Affiliation:
1. Psychiatric Private Hospital, Sanatorium Kilchberg, Zurich,
Switzerland
2. Department of Psychiatry, Social Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Hannover
Medical School, Hannover, Germany
3. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, LMU University Hospital,
LMU Munich, Germany
Abstract
Abstract
Introduction Pharmacoepidemiological data suggest that lithium
prescriptions for bipolar disorder are gradually decreasing, with less attention
having been paid to other indications.
Methods We examined lithium prescriptions between 1994 and 2017 in data
provided by the Drug Safety in Psychiatry Program AMSP, including psychiatric
hospitals in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. We compared lithium use for
different diagnoses before and after 2001 and in three periods (T1: 1994–2001,
T2: 2002–2009, and T3: 2010–2017).
Results In a total of 158,384 adult inpatients (54% female, mean age
47.4±17.0 years), we observed a statistically significant decrease in lithium
prescriptions between 1994–2000 and 2001–2017 in patients with schizophrenia
spectrum disorder from 7.7% to 5.1% and in patients with affective disorders
from 16.8% to 9.6%. Decreases in use were also observed for diagnostic
subgroups: schizoaffective disorder (ICD-10 F25: 27.8% to 17.4%), bipolar
disorder (F31: 41.3% to 31%), depressive episode (F32: 8.1% to 3.4%), recurrent
depression (F33: 17.9% to 7.5%, all: p<0.001) and emotionally unstable
(borderline) personality disorder (6.3% to 3.9%, p=0.01). The results in T1 vs.
T2 vs. T3 were for F25: 26.7% vs. 18.2% vs. 16.2%, F32: 7.7% vs. 4.2% vs. 2.7%,
F33: 17.2% vs. 8.6% vs. 6.6% and for F31: 40.8% vs. 31.7% vs 30.0%, i. e. there
was no further decrease for lithium use in bipolar disorder after 2002.
Lithium’s main psychotropic co-medications were quetiapine (21.1%), lorazepam
(20.6%), and olanzapine (15.2%).
Discussion In inpatients, the use of lithium has decreased in patients
with bipolar disorder and also with various other psychiatric diagnoses.