Essential Dementia Anti-Psychotic Medication in Dementia

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Antipsychotic Medication in

Dementia; The good, the bad and


the ugly !
Anthony Bainbridge
Deputy Director of Nursing
Sheffield Health and Social Care
Different types of antipsychotic medication
• Antipsychotic medication was developed to be
prescribed to people of working age experiencing a
psychotic condition like schizophrenia. These drugs
weren’t developed to be prescribed to older people or
people whose brains are damaged by dementia. Older
types of antipsychotics are called ‘typical’ antipsychotics
or major tranquillisers. They include thioridazine,
promazine and stelazine; they are not licensed for the
use of people with dementia and are rarely prescribed
now. Haloperidol is a typical antipsychotic and is still
used frequently.
Newer Types of Antipsychotic Medication

• Other types of antipsychotics are called ‘atypical’


antipsychotics. These include risperidone and
olanzapine and, since being available from the mid-
1990s, increasingly were prescribed for people with
dementia. In the late 2000s, this began to change with
the publication in 2009 of a major report from the
Department of Health into antipsychotics for people with
dementia, which questioned their heavy use..
• Risperidone is now the only drug licensed for very
cautious use with people with dementia, and then only in
situations involving ongoing aggression for up to six
weeks, with the person being very closely monitored for
ill-effects.
Antipsychotic Drugs
• Antipsychotic drugs are also the drugs
most commonly prescribed for behavioural
and psychological symptoms, such as
aggression or hallucinations, in people
with dementia. In some people
antipsychotics can eliminate or reduce the
intensity of certain symptoms. However,
they also have serious side effects.
Sube Banerjee – drawing lines in
the sand
• “There have been increasing
concerns over the past years
about the use of these drugs in
dementia. The findings of my
review confirm that there are
indeed significant issues in terms
of quality of care and patient
safety. These drugs appear to be
used too often in dementia and, at
their likely level of use, potential
benefits are most probably
outweighed by their risks overall.
This is a problem across the
world, not one just restricted to the
NHS. It is positive that, with
action, we have the means with
which to sort out this problem,
quickly and safely” (Sube
Banerjee 2009)
Hazards!

‘It has become clear that people with


dementia as a whole are at higher risk of
potentially serious adverse effects from
antipsychotic medication’.
Professor Sube Banerjee, in The use of antipsychotic medication for
people with dementia: Time for action (Department of Health, 2009)
Caution

‘Approximately one-third of people with


dementia live in a care home and it is this
group who are most likely to be prescribed
antipsychotics’.
Dementia Alliance 2016
Unpleasant side effects
• Problems with the use of antipsychotics for people with dementia
include their unpleasant and disabling side effects. And Older
people are more likely to experience these side effects.
• Antipsychotic medication can make the person feel very drowsy or
cause their arms, legs and head to move without them meaning to,
or make their body go very stiff or tremble. Not surprisingly, these
effects can make it very hard for a person who already has
difficulties as a result of their dementia to maintain their current
abilities, for example, going to the toilet or dressing themselves.
Taking antipsychotic medication may make it difficult for someone to
speak clearly or understand what is being said to them, to eat and
drink or even sit or stand up comfortably.
• People who know or care for the person may not realise that the
drug is causing these changes and may think that the person’s
dementia has worsened. Sometimes, there is relief that the person’s
behaviour has become less challenging, although their needs
remain unmet and their wellbeing is seriously compromised.
Dangerous side effects
• Antipsychotic drugs can make people, especially older people, ill.
They can cause dehydration and water retention, they can increase
the likelihood of chest infections or they can cause heart problems.
These effects make people more vulnerable to other illnesses, for
example if people become dehydrated, they are more likely to
develop urine infections. There is a increase stroke risk.
• Studies estimate that there are at least 1,800 extra deaths each year
among people with dementia as a result of them taking
antipsychotics, and that the likelihood of premature death increases
if people take these drugs for months or years rather than weeks
(Department of Health, 2009).
• People who have dementia with Lewy bodies or Parkinson’s disease
generally do not benefit from antipsychotics. They may cause all the
effects mentioned above with no benefit.
The benefits of stopping antipsychotics

• Although a small minority of people with dementia taking


antipsychotics won’t benefit from stopping the
medication or a reduced dosage, the majority will.
People generally get relief from the side effects of
trembling, loss of motor control, tiredness and water
retention, among others, and feel better in themselves.
People’s abilities often improve and they find that they
are able to function much better on a daily basis. It may
even seem that the dementia has improved. Sometimes
carers and family are amazed by the change in a
person’s appearance, energy levels and capacity to
engage when they have stopped taking antipsychotics or
reduced the dosage.
What are psychotic symptoms?
• People who live with severe mental health problems, such as
schizophrenia, experience what are called ‘psychotic symptoms’.
People with dementia can experience psychotic symptoms too.
Hallucinations are an example of a psychotic symptom: they involve
seeing, hearing, tasting, smelling or feeling something that isn’t
actually there. The most common type of hallucination is hearing
voices, or what is called an ‘auditory hallucination’.

• Another type of psychotic symptom is a ‘delusion’, which means that


a person holds very unusual beliefs about themselves or those
around them. A person may believe that they are God or another
religious figure for example. More frighteningly, they may believe
that someone or something is trying to harm them. This is known as
a ‘paranoid delusion’.
Psychotic symptoms and dementia
• Some people with dementia experience psychotic symptoms,
although hallucinations are more likely to be something the person
sees rather than hears. It may be thought that someone is
experiencing delusions when actually they have misinterpreted what
is going around them, for example the person believes that
someone has stolen their money because they don’t remember
where they put it.

• Hallucinations and delusions are more common in some types of


dementia than others. People who have dementia with Lewy bodies
(DLB), for example, are quite likely to experience the same visual
hallucinations over and over again because of the way this type of
dementia affects the brain.
BPSD
• The research literature often refers to behavioural and
psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD), which are
a group of symptoms common in people with
Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias, and
especially common in care homes. Between 70-90% of
PWD will experience a BPSD at some time or other.

• Antipsychotic medication began to be used to treat a


wider range of what are sometimes called ‘behavioural
and psychological symptoms in dementia’. These include
aggression, agitation, restlessness, depressed mood,
anxiety
Neuro Psychiatric Inventory (NPI)
• Delusions • Agitation / Aggression
• Hallucinations • Elation
• Depression • Apathy
• Anxiety • Disinhibition
• Irritability / Labilty
Frequency X Severity; • Aberrant Motor Behaviour
Maximum score in each • Night time behaviour
domain =12 • Appetite
A score of 12 in any
domain means PWD is
extremely distressed
Understanding the Person

• If a person with dementia develops any of these


changes, it is important to remember that they are not to
blame or ‘behaving badly’. Their symptoms may be a
direct result of changes in their brain, or because of a
general health problem such as discomfort caused by
pain or infection.
• These symptoms can also be related to the care a
person is receiving, their environment or how they are
spending their time. For example, the person may be
agitated because they are anxious or because they are
somewhere that is very noisy. Symptoms can become
worse because the person’s dementia makes it harder
for them to make sense of the world.
Dementia NICE Guidance
• People with dementia who develop non-cognitive symptoms that cause them
significant distress or who develop behaviour that challenges should be
offered an assessment at an early opportunity to establish the likely factors
that may generate, aggravate or improve such behaviour. The assessment
should be comprehensive and include;
– the person’s physical health
– depression
– possible undetected pain or discomfort
– side effects of medication
– individual biography, including religious beliefs and spiritual and cultural
identity
– psychosocial factors
– physical environmental factors

• Behavioural and functional analysis should be conducted by professionals with


specific skills, in conjunction with carers and care workers. Individually
tailored care plans that help carers and staff address the behaviour that
challenges should be developed, recorded in the notes and reviewed regularly.
Assessment

‘A proper assessment and a thorough


understanding of the role of the array of
interventions available for people with
dementia is essential so the correct and
safest treatment can be delivered’.
Professor Alistair Burns in Optimising treatment and care for people
with behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia
(Alzheimer’s Society, 2011)
No Quick Fix!
• The doctor should discuss with the person
and/or their carer what symptom or symptoms
they are prescribing a drug for, and they should
then monitor how it is working. Don’t expect
immediate results in people taking drugs for
behavioural and psychological symptoms. Any
benefits may take several weeks to appear.
Drugs may also stop working. This is because
dementia is a degenerative condition, meaning
that the chemistry and structure of the brain will
change during the course of the illness.
Starting Antipsychotic Treatment

• All drugs have side-effects which are usually


related to dose, so the doctor will often begin by
prescribing a small dose and then gradually
increase this until the best balance of benefits
and side effects is achieved. This approach is
sometimes known as ‘start low and go slow’
• ECG is usually required before treatment and
repeated part way through
• Side Effect Monitoring – pre and post
Starting Treatment
• The risks and benefits of taking an antipsychotic should
always be discussed with the person with dementia,
where possible, and any carer. The first prescription of
an antipsychotic should only be done by a specialist
doctor. This may be an old-age psychiatrist, geriatrician
or GP with a special interest in dementia. The doctor
should explain the alternatives, the symptoms that are
being targeted, and plans to review, reduce and stop the
antipsychotic.
• When the prescription is reviewed, the doctor may
suggest stopping the drug in one go (for people taking a
low dose of antipsychotic) or a more gradual reduction
(for people on a higher dose). In either case, the effect
on the person’s symptoms should be closely monitored.
Who can antipsychotics help?
• Drug trials have shown that risperidone has a small but
significant beneficial effect on aggression and, to a
lesser extent, psychosis for people with Alzheimer’s
disease. These effects are seen when the drug is taken
for a period of 6–12 weeks. Antipsychotic drugs may be
prescribed for people with Alzheimer’s disease, vascular
dementia or mixed dementia (when it is usually a
combination of these two). If a person with Lewy body
dementia (dementia with Lewy bodies or Parkinson’s
disease dementia) is prescribed an antipsychotic drug, it
should be done with the utmost care, under constant
supervision and with regular review. This is because
people with Lewy body dementia, who often have visual
hallucinations, are at particular risk of severe adverse
(negative) reactions to antipsychotics
Who can antipsychotics help?
• Antipsychotic drugs do not help with other
behavioural and psychological symptoms such
as distress and anxiety during personal care,
restlessness or agitation. These symptoms need
other, more individualised, approaches. For
people with mild-to-moderate behavioural and
psychological symptoms of any kind, the
National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
(NICE) recommends that antipsychotic drugs
should not be prescribed in the first instance.
The non-drug approaches outlined above should
be used for these symptoms.
Risperidone
• Risperidone is licensed for the short-term
treatment of aggression in Alzheimer’s
disease, if aggression poses a risk or the
person has not responded to non-drug
approaches. It is only licenced for PED
who have a diagnosis of alzheimers
disease.
Other Antipsychotics

• Other antipsychotic drugs prescribed for people


with dementia are done so ‘off-label’. This
means that the doctor can prescribe them if they
have good reason to do so, and provided they
follow rules set out by the General Medical
Council. The latest recommendations are that an
antipsychotic other than risperidone should only
be prescribed for a person with dementia if they
have psychosis (delusions or hallucinations) that
developed before – and so is not caused by –
their dementia.
Testimonies
• “I hold them responsible for his • ‘A small study at Sheffield Health
rapid loss of speech, the constant and Social Care NHS Foundation
drooling, his mask- like frozen Trust has shown that certain
expression, the constant jerking of people with dementia show
his right foot that stayed with him substantial reductions in symptom
for the rest of his life, and rapid severity and substantial
onset of incontinence. While still improvements in quality of life
able to walk, he would walk when they are prescribed anti-
leaning over sideways or psychotics. The results also show
backwards at an alarming angle, minimal adverse effects when
and no doubt it was this intensive systematic monitoring is
‘unbalancing’ that caused the hip in place. The results cite the
fractures. Soon he developed personal beneficial impact for
epileptic fits and I cannot be sure people with dementia and their
that it was not related to the families’
antipsychotics.” - Carer of a Rusius / Bainbridge
person with dementia living in a
care home
Testimonies
• “My mother was prescribed these • “While there is a lot of evidence
while I was living at home with showing the negative effects of
her. They were given because she taking these drugs, little is written
was anxious...from that day about the sometimes positive
onwards her speech diminished effects when a person is very
and she suffered with the shakes. frightened and agitated. It may
I haven’t been happy with the mean that the person can remain
drugs for some time. The dose with their carer for a lot longer
was reduced at my request and when taking a small amount of
Mum started to talk a little more, antipsychotic medication.”
but then I went on holiday and Admiral Nurse
while I was away the dose was
upped again to higher than the
original. I do not feel these drugs
have benefited my mother in any
way and I have seen plenty of
negatives.” - Carer of a person
with dementia living at home
Good Practice Questions

• Why is the person being prescribed an antipsychotic? Which


symptoms is the drug meant to be helping with?
• Have possible medical causes of these symptoms (such as
infection, pain or constipation) been ruled out?
• Can non-drug approaches be tried first?
• Do we need to know more about the person as an individual to work
out what may be causing their symptoms?
• How will we know if the drug is working?
• What side -effects might the drug cause?
• What is the plan for the person to come off the antipsychotic?
• When will the use of this drug be reviewed?
Questions ?

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