Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Medication
may provide some benefit for Older Adults
with Anxiety Disorder
Newswise — Preliminary research suggests
that use of the drug escitalopram provided
some improvement in symptoms for older
adults with generalized anxiety disorder,
although the overall benefits were
diminished because of nonadherence to the
drug by some patients, according to a study
in the January 21 issue of JAMA.
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), one of
the most common psychiatric disorders in
older adults, is defined by chronic,
difficult-to-control worry and anxiety, with
related symptoms such as muscle tension,
sleep disturbance and fatigue.
The prevalence of GAD is as high as 7.3
percent among community-dwelling older
adults and even higher among primary care
patients.
Because the number of older adults in the
U.S. is growing and there is a lack of
effective treatment, GAD in older adults
will become an increasing human and economic
burden, according to background information
in the article.
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)
are effective for younger adults with GAD,
but little data exist regarding the outcomes
of their use by older adults.
Eric J. Lenze, M.D., of Washington
University, St. Louis, and colleagues
examined the effectiveness, safety, and
tolerability of the SSRI escitalopram for
the treatment of GAD in older adults.
The study included 177 participants age 60
years or older with a diagnosis of GAD, who
were randomized to receive either 10 to 20
mg/d of escitalopram (n = 85) or matching
placebo (n = 92) for 12 weeks. Anxiety and
other outcomes were measured using a number
of assessment tools.
The researchers found that the cumulative
incidence of response to treatment was
higher in the escitalopram group than in the
placebo group (69 percent vs. 51 percent).
Participants treated with escitalopram
showed greater improvement than with placebo
in anxiety symptoms and role functioning,
activity limitations and impairments in role
and social functioning.
In the intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis,
which included those who began the trial but
may have dropped out, the response was not
different between groups.
Of the participants who received
escitalopram, 16 (18.5 percent) dropped out
of the study before week 12; of the
participants who received placebo, 17 (18.4
percent) dropped out before week 12.
Adverse effects of escitalopram were fatigue
or sleepiness, sleep disturbance and urinary
symptoms.
“The lack of efficacy of escitalopram in the
ITT analysis is consistent with its overall
modest efficacy, diminished further by
nonadherence.
"Given that patients with anxiety disorders
are often poorly adherent to
pharmacotherapy, these negative results may
more accurately portray the results of
treatment in clinical settings,” the authors
write.
“It is important for clinicians to emphasize
to their anxious older patients the need for
an adequate trial in which to observe any
benefits, as well as the expectation and
nature of adverse effects.
"Given
the high human and economic burden of GAD,
these data should provide impetus to detect
and treat this common disorder. Further
study is required to assess efficacy and
safety over longer treatment durations.”
... ..
...
...