From the Editor

Do ‘black boxes’ make demented patients safer?

Author and Disclosure Information

 

Is the FDA being overly zealous with its “black box” warnings? The latest advisory—associating atypical antipsychotics with increased mortality among patients with dementia—joins another black box linking these drugs to potentially fatal diabetes. And, as of October, black boxes warn of “clinical worsening” and “suicidality” associated with using SSRI antidepressants in children and adolescents.

An FDA analysis of 5,111 demented patients in 16 trials found about a 1.6-fold increase in mortality among those receiving atypical antipsychotics. According to the Alzheimer’s Association, the risk of death is “real but small;” 1.5% to 2% of the patients receiving antipsychotics died, compared with 1% of those receiving placebo.

Atypical antipsychotics are useful—at times life-saving—for many agitated elderly patients, and this new labeling should not be used as the basis to withhold these drugs from patients who might benefit from them.

Of course, black boxes are not unique to psychotropics. The COX-2 inhibitor arthritis drugs and others recently have joined more than 200 drugs with these warning labels. What leads the FDA to dichotomize drugs into “black-boxed” or “not black-boxed?” And why do black boxes seem to be proliferating?

I think the reason is that the FDA has been criticized for not doing more to prevent adverse drug events and is feeling the pressure. If someone has an adverse event after taking a black-boxed drug, the FDA can now say something like, “I told you so.” This is, as far as I can tell, the same reason for the Department of Homeland Security’s color-coded terrorism threat levels. One could argue that the much-maligned five-level terror rating system (from green to red) is more rational than the FDA’s two-level system, black or not black.

Congress has been debating whether the terrorism threat system is useful or is unnecessarily alarming the public and making us less safe. We should be asking the same questions about the FDA’s black box system.

Recommended Reading

Light Tx May Surpass Melatonin
MDedge Psychiatry
Cognitive Deficits Can Persist After Brain Injury
MDedge Psychiatry
CBT Helps Patients Regain Lives, Despite Pain : Opioid therapy offers only partial relief, andeven surgery often fails to alleviate symptoms.
MDedge Psychiatry
Use Factors Besides Efficacy to Guide Neuropathic Pain Tx
MDedge Psychiatry
Panic Symptoms Common in Diabetes Patients
MDedge Psychiatry
Stress Raises MI Risk Worldwide
MDedge Psychiatry
Somatization Scores May Predict Success of Outpatient Tx for Headache
MDedge Psychiatry
For Pain Relief, Look on Bright Side of Hospital
MDedge Psychiatry
Pay for Performance: The Right Ingredients
MDedge Psychiatry
Policy & Practice
MDedge Psychiatry