• Br J Gen Pract · Sep 2024

    Antipsychotic management in general practice: serial cross-sectional study (2011-2020).

    • Alan Woodall, Alex Gampel, Huw Collins, Lauren E Walker, Frances S Mair, Sally B Sheard, Pyers Symon, and Iain Buchan.
    • University of Liverpool, Institute of Population Health, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
    • Br J Gen Pract. 2024 Sep 20.

    BackgroundLong-term use of antipsychotics confers increased risk of cardiometabolic disease. Ongoing need should be reviewed regularly by psychiatrists.AimTo explore trends in antipsychotic management in general practice, and proportions of patients prescribed antipsychotics receiving psychiatrist review.Design And SettingA serial cross-sectional study using linked general practice and hospital data in Wales (2011-2020).MethodParticipants were adults (≥18 years) registered with general practices in Wales. Outcome measures were prevalence of patients receiving ≥6 antipsychotic prescriptions annually, proportion of patients prescribed antipsychotics receiving annual psychiatrist review, and proportion of patients prescribed antipsychotics registered on UK Serious Mental Illness, Depression and/or Dementia registers, or not on any of these registers.ResultsPrevalence of adults prescribed long-term antipsychotics increased from 1.06% (95%CI 1.04 to 1.07%) in 2011 to 1.45% (95%CI 1.43 to 1.46%) in 2020. The proportion receiving annual psychiatrist review decreased from 59.6% (95%CI 58.9 to 60.4%) in 2011 to 52.0% (95C%CI 51.4 to 52.7%) in 2020. The proportion of antipsychotics prescribed to patients not on the Serious Mental Illness register increased from 50% (95%CI 49 to 51%) in 2011 to 56% (95%CI 56 to 57%) by 2020.ConclusionsPrevalence of long-term antipsychotic use is increasing. More patients are managed by general practitioners without psychiatrist review and are not on monitored disease registers; they thus may be less likely to undergo cardiometabolic monitoring and miss opportunities to optimise or deprescribe antipsychotics. These trends pose risks for patients and need to be addressed urgently.Copyright © 2024, The Authors.

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