Effects of antipsychotic treatment on cardio-cerebrovascular related mortality in schizophrenia: A subanalysis of a systematic review and meta-analysis with meta-regression of moderators

Solmi, M. ✉; Croatto, G.*; Gupta, A.*; Fabiano, N.*; Wong, S.; Fornaro, M.; Schneider, L.K.; Rohani-Montez, S.C.; Fairley, L.; Smith, N.; Bitter, I. [Bitter, István (Elmekórtan), szerző] Pszichiátriai és Pszichoterápiás Klinika (SE / AOK / K); Gorwood, P.; Taipale, H.; Tiihonen, J.; Cortese, S.; Dragioti, E.; Rietz, E.D.; Nielsen, R.E.; Firth, J.; Fusar-Poli, P.; Hartman, C.; Holt, R.I.G.; Høye, A.; Koyanagi, A.; Larsson, H.; Lehto, K.; Lindgren, P.; Manchia, M.; Nordentoft, M.; Skonieczna-Żydecka, K.; Stubbs, B.; Vancampfort, D.; De, Prisco M.; Boyer, L.; Vieta, E.; Correll, C.U.; for the ECNP Physical And meNtal Health Thematic Working Group (PAN-Health) [Kollaborációs szervezet]

Angol nyelvű Sokszerzős vagy csoportos szerzőségű szakcikk (Folyóiratcikk) Tudományos
  • SJR Scopus - Neurology (clinical): D1
Azonosítók
To further explore the role of different antipsychotic treatments for cardio-cerebrovascular mortality, we performed several subgroup, sensitivity and meta-regression analyses based on a large previous meta-analysis focusing on cohort studies assessing mortality relative risk (RR) for cardio-cerebrovascular disorders in people with schizophrenia, comparing antipsychotic treatment versus no antipsychotic. Quality assessment through the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS) and publication bias was measured. We meta-analyzed 53 different studies (schizophrenia patients: n = 2,513,359; controls: n = 360,504,484) to highlight the differential effects of antipsychotic treatment regimens on cardio-cerebrovascular-related mortality in incident and prevalent samples of patients with schizophrenia. We found first generation antipsychotics (FGA) to be associated with higher mortality in incident samples of schizophrenia (oral FGA [RR=2.20, 95 %CI=1.29–3.77, k = 1] and any FGA [RR=1.70, 95 %CI=1.20–2.41, k = 1]). Conversely, second generation antipsychotics (SGAs) and clozapine were associated with reduced cardio-cerebrovascular-related mortality, in prevalent samples of schizophrenia. Subgroup analyses with NOS score ≥7 (higher quality) demonstrated a significantly increased cardio-cerebrovascular disorder-related mortality, among those exposed to FGAs vs SGAs. Meta-regression analyses demonstrated a larger association between antipsychotics and decreased risk of mortality with longer follow-up, recent study year, and higher number of adjustment variables. Overall, this subanalysis of a systematic review contributes to the evolving understanding of the complex role of antipsychotic treatment for cardio-cerebrovascular mortality in schizophrenia, paving the way for more targeted interventions and improved patient outcomes. © 2024
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2025-04-02 08:56