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Thursday, 15 March 2012

media interest leads to extra Seroxat yellow cards - thus feeding the FIDDAMAN delusion

Keywords:
adverse events;media;paroxetine;selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors;time trends


Aim

To
document the impact on clinical practice in England of media attention around possible adverse effects of paroxetine.

Design

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-2125.2005.02527.x/abstract

Analysis of national selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) prescribing trends and yellow-card adverse drug reaction reports, 2001–2004.

Results

From a steady state in 2001, paroxetine prescribing declined sharply from April 2002, coinciding with a USA regulatory action; the subsequent decline in paroxetine prescribing was 1.87% per month (95% confidence interval − 2.06, −1.68). Other SSRI prescribing increased by 1% per month until a major UK review of SSRIs in children in December 2003, after which prescribing plateaued. Media publicity was associated with short-term peaks in yellow-card reports related to paroxetine.

Conclusion

Falls in paroxetine and other SSRI prescribing in the UK coincided, respectively, with regulatory communications from the USA and the UK, but associations may have noncausal or other explanations. Reports of adverse reactions to paroxetine appeared to increase after adverse media publicity about the drug.


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