On- and Off-Label Atypical Antipsychotic Prescription Trends Across a Nine-Year Period Among Adolescents Pre- to Post-COVID-19.

Journal: Academic pediatrics

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Affiliated Institutions:  Division of Research (B Costales, NE Slama, JR Nugent, SA Sterling, and E Iturralde), Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Oakland, Calif. Electronic address: brianna.m.costales@kp.org. Division of Research (B Costales, NE Slama, JR Nugent, SA Sterling, and E Iturralde), Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Oakland, Calif. Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute (RB Penfold), Seattle, Wash. The Permanente Medical Group (SR Spalding), Oakland, Calif.

Abstract summary 

This study examined atypical antipsychotic prescribing by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved-use (on-label) status for adolescents before and during the COVID-19 pandemic.Retrospective data were collected from electronic health records (EHRs) of adolescents aged 10-17 years in Kaiser Permanente Northern California. New outpatient atypical antipsychotic prescription orders during 2013-2021 were evaluated. Prescriptions were categorized as on-label if linked in EHRs to autism, psychosis, bipolar disorder, or Tourette's diagnoses; otherwise, they were potentially off-label (herein, off-label). Trend analysis of monthly prescribing rates assessed slope change at pandemic onset for the cohort and by sex and age groups.Among 5828 patients, 74.5% of new antipsychotic orders were off-label in 2021. Overall prescribing decreased significantly until early 2020 (slope = -0.045, P < .01) but then significantly increased through 2021 (post-March 2020 slope change = 0.211, P = .01). Off-label prescriptions increased at a similar rate during the COVID-19 time period, but on-label prescriptions did not change significantly. Males and younger adolescents (ages 10-14 years) showed significant decreases until early 2020, while females and older adolescents (ages 15-17 years) did not. Females and younger adolescents exhibited significant increases in overall and off-label prescribing rates following pandemic onset; older adolescents exhibited increases in overall prescriptions while males had no detectable changes.Antipsychotic prescribing declined slightly but then increased significantly following COVID-19 onset for overall and off-label prescriptions. Pandemic onset differentially impacted antipsychotic prescribing by sex and age, with overall and off-label prescribing driven by increases among female and younger adolescents.

Authors & Co-authors:  Costales Slama Penfold Nugent Spalding Sterling Iturralde

Study Outcome 

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Statistics
Citations : 
Authors :  7
Identifiers
Doi : S1876-2859(24)00072-X
SSN : 1876-2867
Study Population
Males,Female,Females
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
COVID-19;adolescents;antipsychotic agents;off-label use;pediatrics
Study Design
Study Approach
Country of Study
Publication Country
United States