Antipsychotics in the Treatment of Children and Adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Protocol for the Present Review
- (1)
- Date: published between January 1950 and November 2022.
- (2)
- Population:
- Children and adolescents (<18 years); if multiple age ranges are included, separated data for children and adolescents for the considered variables were required;
- Patients with a diagnosis of AN;
- At least one patient treated with antipsychotics, including both first- (FGA) and second-generation antipsychotics (SGA): amisulpride, aripiprazole, asenapine, blonanserin, brexpiprazole, cariprazine, iloperidone, lumateperone, lurasidone, olanzapine, paliperidone, pimavanserin, quetiapine, risperidone, ziprasidone, chlorpromazine, flupentixol, fluphenazine, haloperidol, pericyazine, perphenazine, pimozide, pipotiazine, sulpiride, trifluoperazine, zuclopenthixol.
- (3)
- Language: English.
- (4)
- Study Design: RCT, cohort studies, cross-sectional studies, retrospective studies, and case reports.
- (5)
- Outcomes: reporting all these three categories (at least one element per outcome):
- clinical use (starting dosage; maximum dosage; average dosage; duration of treatment);
- clinical outcomes (FED-related psychopathology; weight-related variables; duration of hospitalization);
- safety-related outcomes (Adverse Drug Reactions-ADR; subjective tolerance).
- −
- A system for case-control studies, scoring the three domains of “selection” (adequateness of the case definition, representativeness of the cases, selection of controls, definition of controls), “comparability” (comparability of cases and controls based on the design or analysis), and “exposure” (ascertainment of exposure, same method of ascertainment for cases and controls, Non-Response rate);
- −
- A system for cohort studies, scoring the three domains of “selection” (representativeness of the exposed cohort, selection of the non-exposed cohort, ascertainment of exposure, demonstration that outcome of interest was not present at the start of the study), “comparability” (comparability of cohorts based on the design or analysis), and “outcome” (assessment of outcome, follow-up long enough for outcomes to occur, adequacy of follow up of cohorts) [16].
- −
- If published in a language different from English;
- −
- If the nature of the study was clearly reported as a narrative review, a systematic review, a study protocol, or any other study type other than those admitted (RCT, cohort studies, cross-sectional studies, retrospective studies, and case reports);
- −
- If the included population was clearly reported as composed only of animals other than humans.
- −
- If one of the exclusion criteria was still met after the appropriateness screening (population: other than humans; language: other than English; study design: descriptive studies, reviews, protocols);
- −
- If children and adolescents (aged < 18 years) were not included in the study, or if a mixed group of children/adolescents and adults was included, but separated results for the two age groups were not provided;
- −
- If no individual was assigned a diagnosis of AN;
- −
- If no individual was treated with an antipsychotic;
- −
- If the study did not report in any way the required clinical outcomes. No report of ADR in the presence of a described clinical follow-up was accepted; in this case, studies were assigned a “no ADR reported” outcome.
2.2. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Olanzapine
3.2. Risperidone
3.3. Aripiprazole
3.4. Clotiapine
3.5. Pimozide
3.6. Chlorpromazine
3.7. Studies including Multiple Drugs
3.8. Other Drugs
4. Discussion
5. Limitations and Strengths
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study | Population | Intervention | Comparison | Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|
Olanzapine | ||||
Spettigue et al., 2018 [20] | N: 32; sex: 29 females, 3 males; mean age: 15.48; age range: 11–17. | Olanzapine
| Eligible to switch into the medication group up until the end of week 8 in the study | Side effects/tolerability: patients tended to experience headaches and constipation more than the comparison group. They reported more muscle dizziness, stiffness, somnolence, and dry mouth; Psychopathology: decrease in depression and anxiety; decrease in self-reported ED behavior; Weight: more weight per week than those in the comparison group; Duration of hospitalization: na |
Norris et al., 2011 [21] | N: 43; sex: females; mean age: 14.4; age range: 10–17. | Olanzapine
| Patients chosen by age and diagnosis at assessment, and then treatment intensity level was undertaken after assessment (i.e., outpatient care, entry into our day program, or admission to the inpatient unit). | Side effects/tolerability: sedation (more common); abnormalities in blood work (elevations in the fasting lipid profile; one had elevated liver function test); Psychopathology: no significative differences were found; Weight: no significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: na |
Leggero et al., 2010 [22] | N: 13; sex: females; mean age: 13.7; age range: 9.6–16.3. | Olanzapine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: An increase in liver enzymes occurred in two patients; Psychopathology: CGAS and CGI-S improved significantly. Both the CBCL Total Score and Internalizing Scale improved significantly. The EAT-26 total scores markedly improved, including Dieting, Bulimic, and Oral Control. The EDI-2 showed significant improvement only in two areas, Interoceptive Awareness, and Impulsivity; hyperactivity (according to SIAB-EX) resulted in significant improvement; Weight: BMI score improved significantly; Duration of hospitalization: na |
Dennis et al., 2006 [23] | N: 5; sex: females; mean age: 15.6; age range: 12–18. | Olanzapine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: pt 1: mild sedation; pt 4: excessive sedation; patient 5: itching (stop assumption after 2 months); Psychopathology: pt 1: anxiety around mealtimes subsided and agitation with family decreased markedly; pt 2: improved sleep and decreased anxiety; decreased irritability and combativeness at mealtimes; pt 3: decreased worry about eating and decreased body image concern. She reported less rumination about food, fewer depressive symptoms, and decreased anxiety; pt 4: decreased anxiety. She felt calmer before meals; pt 5: no improvement was recorded; Weight: improved markedly only for two patients; Duration of hospitalization: n.a. |
Pruccoli et al., 2022 [24] | N: 66; sex: 63 females, 3 males; mean age: 15.4; age range: 13–18. | Olanzapine Group 1, (low-dose)
Group 2 (full-dose)
| Same characteristics of the cases, but not treated with antipsychotic | Side effects/tolerability: Group 1: two patients (5.4%) developed a mild elevation of total cholesterol levels; one patient (2.7%) showed elevated transaminase. Group 2: 3 patients (10.5%) presented a mild elevation of total cholesterol levels, 1 patient (3.5%) developed somnolence, 1 patient (3.5%) showed a reduction of blood pressure; Psychopathology: improvement of BUT-GSI (p < 0.001), BDI-II (p < 0.001), and SAFA-D (p < 0.001) for the entire sample, but group 2 experienced a significantly lower improvement in depressive measures than the other groups; Weight: significant gain. Duration of hospitalization: group 1: mean 121 days; group 2: mean 116 days. |
Boachie et al., 2002 [25] | N: 4; sex: females; mean age: 11; age range: 10–12. | Olanzapine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported; Psychopathology: pt 1: better in sleeping, less anxious, fewer compulsive rituals, and fewer food preoccupations; pt 2: at discharge, she was not agitated, was sleeping well, was an improved relationship with others; pt 3: clinical improvement in her general and premeal anxiety levels, as well as a reduction in agitation; pt 4: improvement in her general anxiety level and agitation’s reduction; Weight: significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: pt 1, 49 days; pt 2, 70 days; pt 3, 77 days, pt 4, 120 days. |
Mehler et al., 2001 [26] | N: 5; sex: females; mean age: 15.4; age range: 12–17. | Olanzapine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported. Pt 3 increased appetite with the first episode of binge eating; Psychopathology: improvement of the delusional quality of thinking, and fears about weight; Weight: significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: pt 1: 77 days, pt 2: 56 days; pt 3: 70 days; pt 4 n.a.; pt 5 n.a. |
Ercan et al., 2003 [27] | N: 1; sex: female; age: 15. | Olanzapine:
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported; Psychopathology: remission of psychiatric symptoms (irritability, compulsive thoughts about body weight, food, and physical activity) Weight: significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: 133 days. |
Dadic-Hero et al., 2009 [28] | N: 1; sex: female; age: 15. | Olanzapine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported Psychopathology: na Weight: significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: 112 days. |
La Via et al., 2000 [29] | N: 1; sex: female; age: 15. | Olanzapine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: mild sedation; Psychopathology: reduction in agitation and anxiety; Weight: significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: 98 days |
Duvvuri et al., 2012 [30] | N: 1; sex: female; age: 12. | Olanzapine
| Identical twin, with the same diagnosis, treated with fluoxetine | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported Psychopathology: reduced ED preoccupations or rituals, obsessions, and compulsions; Weight: IBW restored; Duration of hospitalization: outpatient treatment. |
Ayyildiz et al., 2015 [31] | N: 1; sex: male; age: 17. | Olanzapine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: NMS occurred 48 h after the first administration; Psychopathology: no improvement; Weight: no improvement; Duration of hospitalization: na. |
Tateno et al., 2008 [32] | N: 1; sex: female; age: 17 | Olanzapine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported; Psychopathology: abnormal eating habits gradually remitted; Weight: reached the standard; Duration of hospitalization: na. |
Risperidone | ||||
Kracke et al., 2014 [33] | N: 1; sex: female; age: 17. | Risperidone
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported Psychopathology: improvement in rigidity during meal timing; Weight: significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: no hospitalization. |
Umehara et al., 2014 [34] | N: 1; sex: male; age: 10 | Risperidone
Risperidone long-acting injection (RLAI)
| / | Side effects/tolerability: he refused oral risperidone because he believed it was making him fat Psychopathology: reduction of agitation during enteral feeding; reduction of his complaints based on body distortion Weight: significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: 448 days. |
Newman-Toker, 2000 [35] | N: 1; sex: female; age: 12. | Risperidone:
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported; Psychopathology: cheerful, energetic, insight about anorexia, lowered anxiety Weight: BMI improvement; Duration of hospitalization: na |
Fisman et al., 1996 [36] | N: 1; sex: female; age: 13. | Risperidone
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported; Psychopathology: striking decrease in agitation and aggression, loss of paranoid ideation, more focused attention, and generally more settled and malleable behavior. Weight: significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: na. |
Clotiapine | ||||
Pruccoli et al., 2021 [37] | N: 2; sex: females; mean age: 17.5; age range: 17–18. | Clotiapine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: fatigue (pt 1) which caused withdrawal in 3 days; Psychopathology: decrease of delusional symptoms, restored proper hygiene habits; Weight: n.a. Duration of hospitalization: 330 days. |
Aripiprazole | ||||
Frank et al., 2016 [38] | N: 4; sex: females; mean age: n.a.; age range: 12–17 | Aripiprazole
| / | Side effects/tolerability: Patient 1: neutropenia; Psychopathology: improvement in psychopathology from subjective reports; Weight: Improvement in IBW Duration of hospitalization: na |
Frank et al., 2017 [39] | N: 22; sex: na; mean age: 15; age range: na | Aripiprazole
| Comparison groups took part in the same specialized eating disorder inpatient or partial hospital program and were matched for age and had a similar number of inpatient days. | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported; Psychopathology: no data were collected Weight: greater improvement in the aripiprazole group; Duration of hospitalization: mean 18.9 days (inpatient); mean 40.4 days (partial hospital treatment). |
Tahilioglu et al., 2020 [40] | N: 11; sex: females; mean age: 14; age range: 11–17. | Aripiprazole
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported; Psychopathology: improvements in obsessive eating attitudes and behaviors in all patients. Increased appetite; change in the CGI-S scores Weight: significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: na |
Pimozide | ||||
Plantey, 1977 [41] | N: 1; sex: male; age: 17. | Pimozide
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported; Psychopathology: implacable obsession with weight disappeared; reduction of hyperactivity; Weight: significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: na |
Chlorpromazine | ||||
Foster and Kupfer, 1975 [42] | N: 1; sex: female; age: 17. | Chlorpromazine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported; Psychopathology: reduction in nocturnal activity; Weight: regained her body weight; Duration of hospitalization: na |
Roberts et al., 1986 [43] | N: 1; sex: female; age: 16. | Chlorpromazine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: “grand mal” seizure (direct association unclear potentially mediated by variations in plasma electrolytes). Psychopathology: not directly reported: commented as “reduction of anxiety [...] and fear of eating” in the case report section, in light of the previous literature Weight: significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: na |
Roussonis, 1971 [44] | N:1; sex: male; age: 11. | Chlorpromazine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported. Psychopathology: not mentioned; Weight: significant gain; Duration of hospitalization: na |
Studies including Multiple Drugs | ||||
Rossi et al., 2007 [45] | N: 19; sex: 17 females, 2 males; mean age: n.a.; age range: 12–18 | Haloperidol (n: 4); olanzapine (n: 3); risperidone (n: 1):
*”low and medium range according to international pharmacological guidelines” | The comparison group has the same characteristics but was treated with SSRIs. | Side effects/tolerability: none 75%, severe drowsiness (12.5%), worsening eating disorder (12.5%); Psychopathology: based on the CGI-S assessment, 75% of the patients showed an improvement in their eating behavior and their psychological status; Weight: BMI increased in all the patients except one (clinical worsening due to haloperidol administration). Duration of hospitalization: n.a. |
Ritchie et al., 2009 [46] | N: 1; sex: female; age: 15. | Olanzapine
Risperidone
Quetiapine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: prolonged QTc (olanzapine and risperidone); Psychopathology: Patient’s anxiety and mood stability improved (quetiapine); Weight: Reestablishment of a healthy weight; Duration of hospitalization: >71 days |
Dodig-Ćurković et al., 2010 [47] | N: 1; sex: female; age: 15. | Sulpiride
Olanzapine
| / | Side effects/tolerability: no ADR reported; Psychopathology: decreased delusions of her appearance and body weight; decreased the irrational food selection and caloric values of certain foods; Weight: BMI improvement; Duration of hospitalization: na. |
Drug | Selection | Comparability | Exposure (Case Control)/Outcome (Cohort) | Quality | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Spettigue et al., 2018 [20] | Olanzapine | 3 | 2 | Poor | |
Norris et al., 2011 [21] | Olanzapine | 3 | 2 | 2 | Good |
Leggero et al., 2010 [22] | Olanzapine | 2 | 1 | Poor | |
Rossi et al., 2007 [45] | Haloperidol, risperidone, olanzapine | 2 | 1 | Poor | |
Frank et al., 2017 [39] | Aripiprazole | 4 | 2 | 1 | Poor |
Pruccoli et al., 2022 [24] | Olanzapine | 2 | 2 | 2 | Fair |
Tahıllıoğlu et al., 2020 [40] | Aripiprazole | 1 | 2 | Poor |
Females | Males | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Quality | Summary of Findings | Quality | Summary of Findings | |
Olanzapine | 10 studies (1 prospective study, 1 retrospective study, 3 case series, 5 case reports) |
| 1 case report |
|
Risperidone | 3 case reports |
| 1 case report |
|
Aripiprazole | 2 case series |
| / | |
Quetiapine | 1 case report |
| / | |
Clotiapine | 1 case report |
| / | |
Chlorpromazine | 2 case reports |
| 1 case report |
|
Haloperidol | ||||
Pimozide | / | 1 case report |
| |
Sulpiride | 1 case report |
| / |
Children (<14 years) | Adolescents (≥14 years) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Quality | Summary of Findings | Quality | Summary of Findings | |
Olanzapine | 2 case reports/series |
| 5 case reports |
|
Risperidone | 3 case reports |
| 1 case report |
|
Aripiprazole | / | / | ||
Quetiapine | / | 1 case report |
| |
Clotiapine | / | 1 retrospective chart review |
| |
Chlorpromazine | 2 case reports |
| 1 case report |
|
Haloperidol | / | / | − | |
Pimozide | / | 1 case report |
| |
Sulpiride | / | 1 case report |
|
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Pruccoli, J.; Bergonzini, L.; La Tempa, A.; Parmeggiani, A. Antipsychotics in the Treatment of Children and Adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa: A Systematic Review. Biomedicines 2022, 10, 3167. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10123167
Pruccoli J, Bergonzini L, La Tempa A, Parmeggiani A. Antipsychotics in the Treatment of Children and Adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa: A Systematic Review. Biomedicines. 2022; 10(12):3167. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10123167
Chicago/Turabian StylePruccoli, Jacopo, Luca Bergonzini, Angela La Tempa, and Antonia Parmeggiani. 2022. "Antipsychotics in the Treatment of Children and Adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa: A Systematic Review" Biomedicines 10, no. 12: 3167. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10123167
APA StylePruccoli, J., Bergonzini, L., La Tempa, A., & Parmeggiani, A. (2022). Antipsychotics in the Treatment of Children and Adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa: A Systematic Review. Biomedicines, 10(12), 3167. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10123167