Considerations when etablishing whether a person needs to switch their antidepressant
Considerations when establishing whether a person needs to switch their antidepressant
- a clinician should adopt a shared approach from the beginning in establishing whether a person might benefit from switching their antidepressant
- discuss existing issues and experiences, and how medicines fit in with a typical day
Points to consider include the following:
- Inadequate response
- discuss with the person and/or their carer whether their current antidepressant is effective after they have adhered to a therapeutic dose, for an appropriate duration
- Side-effects
- discuss with the person and/or their carer any side-effects they have experienced (such as weight gain or reduced libido). Abrupt withdrawal should be avoided unless the person experiences a serious side-effect
- New contraindications and interactions
- people may develop a new contraindication to their existing antidepressant or they may start a new medication that interacts with their existing antidepressant. Establish whether this is the case
- Current symptoms
- establish current symptoms, particularly where treatment has failed previously. Consider using an evidence-based tool, such as:
- PHQ-9 (Patient Health Questionnaire-9),
- HADS (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale) or
- BDI-II (Beck Depression Inventory-II) to assess
- it can be unsafe for some people to remain untreated for extended periods of time (1)
- Agree goals
- use a shared decision making approach to agree the purpose of the switch with your patient and what will be achieved from it.
- Share decisions
- discuss with the person and/or their carer the purpose of the switch and what you’re trying to achieve. Consider:
- what matters to them
- any concerns they have
- the extent of the side-effects they could tolerate
- whether a trial period without an antidepressant might be useful
Reference:
- NHS Specialist Pharmacy Service (February 2023). Establishing whether a person needs to switch their antidepressant
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