Incidence and trend of cardiac events among children and young adults exposed to psychopharmacological treatment (2006–2018): A nationwide register‐based study




Elmowafi, Howaida; Kindblom, Jenny M.; Halldner, Linda; Gyllenberg, David; Naumburg, Estelle

PublisherWiley

2024

 British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology

British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology

0306-5251

1365-2125

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/bcp.16321

https://doi.org/10.1111/bcp.16321

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/459049752



Aims

The aim of this study was to assess cardiac event incidence and trends by sex and age in young patients on psychopharmacological treatment in Sweden.

Methods

This nationwide incidence study encompassed data from Swedish registers (2006–2018). Patients aged 5–30 years were exposed to one or more psychotropic medications (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder medications, antihistamines, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, other antidepressants, anxiolytics, antipsychotics, hypnotics/sedatives). Annual incidences, trends and mean incidences of cardiac events (cardiac arrest, arrhythmias, fainting/collapse, sudden death) and recurrent events were calculated.

Results

Among those exposed (n = 875 430, 2 647 957 patient-years, 55% female), 26 750 cardiac events were identified. The mean annual incidence of cardiac events and first-ever events were 0.99% and 0.80%, respectively, showing significant upward annual trends of 4.26% and 2.48%, respectively (P < .001). The highest incidences were among females aged 15–19 years (1.50%) and those exposed to polypharmacy (1.63%), anxiolytics (1.53%) or antihistamines (1.27%). The mean annual incidences of cardiac arrest and arrythmias, for both sexes, were 0.01% and 0.51%, respectively. Fainting/collapse accounted for about half of all events, occurring more often in females. The pattern of rising annual incidence remained after excluding fainting/collapse. In all, 21.1% of events were recurrent. Death, including sudden death, occurred in 13 patients.

Conclusions

The mean annual incidence of cardiac events among young patients receiving psychopharmacological treatment was low, 0.99%, with an upward trend of 4.26% annually. Incidence was highest in adolescent females and patients exposed to polypharmacy. Our study highlights the need for more knowledge regarding the possible association between exposure to psychopharmacological treatment and cardiac events.


This project has received grants from FORTE (the Swedish Research Council for Health, Working life and Welfare; 2021-00812) and the Swedish Heart Lung Foundation (20210285).


Last updated on 15/08/2025 03:29:50 PM