by Cucci, Michaelia D.; Chester, Katleen W.; Hamilton,
Leslie A.
Critical Care Medicine: April 2022 -
Volume 50 - Issue 4 - p 665-673
OBJECTIVE: Concise definitive review of the reinitiation of
prior-to-admission neuropsychiatric medications (NPMs) in ICU patients.
DATA SOURCES: Available literature on PubMed and MEDLINE
databases.
STUDY SELECTION: Available clinical trials and observational
studies addressing the reinitiation of select NPMs (antidepressants,
antipsychotics, and gabapentinoids) on various outcomes were included.
DATA EXTRACTION: Eligible studies were identified by
authors, and recommendations were summarized.
DATA SYNTHESIS: Agitation and delirium are recognized as
common complications of patients in the ICU. While there is literature that
suggests patients can acutely withdraw from opioids, less data are known about
withdrawal from NPM such as antidepressants, antipsychotics, and
gabapentinoids. However, there is some literature that suggests reinitiating
some NPMs may lead to reductions in agitation, delirium, and hospital and ICU
length of stay.
CONCLUSIONS: Additional larger studies are needed to
evaluate the safety and efficacy of reinitiation of select prior-to-admission
NPM to prevent agitation and delirium in ICU patients. Multiple factors for NPM
reinitiation should be considered, such as reason for admission, organ
dysfunction, available route of administration to provide prior-to-admission
NPM, concomitant additional medications for agitation and delirium, and safety
of these medications for patients in the ICU.
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