aiMH Lab

applied informatics for Mental Health

Co-prescription of metformin and antipsychotics in severe mental illness: a UK primary care cohort study


Journal article


Luiza Farache Trajano, Joseph F Hayes, N. Launders, Neil M Davies, David P J Osborn, A. Richards-Belle
medRxiv, 2024

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Trajano, L. F., Hayes, J. F., Launders, N., Davies, N. M., Osborn, D. P. J., & Richards-Belle, A. (2024). Co-prescription of metformin and antipsychotics in severe mental illness: a UK primary care cohort study. MedRxiv.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Trajano, Luiza Farache, Joseph F Hayes, N. Launders, Neil M Davies, David P J Osborn, and A. Richards-Belle. “Co-Prescription of Metformin and Antipsychotics in Severe Mental Illness: a UK Primary Care Cohort Study.” medRxiv (2024).


MLA   Click to copy
Trajano, Luiza Farache, et al. “Co-Prescription of Metformin and Antipsychotics in Severe Mental Illness: a UK Primary Care Cohort Study.” MedRxiv, 2024.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{luiza2024a,
  title = {Co-prescription of metformin and antipsychotics in severe mental illness: a UK primary care cohort study},
  year = {2024},
  journal = {medRxiv},
  author = {Trajano, Luiza Farache and Hayes, Joseph F and Launders, N. and Davies, Neil M and Osborn, David P J and Richards-Belle, A.}
}

Abstract

Background: Metformin is a pharmacological candidate to mitigate second-generation antipsychotic (SGA)-induced weight gain in patients with severe mental illnesses (SMI). Objective: To evaluate the incidence, prevalence, and demographic patterns of metformin co-prescription among patients diagnosed with SMI initiating SGAs. To estimate the impact of co-prescription on weight. Methods: A cohort study of patients diagnosed with SMI initiating aripiprazole, olanzapine, quetiapine, or risperidone in 2005-2019 using primary care data from Clinical Practice Research Datalink. We estimated cumulative incidence and period prevalences of co-prescription and explored prescribing differences by demographic and clinical factors. We compared weight change among patients prescribed an SGA only versus an SGA plus metformin, accounting for confounders using linear regression. Findings: Among 26,537 patients initiating SGAs, 4652 were ever prescribed metformin and 21,885 were not. Two-year incidence of first metformin prescription was 3.3%. The SGA plus metformin group were more ethnically diverse, had greater social deprivation, more comorbidities, and higher baseline weight (mean 90.4 vs. 76.8 kg). By two years post-SGA initiation, mean weight in the SGA-only group had changed by +4.16% (95% CI, -1.26 to +9.58) compared to -0.65% (95% CI, -4.26 to +2.96) in the SGA plus metformin group. After confounder adjustment, the two-year mean difference in weight with metformin co-prescription was -1.48 kg (95% CI, -4.03 to 1.07) among females and -1.84 kg (95% CI, -4.67 to 0.98) among males. Conclusion: Metformin is infrequently co-prescribed, despite established efficacy and guidelines. Clinical implications: Primary and secondary care collaboration should be strengthened and barriers to co-prescribing addressed.