Systematic review of patient and nurse attitudes to depot antipsychotic medication{dagger}

JESSICA WALBURN, RICHARD GRAY, RMN, KEVIN GOURNAY, PhD, SEEMA QURAISHI, MSc and ANTHONY S. DAVID, FRCPsych

Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK

Correspondence: Professor Anthony David, Institute of Psychiatry & GKT School of Medicine, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8AF, UK. Tel: 020 7848 0138; Fax: 020 7848 0572; e-mail: a.david{at}iop.kcl.ac.uk

Declaration of interest Funded by the NHS Health Technology Assessment programme. A.S.D. is participating in a trial funded by Janssen-Cilag and has acted as an advisor for them. He has received expenses to attend academic conferences from Astra-Zeneca and Lundbeck.

{dagger} See pp. 290– 299, this issue. Back


   ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHOD
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 APPENDIX: SEARCH STRATEGY
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Background Depot antipsychotic medication is used widely in the treatment and prophylaxis of severe mental illness.

Aims To review the literature on patient and nurse satisfaction with, and attitudes towards, depots.

Method A systematic search of Medline, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL and The Cochrane Library was undertaken, along with citation searches. Studies were selected if satisfaction/attitude data were described in the title or abstract and original data were included. Study quality was rated.

Results The search produced 1374 articles; 22 articles met the inclusion criteria, 18 of which were cross-sectional surveys. Of the 12 studies with relevant data, 10 conveyed a positive opinion of depot medication. Five out of six studies comparing depot with oral medication showed patient preference for depot.

Conclusions High-quality data examining patient and nurse attitudes regarding depot antipsychotics are sparse. What data there are show a positive attitude to depots from patients. Future randomised controlled trials should include satisfaction as an outcome.


   INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHOD
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 APPENDIX: SEARCH STRATEGY
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Antipsychotic medication is fundamental to the effective management of schizophrenia, in terms of both acute treatment and relapse prevention. Long-acting depot antipsychotics, given every 1-6 weeks by intramuscular injection, were developed in the 1960s as an additional method of drug delivery aimed specifically to counter problems with treatment adherence in chronic sufferers (Simpson, 1984) and to simplify the medication process (Johnson, 1984; Barnes & Curson, 1994; Davis et al, 1994). A series of systematic reviews on the efficacy, effectiveness and safety of depot neuroleptic drugs in the treatment of schizophrenia has been published recently (Adams & Eisenbruch, 2000; Coutinho et al, 2000; Quraishi & David, 2000a, b, c, d, e; Quraishi et al, 2000), summarised in the accompanying article (see Adams et al, this issue). Here we review the published evidence on patient and staff satisfaction with depots. It is ironic that the very reasons why clinicians favour depot medication in certain circumstances are those that make this method of administration unpopular with some users. For example, Anderson et al (1989) reported that the depot clinic is perceived as being "out of date, not geared to the needs of the patient, inaccessible and unable to provide personalised care". Pereira & Pinto (1997) stated that "Consumer advocates concentrate on the undeniable adverse effects of antipsychotic drugs and upon the accusation that depot treatments involve an element of coercion". It is against this backdrop that the review was carried out.

Objective
The objective of the review was to explore patient and nurse satisfaction with depot antipsychotic medication. None of the studies included in the effectiveness reviews reported data that directly assessed patient satisfaction with the medication. Consequently, a wider review incorporating studies of mixed design and not restricted to randomised controlled trials (RCTs) was instituted. The specific aims were to investigate: patient satisfaction with depot antipsychotic medication; the patient preferred setting for the administration of depot antipsychotic medication; patient preference for depot antipsychotic medication or oral antipsychotic medication; and nurse satisfaction with depot antipsychotic medication.


   METHOD
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHOD
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 APPENDIX: SEARCH STRATEGY
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
A systematic search strategy was implemented. This involved searching the following electronic databases: Medline, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL and The Cochrane Library from 1966 up to the end of May 1999. The review used a subject and textword search strategy with DEPOT, DELAYED-ACTION PREPARATIONS, (INTRAMUSCULAR) INJECTIONS and ANTIPSYCHOTIC (AGENTS) and/or NEUROLEPTIC (DRUGS) as the main search terms. The databases were also searched using specific depot drug names in order to be as comprehensive as possible. These were combined with ‘satisfaction’, ‘attitude’ and related terms. Reference and library source searching plus hand-searches also were carried out (see Appendix).

Inclusion/exclusion criteria
Studies were included if they contained original data describing nurse or patient satisfaction (i.e. any opinion or attitude) towards depot antipsychotic medication according to the title or abstract. A second independent reviewer selected studies from a random 10% of the references to ensure that selection of studies was reliable. Where differences of opinion occurred, these were resolved by discussion.

Analysis
The quality of the articles was assessed in two stages. The first stage used a ‘hierarchy of evidence’. This is a method of categorising studies via the attributes of their design. It is a hierarchy of bias, which increases progressively downwards. We used an amalgamation of two hierarchies (University of York NHS Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, 1996; Greenhalgh, 1997) — essentially from RCTs, through non-randomised controlled trials, to cohort studies, to case-control studies, to case series, etc. The categorisation for each study was carried out by two of us (J.W., R.G.) independently and any disagreements were resolved by discussion.

The second stage comprised the assessment of the studies using a 13-item checklist constructed specifically for the review. The items for this checklist were derived from a number of sources (University of York NHS Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, 1996; Greenhalgh, 1997) and finalised by discussion between us. The checklist focused upon those variables most often highlighted in critical appraisal, namely, justification of sample size, sampling, response/drop-out rates, validity of measures and the generalisability of the results (see Tables 1 and 2).


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Table 1 Characteristics of included studies (study denoted by first author and year of publication)
 

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Table 2 Checklist results: quality of studies
 


   RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHOD
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 APPENDIX: SEARCH STRATEGY
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
The search strategy produced 1374 articles. Of these, 22 met the inclusion criteria for containing satisfaction data. Sixteen studies explored patient attitudes towards depot antipsychotic medication, four looked at the opinions of nurses and two investigated both. Eighteen studies were cross-sectional surveys, three were quasi-case-control studies and there was one RCT. The sample size of the studies ranged from 26 to 270 participants (median=73). The total number of patient participants was 2311. Various settings were used for the studies, including hospital-based depot clinics, outpatient clinics and general practitioner (GP) surgeries. Twenty studies used questionnaires or interviews specifically designed for the study, one adapted an existing measure and one applied an existing measure. The characteristics of the included studies and scales used are described in Table 1.

The quality of the studies was mixed. Their performance on the checklist (Table 2) and marks scored was in the range 1-10 out of a maximum of 13 (mean score=44%). Ten (48%) studies failed to score on eight of the items. The studies performed best for: ‘response rate specified’ (included by 90% of the studies) and ‘demographic details’ (67%). However, only one study included a sample size calculation, and, although 19 studies stated their response or drop-out rate, only four of these justified or explained these rates. Similarly, 16 studies did not attempt to show that their sample was in any way representative of the population they were aiming to investigate.

Ten of the twelve studies that included specific attitudinal or preferential data found that their patients held some positive views towards depot antipsychotic medication. One reported a neutral view and one a negative attitude (Table 3).


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Table 3 Patient satisfaction with depot antipsychotics
 

Four of the five studies investigating patient preference regarding treatment setting reported that the majority preferred to receive their medication at the depot clinic (a regular forum attached to a hospital or community centre where depots are administered), whereas Poole & Grimes (1998) found the preferred setting to be at home (Table 4). None of the studies found a majority of patients in favour of GP-based treatment. Indeed, this was the third least preferable option for all of the studies.


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Table 4 Patient preference for treatment setting
 

There were six studies that reported on a direct comparison of oral v. depot from the point of view of patient preference (Table 5). Five studies found that the majority of participants preferred to receive their medication via depot administration rather than in tablet form. Desai (1999), in an open non-randomised study comparing patients switched from depot to risperidone, found that 80% of their sample preferred oral medication.


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Table 5 Patient preference for depot v. oral antipsychotic (unless otherwise stated, patients are on depot antipsychotics)
 

Two studies investigated the importance given to particular side-effects. Buis (1992) asked patients to complete an amended version of the UKU side-effect rating scale (Lingjaerde et al, 1987), where objective criteria had been replaced by subjective criteria. They then formed a hierarchy of the side-effects that were most important or troublesome. The top five were: sleepiness, increased fatigability, weight gain, tension or inner unrest and concentration difficulties. Side-effects associated with movement were among the least important. Larsen & Gerlach (1996) reported that extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS) (apart from akathisia) were least reported by patients. However, 88% of patients who reported no side-effects had at least one EPS. Larsen & Gerlach (1996) also found that non-physical or ‘psychic’ side-effects (dullness/tiredness) were the most frequently reported. This is in contrast to the perception of the patients' physician, who focused mainly on EPS.

Nurse satisfaction
There were minimal data for nurse satisfaction with depot antipsychotics. No one paper focused specifically on the issue of nurse satisfaction with depot antipsychotics and all data included were embedded within articles looking at other topics. There were differences between the attitude of community psychiatric nurses (CPNs) and practice nurses. Bennett et al (1995) reported that, overall, the CPNs' attitude was favourable towards administering and monitoring medication, although 29% felt that it did not utilise their skills. However, Burns et al (1998) reported that two-thirds of practice nurses administered depots but most lacked confidence and training. Kendrick et al (1998) surveyed practice nurses by post and held a focus group to find that they felt unsupervised and that CPNs should be administering depots. Cantle (1997) surveyed 26 delegates (GPs and primary care nurses) at a training day for depot neuroleptics: 88% of the group stated that they would like more training. Warren (1998) carried out an audit of depot administration and reported that nurses wanted more training in medication and treating psychoses in general. Finally, only one of the five studies looking at patient preference for treatment setting investigated nurse opinion. Brooker et al (1996) asked clinic nurse managers of 135 depot clinics to rate their overall satisfaction (0=totally unsatisfactory, 8=excellent) with their clinic arrangements. The mean rating was 4.8, with 40% scoring below this figure.


   DISCUSSION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHOD
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 APPENDIX: SEARCH STRATEGY
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
There were few data in the literature concerned with patient satisfaction with depot antipsychotic medication, and even fewer investigating the attitudes of nurses. All were from the lower levels of the hierarchy of evidence. Although the cross-sectional survey is appropriate for investigating satisfaction, more complex longitudinal designs could be used to assess, for example, how attitudes may change over time.

Data quality
The favourable findings regarding depots in the majority of studies are in contrast to the negative popular perception of depot antipsychotic medication and the view put forward in the introduction (Anderson et al, 1989; Pereira & Pinto, 1997). However, the scarcity and mixed quality of the studies make generalisations problematic. First, no studies asked the same question to guage overall satisfaction, so amalgamating the responses may be inappropriate. Similarly, comparison between studies was difficult. Second, the higher quality studies tended to show less positive results, indicating a possible relationship between study quality and outcome, but because there are only two dissenters this cannot be concluded with confidence. Another more persuasive explanation for the findings is sample selection bias. The patients involved in the studies were, by definition, ‘attenders’ and ‘compliers’. People who attend depot clinics would be expected to be reasonably positive about depots, otherwise they would not attend. Data on non-attenders and non-compliance are, ipso facto, hard to obtain. The key factor is that the studies did not formally seek a sample that was representative of all those who were prescribed depot antipsychotic medication but took a convenience sample with all its associated pitfalls. Similarly, a non-selected group of patients on maintenance oral medication would include many who had been either on depots in the past or at least offered them and declined. The views of such patients on depots (presumably rather negative) would complete the picture, as well as perhaps offering insights into why such patients dislike depots (see Hoencamp et al, 1995). The most informative study would compare a population-based survey of all patients on maintenance treatment — depot and oral. Depot recipients are bound to have been given oral medication previously and many patients on oral medication also will have experience of depots. Hence, each could express a preference. Reasons for accepting/declining depots could be gathered systematically.

Preference for depots
Hoencamp et al (1995) did compare patients on oral and depot medication but could not obtain data regarding preference from those currently on oral medication. It was reported that 26 of the 93 patients on oral medication had been on depot medication previously but only two preferred depot medication. Nevertheless, the conclusion that can be drawn from this and similar studies is that the majority of patients on depot antipsychotic medication accept their medication, with approximately a quarter of patients in three of the studies not satisfied. Desai (1999) was the only study reporting that patients preferred oral medication to their current depot medication. However, this can be attributed to bias because the sample was composed of patients whose psychiatrists had considered that they would benefit from a switch from depot antipsychotic medication to risperidone, an oral atypical antipsychotic drug.

The results show that the majority of patients prefer to have their medication administered at a clinic organised for this purpose. This may be because of the social contact afforded by attending the clinic and ready access to health care professionals. These benefits would not follow from attendance at the GP surgery, where there would be few other relevant facilities on site. However, the bias described previously may also explain the preference for treatment setting. All five studies took their sample from patients receiving their medication at a depot clinic. None of the studies took a representative sample from patients of clinics, at home and at their GP surgery.

Reasons for preference
The evidence reviewed showed clear patient preference for depot antipsychotic medication over oral antipsychotic medication. Therefore, although evidence of clinical superiority may be elusive, we have found support for a ‘subjective superiority’ for depots. One possible explanation is convenience. Wistedt (1995) found that 67% of their sample thought it easier to have an injection than taking tablets once or twice daily. Hoencamp et al (1995) also found convenience to be an important factor, because 42% of those who preferred depots cited this as a reason why. In contradiction to the concerns regarding the loss of personal freedom, Jacobsson & Odling (1980) reported that 67% of their sample receiving antipsychotics via a depot did so because of the control they had over the timing and dosage of treatment.

The emphasis of patients on the ‘psychological’ side-effects described by Buis (1992) and Larsen & Gerlach (1996) and its discordance with the emphasis of health professionals (Larsen & Gerlach, 1996) highlights the need for a patient focus. Although the physical side-effects must be addressed for the patient's safety and satisfaction, the psychological aspects also need to be addressed to improve quality of life. The neglect of this dimension may lead to non-compliance.

Nurse satisfaction
There are few studies looking at the perception of nurses administering depot antipsychotic medication. We may conclude, nevertheless, that there is ambiguity as to the type of nurse who should administer depot antipsychotic medication and that more and better training should be given (see Burns et al, 1998; Kendrick et al, 1998).


   APPENDIX: SEARCH STRATEGY
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHOD
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 APPENDIX: SEARCH STRATEGY
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Database searching

  1. Medline, 1966—May 1999 (updated weekly): [(DEPOT$.mp/or exp Delayed-action preparations)/and (ANTIPSYCHOTIC$.mp/or exp antipsychotic agents or "NEUROLEPTIc$.MP)]
  2. PsycINFO, 1887—May 1999 (updated monthly): [(DEPOT$.mp/and (ANTIPSYCHOTIC$.mp/or "NEUROLEPTIC$.mp/or exp neuroleptic drugs)]
  3. CINAHL, 1993—April 1999 (updated monthly): [DEPOT$.mp/or exp injections, intramuscular)/and (ANTIPSYCHOTIC$.mp/or exp antipsychotic agents or "NEUROLEPTIC$.mp)]
  4. Embase, 1980—May 1999 (updated weekly): [DEPOT$.mp/and (ANTIPSYCHOTIC$.mp/or exp atypical antipsychotic agent/or NEUROLEPTIC$.mp/or exp neuroleptic agent)]
  5. The Cochrane Library (issue 4, 1999)

The above databases were also searched using specific depot drug names in order to make the search as comprehensive as possible (see text). These were combined with ‘satisfaction and related terms, as follows:

  1. Medline [(exp consumer satisfaction/or exp job satisfaction/or exp patient satisfaction/or exp personal satisfaction/or satisfaction.mp) or (exp attitude/or exp attitude of health personnel/or exp attitude to health/or attitude.mp)]
  2. PsycINFO [(exp satisfaction/or satisfaction.tw) or (exp adult attitudes/or exp attitudes/or exp drug use attitudes/or exp attitudes towards mental illness/or attitude$.tw)]
  3. CINAHL [(exp consumer satisfaction/or exp job satisfaction/or exp patient satisfaction/or exp personal satisfaction/or satisfaction.mp) or (exp attitude/or exp attitude of health personnel/or attitude to mental illness/or attitude$.mp)]
  4. Embase [(exp job satisfaction/or exp life satisfaction/or exp patient satisfaction/or exp satisfaction/or satisfaction.mp) or (exp patient attitude/exp nurse attitude/exp physician attitude/or attitude$.mp)]

Reference searching
The references of the included studies were inspected for further studies. Each of the included studies was sought as a citation on the SCISEARCH database. Reports of articles that had cited these studies were inspected in order to identify further trials.

Library source searching
The catalogues at the Institute of Psychiatry and the Royal College of Nursing were searched to obtain secondary sources:

  1. Depot and [antipsychotic or neuroleptic]
  2. Psychiatric Nursing and Depot

Hand-searching
The following journals were hand-searched for June, July and August 1999 to identify publications that may not have been entered on the databases yet:

  1. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica
  2. Journal of Mental Health
  3. British Journal of Psychiatry
  4. Schizophrenia Bulletin
  5. Psychiatric Bulletin


   Clinical Implications and Limitations
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHOD
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 APPENDIX: SEARCH STRATEGY
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS

LIMITATIONS


   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHOD
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 APPENDIX: SEARCH STRATEGY
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
The authors thank Dr Clive Adams for his expert assistance in carrying out the review.


   REFERENCES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 METHOD
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 APPENDIX: SEARCH STRATEGY
 Clinical Implications and...
 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 REFERENCES
 
Adams, C. E. & Eisenbruch, M. (2000) Depot fluphenazine for schizophrenia. Cochrane Library, issue 2. Oxford: Update Software.

Adams, C. E., Fenton, M. K. P., Quraishi, S., et al (2001) Systematic meta-review of depot antipsychotic drugs for people with schizophrenia. British Journal of Psychiatry, 179, 290 -299.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

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Burns, T., Millar, E., Garland, C., et al (1998) Randomised controlled trial of teaching practice nurses to carry out structured assessments of patients receiving depot antipsychotic injections. British Journal of General Practice, 48, 1845 -1848.[Medline]

Cantle, F. (1997) Management of depot neuroleptics. Practice Nursing, 8, 118-147.

Coutinho, E., Fenton, M. & Quraishi, S. (2000) Zuclopenthixol decanoate for schizophrenia and other serious mental illnesses. Cochrane Library, issue 2. Oxford: Update Software.

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Hoencamp, E., Knegtering, H., Kooy, J. J. S., et al (1995) Patient requests and attitude towards neuroleptics. Nordic Journal of Psychiatry, 49 (suppl. 35), 47 -55.

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Quraishi, S. & David, A. (2000a) Depot flupenthixol decanoate for schizophrenia or other similar psychotic disorders. Cochrane Library, issue 2. Oxford: Update Software.

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Received for publication September 6, 2000. Revision received February 5, 2001. Accepted for publication February 8, 2001.


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