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BackgroundThe degree of physiological responses to individual antipsychotic drugs is unclear in children and adolescents.With network meta-analysis, we aimed to investigate the effects of various antipsychotic medications on physiological variables in children and adolescents with neuropsychiatric and neurodevelopmental conditions. MethodsFor this network meta-analysis, we searched Medline, EMBASE, PsycINFO, Web of Science, and Scopus from database inception until Dec 22, 2023, and included randomised controlled trials comparing antipsychotics with placebo in children or adolescents younger than 18 years with any neuropsychiatric and neurodevelopmental condition.Primary outcomes were mean change from baseline to end of acute treatment in bodyweight, BMI, fasting glucose, total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, prolactin, heart rate, systolic blood pressure (SBP), and QT interval corrected for heart rate (QTc) for patients receiving either active treatment or placebo.For multigroup trials reporting several doses, we calculated a summary value for each physiological variable for all doses.After transitivity assessment, we fitted frequentist random-effects network meta-analyses for all comparisons in the network.A Kilim plot was used to summarise the results for all treatments and outcomes, providing information regarding the strength of the statistical evidence of treatment effects, using p values.Network heterogeneity was assessed with τ, risk of bias of individual trials was assessed with the Cochrane Collaboration's Tool for Assessing Risk of Bias, and the credibility of findings from each network meta-analysis was assessed with the Confidence in Network Meta-Analysis (CINEMA) app.This study is registered on PROSPERO (CRD42021274393).Findings Of 6676 studies screened, 47 randomised controlled trials were included, which included 6500 children (mean age 13•29 years, SD 2•14) who received treatment for a median of 7 weeks (IQR 6-8) with either placebo (n=2134) or one of aripiprazole, asenapine, blonanserin, clozapine, haloperidol, lurasidone, molindone, olanzapine, paliperidone, pimozide, quetiapine, risperidone, or ziprasidone (n=4366).Mean differences for bodyweight change gain compared with placebo ranged from -2•00 kg (95% CI -3•61 to -0•39) with molindone to 5•60 kg (0•27 to 10•94) with haloperidol; BMI -0•70 kg/m² (-1•21 to -0•19) with molindone to 2•03 kg/m² (0•51 to 3•55) with quetiapine; total cholesterol -0•04 mmol/L (-0•39 to 0•31) with blonanserin to 0•35 mmol/L (0•17 to 0•53) with quetiapine; LDL cholesterol -0•12 mmol/L (-0•31 to 0•07) with risperidone or paliperidone to 0•17 mmol/L (-0•06 to 0•40) with olanzapine; HDL cholesterol 0•05 mmol/L (-0•19 to 0•30) with quetiapine to 0•48 mmol/L (0•18 to 0•78) with risperidone or paliperidone; triglycerides -0•03 mmol/L (-0•12 to 0•06) with lurasidone to 0•29 mmol/L (0•14 to 0•44) with olanzapine; fasting glucose from -0•09 mmol/L (-1•45 to 1•28) with blonanserin to 0•74 mmol/L (0•04 to 1•43) with quetiapine; prolactin from -2•83 ng/mL (-8•42 to 2•75) with aripiprazole to 26•40 ng/mL (21•13 to 31•67) with risperidone or paliperidone; heart rate from -0•20 bpm (-8•11 to 7•71) with ziprasidone to 12•42 bpm (3•83 to 21•01) with quetiapine; SBP from -3•40 mm Hg (-6•25 to -0•55) with ziprasidone to 10•04 mm Hg (5•56 to 14•51) with quetiapine; QTc from -0•61 ms (-1•47 to 0•26) with pimozide to 0•30 ms (-0•05 to 0•65) with ziprasidone.Interpretation Children and adolescents show varied but clinically significant physiological responses to individual antipsychotic drugs.Treatment guidelines for children and adolescents with a range of neuropsychiatric and neurodevelopmental conditions should be updated to reflect each antipsychotic drug's distinct profile for associated metabolic changes, alterations in prolactin, and haemodynamic alterations.
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Maria Rogdaki
King's College London
Robert A. McCutcheon
Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust
Enrico D’Ambrosio
The King's College
The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health
University of Oxford
University College London
Imperial College London
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Rogdaki et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e64544b6db6435875d7258 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/s2352-4642(24)00098-1