- Psychotropic Drug Use in Very Young Children
- Joseph T. Coyle, MD
- The Journal of American Medical Association
- February 23, 2000 - Vol. 283 No. 8
-
- The study by Zito and colleagues1 in this issue of THE JOURNAL on the use
of psychotropic medications in very young children in 2 Medicaid programs
and a managed care organization suggests that 1% to 1.5% of all children 2
to 4 years old enrolled in these programs currently are receiving
stimulants, antidepressants, or antipsychotic medications. The authors also
report that the prevalence of neuropsychopharmacologic interventions in this
age group increased substantially during the last decade.
-
- This reported increased use of psychotropic drugs in very young children
raises important questions. Are the findings aberrant? Are they consistent
with evidence-based medicine? Is there a reason to be concerned about this
new prescribing pattern?
-
- Several recent studies provide additional evidence that the prescription
of psychotropic drugs to very young children has increased during the last
decade. In a review of information from the Intercontinental Medical
Statistics Study, Minde2 described a 3-fold increase in methylphenidate
- prescriptions in Canada and a 10-fold increase in the prescription of
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors in the United States for children 5
years old and younger between 1993 and 1997. This article also summarized
findings from Strasbourg, France, showing that 12% of children beginning
- school were receiving psychotropic medications, primarily phenothiazines,
and that 76% of these commenced treatment by their fourth year of life. In
an analysis of Michigan Medicaid claims, Rappley et al3 identified 223
children aged 3 years or younger who received the diagnosis of
attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, the majority of whom had
significant comorbid conditions. While only a quarter of these children
received psychological services, nearly 60% received psychotropic
medications, and almost half of these were prescribed 2 or more psychotropic
- medications. Thus, the findings of Zito et al1 and Rappley et al3 appear
to identify an important change in psychotropic drug prescribing practices
for very young children. As 3 of the 4 data sets are derived from Medicaid
populations, the findings suggest that poor children are experiencing these
- changes in drug prescribing practices, but additional investigation in
other populations is required.
-
- It should be emphasized that most of the drugs prescribed involve
off-label use because efficacy of psychotropic drugs has not been
demonstrated in very young children. As noted by Greenhill, 4
methylphenidate, the most commonly prescribed drug in these studies, carries
a warning against its use in children younger than 6 years. Furthermore, the
validity and reliability of the diagnoses of attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder, mood disorders, and schizophrenia in very young children have not
been demonstrated. To ascertain whether the prescribing practices documented
by these recent reports represent informed practice, I surveyed the
editorial board (48 physicians) of the Journal of Child and Adolescent
Psychopharmacology by facsimile about their prescribing of stimulants,
clonidine, antidepressants, and antipsychotics for 2- to 4-year-old children
(unpublished data, November 24, 1999). The board consists of expert
clinicians and clinical researchers who are likely to treat the most
difficult cases. Seventy-two percent of the physician board members
responded. Most (28 of 35) reported either no use or very rare prescribing
of these medications in this age group, and only 3 reported prescribing
clonidine on rare occasions. The few positive responses generally were
associated with the description of use of these drugs for severe,
intractable cases such as the management of children with severe
self-injurious behavior. The rarity of the use of psychotropic medications
in very young children reported by experts in pediatric psychopharmacology
suggests that they are much more reticent than the physicians treating the
children in these studies.
-
- Since there is virtually no clinical research on the consequences of
pharmacologic treatment of behavioral disturbances of very young children,
is there a basis for concern about these prescribing practices? Early
childhood is a time of tremendous change for the human brain. Visual
processing, language, and motor skills are acquired during this sensitive
period. 5 The cortical synaptic density reaches its maximum at the age of 3
years and is substantially modified by pruning during the next 7 years.6 At
the same time, the cerebral metabolic rate peaks between 3 and 4 years of
age.7
-
- Studies in experimental animals indicate that the aminergic systems that
are the target of action of these psychotropic medications play an important
role in neurogenesis, neuron migration, axonal outgrowth, and
synaptogenesis.8 In this regard, it has been shown that depletion of
serotonin in the preweanling rat results in a persistent decrease in
cortical synaptic density and in memory deficits in adulthood.9 Perinatal
treatment of rats with an antipsychotic drug results in a long-standing
abnormality in dopamine receptor function and altered levels of dopamine and
norepinephrine in adulthood.10 Thus, it would seem prudent to carry out much
more extensive studies to determine the long-term consequences of the use of
psychotropic drugs at this early stage of childhood.
-
- Given that there is no empirical evidence to support psychotropic drug
treatment in very young children and that there are valid concerns that such
treatment could have deleterious effects on the developing brain, the
reasons for these troubling changes in practice need to be identified.
Unfortunately, the study by Zito et al1 does not provide the diagnoses of
the children or the professional identities or specialties of the
prescribers, which could shed some light on the reason for these prescribing
patterns. One possible contributing factor is the way mental health services
are provided to children. For example, many state Medicaid programs now
provide quite limited reimbursement for the evaluation of behavioral
disorders in children and preclude more than 1 type of clinical evaluator
per day. Thus, the multidisciplinary clinics of the past that brought
together pediatric, psychiatric, behavioral, and family dynamic expertise
for difficult cases have largely ceased to exist. As a consequence, it
appears that behaviorally disturbed children are now increasingly subjected
to quick and inexpensive pharmacologic fixes as opposed to informed,
multimodal therapy associated with optimal outcomes.11 These disturbing
prescription practices suggest a growing crisis in mental health services to
children and demand more thorough investigation.
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