Abstract
Purpose
Glioma patients often suffer from psychiatric and neurological conditions. However, little is known about the patterns of use of psychotropic drugs pre- and post-glioma diagnosis. Therefore, we assessed temporal patterns of psychotropic prescriptions among glioma patients, compared to an age and sex matched comparison cohort in four European countries.
Methods
Incident gliomas were identified in Wales from the Secured Anonymized Information Linkage Databank (2005–2016) and population-based registries in Denmark (2001–2016), Norway (2006–2019), and Sweden (2008–2018). From each data source, a cancer-free comparison cohort was matched to the glioma cases by age and sex. We calculated rates of new psychotropic prescriptions and any psychotropic prescriptions during the 2 years prior to and post glioma diagnosis. Analyses were stratified by histological subtypes and subclasses of psychotropic medications.
Results
We identified 16,007 glioma patients. The rate of new psychotropic drug use increased from 7 months before diagnosis, peaking around the month of glioma diagnosis (with peak rates ranging from 227 to 753 new psychotropic drugs per 1000 person-months). New use remained substantially higher among glioma patients than comparators throughout the 2-year follow-up period after glioma diagnosis, though rates of new use continued to decline throughout. New use was largely driven by antiepileptics, anxiolytics, hypnotics, and sedatives. Patterns were similar when analyses were stratified by histological subtype.
Conclusion
Psychotropic drug use among glioma patients was high, and elevations observed around the time of cancer diagnosis, largely driven by antiepileptics, anxiolytics, hypnotics, and sedatives, are likely associated with the consequences of the disease.
Glioma patients often suffer from psychiatric and neurological conditions. However, little is known about the patterns of use of psychotropic drugs pre- and post-glioma diagnosis. Therefore, we assessed temporal patterns of psychotropic prescriptions among glioma patients, compared to an age and sex matched comparison cohort in four European countries.
Methods
Incident gliomas were identified in Wales from the Secured Anonymized Information Linkage Databank (2005–2016) and population-based registries in Denmark (2001–2016), Norway (2006–2019), and Sweden (2008–2018). From each data source, a cancer-free comparison cohort was matched to the glioma cases by age and sex. We calculated rates of new psychotropic prescriptions and any psychotropic prescriptions during the 2 years prior to and post glioma diagnosis. Analyses were stratified by histological subtypes and subclasses of psychotropic medications.
Results
We identified 16,007 glioma patients. The rate of new psychotropic drug use increased from 7 months before diagnosis, peaking around the month of glioma diagnosis (with peak rates ranging from 227 to 753 new psychotropic drugs per 1000 person-months). New use remained substantially higher among glioma patients than comparators throughout the 2-year follow-up period after glioma diagnosis, though rates of new use continued to decline throughout. New use was largely driven by antiepileptics, anxiolytics, hypnotics, and sedatives. Patterns were similar when analyses were stratified by histological subtype.
Conclusion
Psychotropic drug use among glioma patients was high, and elevations observed around the time of cancer diagnosis, largely driven by antiepileptics, anxiolytics, hypnotics, and sedatives, are likely associated with the consequences of the disease.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 383-395 |
| Number of pages | 13 |
| Journal | Journal of Neuro-Oncology |
| Volume | 173 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| Early online date | 10 Apr 2025 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Jun 2025 |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being
Keywords
- psychotropic medications
- psychotropic
- glioma patients
- Denmark
- brain tumor
- anticonvulsants
- glioma
- hypnotics
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