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John I. Nurnberger Jr.

1 paper in the library · 25 citations · publishing 2021

Papers

Effects of somatic treatments on suicidal ideation and completed suicides

Brain and Behavior November 25, 2021 Elise M Hawkins, William Coryell, Stephen Leung et al. 25 citations

Lithium and clozapine are the only two somatic treatments with high-quality evidence of reducing suicide risk, in mood disorders and schizophrenia respectively; stopping lithium increases that risk. Ketamine and esketamine may offer a small, immediate antisuicide effect, though a disproportionate number of suicides occurred in esketamine-treated subjects versus placebo (3 vs. 0 among over 3500 subjects), requiring ongoing evaluation. The evidence for electroconvulsive therapy's antisuicide effect is low-quality. Antidepressants' effect is unclear: direct evidence shows they may increase suicidal ideation and risk in young people over the short term, while indirect evidence suggests they reduce risk over the long term. Clinicians have an expanding pharmacopeia, but some agents may also increase suicidality under specific circumstances.