DiscoverBJGP InterviewsRisk of postural hypotension associated with antidepressants in older adults – what to think about when prescribing
Risk of postural hypotension associated with antidepressants in older adults – what to think about when prescribing

Risk of postural hypotension associated with antidepressants in older adults – what to think about when prescribing

Update: 2025-06-10
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Today, we’re speaking to Dr Cini Bhanu, GP and Academic Clinical Lecturer in the Primary Care and Population Health Department at University College London. 

Title of paper: Antidepressants and risk of postural hypotension: a self-controlled case series study in UK primary care

Available at: https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2024.0429

Antidepressants are associated with postural hypotension (PH). This is not widely recognised in general practice, where antihypertensives are considered the worst culprits. The present study examined >21 000 older adults and found a striking increased risk of PH with use of all antidepressants (over a four- fold risk with SSRIs) in the first 28 days of initiation. 


Transcript

This transcript was generated using AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Please be aware it may contain errors or omissions.


Speaker A

00:00:00 .480 - 00:00:56 .990

Hello and welcome to BJGP Interviews. My name is Nada Khan and I'm one of the associate editors of the bjgp. Thanks for listening to this podcast today.


In today's episode, we're speaking to Dr. Cini Banu, who is a GP in an academic clinical lecturer based in the Department of Primary Care and Population Health at University College London.


We're here to talk about her recent paper in the BJGP titled Antidepressants and Risk of Postural Hypertension, A Self Controlled Case Series Study in UK Primary Care. So, hi Cinny, it's really nice to meet you today.


I guess this is an interesting area to cover, especially as the prescribing rates for some antidepressant medications are increasing.


But I don't know what your feeling is, but I'm not sure if many GPs would actually know that antidepressants are associated with poison postural hypertension. So, yeah, talk us through that.


Speaker B

00:00:57 .310 - 00:01:18 .350

Yeah, so I think that's one of the reasons this study is so important.


So definitely from conversations that I've had with gps that I work with and it's not commonly recognized that postural hypotension is associated with antidepressants, though it is by geriatricians, for example, where it's very.


Speaker A

00:01:18 .350 - 00:01:41 .850

Well recognized and in this study used a big database to look at the risk of new postural hypertension associated with the use of antidepressants in people aged over 60.


I guess there's quite a lot of in depth stuff in the methods, but I guess just for a summary for people who are interested in what you did, do you mind just sort of going over it at sort of like a high level?


Speaker B

00:01:41 .850 - 00:02:54 .200

Yeah, yeah. So we looked at a big database, what we call a routine primary care database called imrd.


And essentially this captures data from software that gps use like EMIS and Vision System and captures a whole load of information like problems, symptoms and prescriptions. So we went into this database and identified everyone over the age of 60 that might be eligible during our study period.


And for this we looked at people that were contributing at least one full year of data between 2010 and 2018. And then within that we identified people with a first diagnosis of postural hypotension.


And then again we made subgroups according to people who had this diagnosis but also had a first prescription of a new antidepressant during that time.


And what we were interested in, and the methodology is called a self controlled case series, we weren't interested in who got postural Hypotension, because everyone was a case, but rather when that diagnosis happened in relation to antidepressant exposure.


Speaker A

00:02:55 .230 - 00:03:07 .310

And we'll talk about those different time points in a bit, but I wonder if you could just talk us through why that focus on people aged over 60 and why this is so important, especially in that age group.


Speaker B

00:03:07 .710 - 00:04:22 .710

Yes, so two big reasons.


So, postural hypotension is very, very common in people aged over 60 and we know that it affects around a third of people living out in the community. It's largely under recognized and under detected by gps and in prim care.


And postural hypotension in older adults has significant risk of adverse complications and long term effects, including risk of being admitted to hospital, falls, fractures, but also later down the line it increases your risk of stroke and cognitive decline. So it's a really important common diagnosis. We're probably not managing as well as we can in primary care.


Second is that antidepressants are actually used quite commonly in this group of patients.


So we know that for people with late life depression, they're more likely to be given an antidepressant treatment for their depression rather than another therapy. So over 80% of people with depression in this age group are given an anti, are prescribed an antidepressant.


So there's very high risk with both the exposure and the outcome.


Speaker A

00:04:23 .510 - 00:04:50 .610

And I guess this comes back to the fact that, yes, a lot of GPs might not know about this as a risk. So it's really important that you've done this research.


And so you looked at these different time points of people after starting their antidepressants and risk of postural hypertension. But talk us through what you found here.


So in people who were taking one of the most commonly prescribed antidepressant classes, SSRIs, what did you find here about the risks?


Speaker B

00:04:50 .770 - 00:06:05 .480

Yeah, so we actually found some really interesting time variable trends with the risk of postural hypotension associated with ssri. So we looked at two specific time periods.


And that was initiating the drug, which was between a short period, days 1 to 28, and then days 29 to 56, which we treated as initiation, and then a continuation period, day 57 onwards.


And what we've seen in SSRIs, but also all of the antidepressant drugs, is this peak in your risk of developing a new diagnosis of postural hypotension within that acute day 1 to 28 period.


And so that was mimicked across SSRIs, tricyclic antidepressants and the other antidepressant group for SSRIs in particular, we noticed a fourfold increase in that day 1 to 28 peak that gradually declined as time went on.


And tricyclic antidepressants and other antidepressants had a similarly increased peak, not to the same extent, but about twofold that declined with time.


Speaker A

00:06:05 .960 - 00:06:17 .240

And we know that tricyclic drugs are often prescribed for other things as well, like pain. So do we need to be careful when prescribing it at lower doses for things like neuropathic pain?


Speaker B

00:06:17 .240 - 00:06:51 .460

We didn't look into dosing, but it's certainly likely that the majority of these prescriptions were prescribed in low doses for other indications, like neuropathic pain, as you. You've said, and insomnia. And we've already seen a twofold increased risk in that acute initiation period, likely for low doses.


So there is certainly a risk to be aware of in older patients that we're prescribing tricyclic antidepressants to. And it's likely that as the dose increases, that this risk increases.


Speaker A

00:06:51 .620 - 00:07:04 .400

And I think one thing that's really important here is that the effect sizes are actually pretty significant. So this could represent a fairly significant risk for patients, especially in that initial peak time that you mentioned.


Speaker B

00:07:04 .960 - 00:07:38 .380

Absolutely, yes.


And I think there's certainly a striking risk associated with SSRIs in this group, and a lot of it depends on the context of the person you're prescribing this medication to.


So whilst we know there's a fourfold increased risk in this study, you may be more cautious with someone who is at greater risk of postural hypotension at their baseline anyway, either related to advancing age or other chronic conditions like diabetes or Parkinson's, for example.


Speaker A

00:07:38 .700 - 00:07:53 .740

And I think what's really interesting is you point out in the paper that actually postural hypertension isn't highlighted as a common side effect in the BNF for these drugs. So it seems with such a significant effect that probably that's something that should be highlighted.


Speaker B

00:07:54 .300 - 00:08:19 .640

Yes, that's something I think is really, really important.


So you'll often see hypotension cited as a side, but they are quite different and the assessment is different and how you might manage it would be different too. So I think it's definitely really important that that increased risk of postural changes in blood pressure is documented for these medications.


Speaker A

00:08:20 .760 - 00:08:46 .019

I think it's interesting because often when people start these medications, they might have an early review with a GP about how they're getting on with it. And often that that initial review really focuses

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Risk of postural hypotension associated with antidepressants in older adults – what to think about when prescribing

Risk of postural hypotension associated with antidepressants in older adults – what to think about when prescribing