Editor, – The editorial 'Suicide and antidepressants in children' (Aust Prescr 2005;28:110-11) is potentially misleading. It stated that there was a 'small but significant increase in suicide risk'. This is not so.
Analysis of the UK General Practice Research Database found no suicides among the 6976 people aged 10-19 years who had been prescribed one of two selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) or two tricyclic antidepressants between 1993 and 1999; however, 15 people in that age group who died by suicide had not received an antidepressant.1 Similarly, a toxicological review of 14 857 suicides between 1992 and 2000 in Sweden detected no SSRIs in the 52 suicides under 15 years of age. In the 15-19 years age group those taking SSRIs had a lower relative risk of dying by suicide than those taking other antidepressants.2
Clinicians with responsibility for children and adolescents can be reassured by these data, and by the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and the American Psychiatric Association guidelines3 which have been endorsed by over a dozen United States organisations comprising a 'national coalition of concerned parents, providers, and professional associations'. Similar guidance has been provided by the Australian/Australasian Colleges of General Practitioners, Physicians and Psychiatrists.4
In view of the strong association between child and adolescent mood disorders and suicide,5 it does not appear prudent to withhold antidepressant medication in young people with severe depression if non-pharmacological measures are ineffective.
Robert D. Goldney
Professor of Psychiatry, University of Adelaide
Adelaide
Professor Goldney has received honoraria and research grants from a number of pharmaceutical companies for presentations and research on depression.