Joseph M. Pierre, MD Health Sciences Clinical Professor Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Los Angeles, California
Disclosure The author reports no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this article, or with manufacturers of competing products.
Limitations of available medications. There is no perfect medication for the management of acute agitation. Evidence indicates that pharmacologic options take 15 minutes to several hours to resolve acute agitation, even potentially more rapid-acting medications such as midazolam and droperidol. This is well beyond most clinicians’ desired window for response time in a behavioral emergency. Multiple-medication “cocktails” may be used with the hope of hastening response time, but may not achieve this goal at the expense of increasing the risk of adverse effects and the likelihood that a patient will remain sedated for a prolonged time. In the real world, this often means that by the time a psychiatrist comes to evaluate a patient who has been given emergency medications, the patient cannot be aroused for an interview. Ideally, medications would calm an agitated patient rapidly, without excess or prolonged sedation.80 Less-sedating SGAs, such as ziprasidone, might have this potential, but can sometimes be perceived as ineffective.
Avoiding akathisia. Akathisia’s potential to worsen and be mistaken for agitation makes it an especially concerning, if underappreciated, adverse effect of haloperidol that is often not adequately assessed in clinical trials or practice. In light of evidence that akathisia can occur in nearly half of patients receiving a single 5 mg-dose of haloperidol, it is difficult to justify the use of this medication for agitation when equally effective options exist with a lower risk of EPS.
While haloperidol-induced akathisia could in theory be mitigated by adding anticholinergic medications or benzodiazepines, previous studies have found that such strategies have limited effectiveness compared to “gold standard” treatment with propranolol.28,81,82 Furthermore, the half-lives of anticholinergic medications, such as benztropine or diphenhydramine, are significantly shorter than that of a single dose of haloperidol, which can be as long as 37 hours.83 Therefore, akathisia and other EPS could emerge or worsen several hours or even days after receiving an IM haloperidol “cocktail” as the shorter-acting medications wear off. Akathisia is best minimized by avoiding FGAs, such as haloperidol, when treating acute agitation.
Promoting adherence.Although haloperidol is often recommended for acute agitation in patients with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder on the basis that it would treat the underlying condition, many patients who receive IM medications for acute agitation are already prescribed standing doses of oral medication, which increases the risk of cumulative toxicity. In addition, receiving a medication likely to cause acute EPS that is ranked near the bottom of patient preferences may erode the potential for a therapeutic alliance and hamper longer-term antipsychotic medication adherence.
Time for a change
For nearly half a century, haloperidol has been a “gold standard” intervention for IM control in patients with agitation. However, given its potential to produce adverse effects, including a significant risk of akathisia that can worsen agitation, along with the availability of newer pharmacologic options that are at least as effective (Table 1, and Table 2), haloperidol should be retired as a first-line medication for the treatment of agitation. Clinicians would benefit from RCTs investigating the safety and efficacy of novel interventions including frequently-used, but untested medication combinations, as well as nonpharmacologic interventions.