Establishing if a person needs to switch their antidepressant

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Prior response, side-effects, new contraindications, and current depression symptoms may require switching antidepressants. When it is, establish shared goals.

Discuss issues and experiences

You should adopt a shared approach from the beginning in establishing whether a person might benefit from switching their antidepressant for the treatment of depression. Discuss existing issues and experiences, and how medicines fit in with a typical day. Points to consider include the following:

Inadequate response

Discuss with the person and/or their carer whether their current antidepressant is effective after they have adhered to a therapeutic dose, for an appropriate duration.

Side-effects

Discuss with the person and/or their carer any side-effects they have experienced (such as weight gain or reduced libido). Abrupt withdrawal should be avoided unless the person experiences a serious side-effect.

New contraindications and interactions

People may develop a new contraindication to their existing antidepressant or they may start a new medication that interacts with their existing antidepressant. Establish whether this is the case.

Current symptoms

Establish current symptoms and review the diagnosis, particularly where treatment has failed previously. Consider using an evidence-based tool, such as PHQ-9 (Patient Health Questionnaire-9), HADS (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale) or BDI-II (Beck Depression Inventory-II) to assess. It can be unsafe for some people to remain untreated for extended periods of time.

Agree goals

Use a shared decision making approach to agree the purpose of the switch with the person being treated for depression and what will be achieved from it.

Share decisions

Discuss with the person and/or their carer the purpose of the switch and what you’re trying to achieve. Consider:

  • what matters to them
  • any concerns they have
  • the extent of the side-effects they could tolerate
  • whether a trial period without an antidepressant might be useful

Establish treatment options

Refer to the NICE guidance on depression in adults: treatment and management to establish where the person being treated for depression is on the treatment pathway and what additional or alternative treatment options are available.

Choosing a new medicine, planning the switch, and monitoring

After you’ve agreed that a switch is necessary, you’ll need to choose a medicine to switch to, and then agree a strategy and monitoring approach.

Considerations when choosing an alternative antidepressant

Consider the risks associated with switching an antidepressant for depression, the patient's individual circumstances and when to seek specialist advice.

Planning and agreeing an antidepressant switching strategy

Guidance on planning and implementing the antidepressant switch after the need and choice of antidepressant have been decided.

Monitoring a person during and after antidepressant switching

Review people at appropriate time points; advise on what to expect and report; and beware of the possibility of withdrawal symptoms and serotonin syndrome.

Individual switches

We have advice on how to switch between individual antidepressants of different types. Browse our collection below.

Update history

  1. Added section on establish treatment options.
  1. Published

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