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Benzodiazepine and Z-hypnotic stewardship

The Journal of Family Practice. 2022 April;71(3):103-107 | doi: 10.12788/jfp.0381
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These agents are not first-line treatments for many of the conditions for which they are used. When they are used, there should be a plan in place for deprescribing.

PRACTICE RECOMMENDATIONS

› Recommend cognitive behavioral therapy as first-line treatment for anxiety and insomnia. A

› Limit benzodiazepine prescribing to ≤ 2 to 4 weeks for anxiety and insomnia. B

› Taper benzodiazepines slowly and flexibly. A

Strength of recommendation (SOR)

A Good-quality patient-oriented evidence
B Inconsistent or limited-quality patient-oriented evidence
C Consensus, usual practice, opinion, disease-oriented evidence, case series

Risks with benzodiazepine receptor agonists

Harms from BZRA use are common, tempering their utility. Sedation, dyscognition, and psychomotor impairments are often seen upon initiation of BZRA use. These adverse effects can—although not always—improve with continuous BZRA exposure, an effect known as tolerance, which is due to neuropharmacologic adaptation. 

Cognitive issues include problems with memory, judgment, and decision making. These may be unrecognized or, if noted, attributed to other issues such as aging, and may become clear only when BZRAs are discontinued. Anterograde amnesia and parasomnias occur less often.

Psychomotor impairment can result in falls, fractures, and other injuries, especially in the elderly. Decrements in mood, including emergent depression and paradoxical anxiety, can occur. Some individuals experience disinhibition that is expressed through irritability, agitation, aggression, and violence.

Misuse of BZRAs is not unusual and can be related to dosing errors or attempts to ease intrusive symptoms. Nonmedical use almost always occurs in the context of an underlying use disorder, whereby BZRAs serve to amplify euphoria or ameliorate withdrawal from opioids or alcohol. Addiction per se, which entails BZRA craving and compulsive use leading to adverse consequences, is unusual.

BZRAs are associated with increased mortality, including all-cause mortality and suicide. They are respiratory depressants, although when taken alone in excess rarely result in death. They are, however, strongly implicated in opioid-related overdose fatalities, as their presence has been identified in 1 of 3 such decedents.27

Continue to: Physiologic dependence with BZRAs