Metformin, a biguanide drug, is emerging as an important treatment option for the prevention or treatment of weight gain, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and the metabolic syndrome in psychiatric patients, especially those who require or receive antipsychotic drugs. Metformin treatment is commonly associated with gastrointestinal adverse effects; the risk of these is reduced by gradual dose uptitration, administration of the drug with meals, and use of a time-release formulation. Lactic acidosis, a potentially fatal complication of biguanide therapy, is very rare with metformin; the risk can be reduced by avoidance of its prescription in patients with impaired renal function, impaired liver function, cardiac failure, and certain other conditions. Long-term metformin use is associated with decreased Vitamin B12 levels, and even with biochemical B12 deficiency; this complication can detected early by annual assessments of serum B12 levels and prevented by annual intramuscular B12 administration.
CITATION STYLE
Andrade, C. (2016). Use of metformin for cardiometabolic risks in psychiatric practice: Need-to-know safety issues. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 77(11), e1491–e1494. https://doi.org/10.4088/JCP.16f11263
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