• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • About
    • About Us
    • Founding Team
  • Blog
  • Drug Search
  • Zones
    • Suicide
    • Violence
    • Sex and Relationships
    • Hair
    • Skin and Nails
    • Withdrawal
    • Vision
    • Fertility
  • Research Fund
  • Tools
    • Healthcare Record Pro Forma
    • Starting a Medication
    • Guides & Papers
    • Too Many Medications?
    • Complex Withdrawal
    • Videos
    • Reducing the Risk of Treatment Induced Suicide
  • PSSD
    • Post-SSRI Sexual Dysfunction (PSSD)
    • PSSD Doctors
    • PSSD Literature
    • PSSD in the Media
    • RxISK Prize
    • Research Forum for Enduring Sexual Dysfunction
  • Side Effect?
RxISK Logo

RxISK

Making Medicines Safer for All of Us

RxISK’s SoS Zone: Symptoms on Stopping

April 17, 2013 4 Comments

Stop sign

[Note: The current version of the Withdrawal Zone works differently than described below.]

Birth of the SoS zone

Backed into a corner by Panorama’s Shelley Jofre in 2003, GSK’s Alastair Benbow was faced with an accusation that GSK’s Paxil – Seroxat was addictive. No it’s not he said. He had a snag though, he couldn’t use the words withdrawal or dependence, as to most people these sound like addiction words. Around 1995, the SSRI companies spent millions trying to rewrite the English language getting doctors to stop using “withdrawal” and to start using “discontinuation” instead.

But soon after discontinuation was coined, Lilly launched an attack on GSK, saying Paxil-Seroxat was bad for discontinuation problems. Discontinuation began to develop its own unsavory odor. So for a few reasons Alastair couldn’t used discontinuation. Whether it was a flash of inspiration or blind panic, he reached for the closest lifeline – people can have Symptoms on Stopping, he said. And so RxISK’s SoS Zone was born.

SoS problems happen on a range of drugs from treatments for gastritis and heartburn to beta-blockers for hypertension or antidepressants and SoS after many of these drugs can be far worse than the abuse problems linked to opiates, speed or other drugs of abuse. The SSRIs and antipsychotics may be the worst drugs there are in terms of the long-term consequences with the benzodiazepines not far behind, but a host of other drugs cause problems from the PPIs used for gastric problems and heartburn to osteoporosis drugs, dopamine agonists and others.

The table below drawn from the FDA data on RxISK will be a surprise to many. But even this is not complete. There are unquestionably other drugs that cause problems. Few people on PPIs, contraceptives or other drugs realise they might have serious SoS – they tend to think or may be told that any problems stem from their underlying illness.

In terms of handling the problems Symptoms on Stopping throw up, there are a series of papers on RxISK that offer help. These are Dependence and Withdrawal, Stopping Antidepressants and Medicine Induced Stress Syndromes. We will need help from readers to broaden these out to cover all drugs.

We also need to get as many as possible report SoS problems to us even if its less than clear whether the problem links to medication or the illness. The SoS Zone comes with a terminator algorithm that can help you in cooperation with your pharmacist, nurse or doctor work out whether the problem you are having is likely to stem from your treatment or your illness.

Drug GroupSoSAbuseAddictionDependenceIntoxication
Anticonvulsants2,3607498346842,611
Anti-Clotting Drugs201192209143584
Antipsychotics1,8499017275055,411
Benzodiazepines1,9852,5751,7621,1972,751
Benzo – Z Hypnotics382434439298451
Cardiovascular Ds2453922171202,125
Dopamine Agonists135165158143344
Gastric – H2 Blockers1839544069
Gastric – PPIs193447562415
HRT & Contraception309333426588
Monoclonal Antibodies17786122105953
Opiates4,8307,4608,3234,6792,861
Osteoporosis Ds299276244249981
Statins118464135493
Steroids1815310597856
SSRI & SNRIs17,5152,4072,9342,4095,171

Profiling the data

The data in this table intrigue and fascinate. Over the next few weeks we will present tables with each of these drug groups in turn so you can see how your particular drug compares with other drugs in the same group. Quite aside from the drugs in each of these tables you will be able to look up other treatments for your condition and see how they compare.

As might be expected, addictive and abuse behaviors are found more with opiates than any other drugs but the benzodiazepines and antidepressants are not far behind.

Drunken or intoxicated behavior is a well known feature of steroid treatment but the table shows it also happening on anticonvulsants and antipychotics.

The oral contraceptives are well-known to cause rebound difficulties from severe skin problems to depression, and these show up here. But equally there are almost as many SoS reports on drugs for osteoporosis as well as on PPIs like esomeprazole or lansoprazole. The PPIs are not well known as causing withdrawal and osteoporosis drugs even less so. The osteoporosis drugs show up as dark horses with a substantial rate of reporting of abuse and addiction.

One of the most interesting groups here are the Biologicals or Monoclonal Antibodies, a drug group that includes well know drugs like Humira, Tysabri, Lucentis and Enbrel. These are the most expensive drugs in medicine and possibly the most lethal. They are expensive because their use was supposedly going to be restricted to relatively rare serious disease states but they are increasingly being promoted for minor conditions with young men being asked by Abbott, the makers of Humira, to consider if their backache might be ankylosing spondylitis. Against this background, this rate of SoS and intoxication problems suggests this is a drug group to watch.

Over the next few weeks we will break out the data on individual drugs starting with the dopamine agonists, next week. The dopamine agonists as can be seen here are linked to reports of abuse, addiction, and dependence as might be expected of drugs that are closely related to Crystal Meth. But what is striking as well are the number of reports of withdrawal or discontinuation problems – there is an increasingly well defined DAWS or Dopamine Agonist Withdrawal Syndrome.

Some health warnings

  1. The presence of a 0 in some later tables means the drug is not available in the US but is in Europe or elsewhere.
  2. The data on the benzodiazepines is short-changed at the moment; it will be updated as we load more drugs into the mix.
  3. We have missed Clozapine in the antipsychotic group. This has some of the most serious withdrawal problems in medicine.
  4. The lower rate of problems for older drugs in all groups in the tables that follow is misleading. These data do not go back before 2004.

Filed Under: Withdrawal

Are you experiencing a drug side effect?

Get your free RxISK Report to find out

 

Subscribe to our mailing list
Get notified when we publish a new blog post.
By subscribing, you agree with our privacy policy and our terms of service.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Fid says

    April 18, 2013 at 1:40 am

    It was Benbow who came to me in my sleep one night and gave me the title of my book 🙂

    Reply
  2. annie says

    April 18, 2013 at 10:38 am

    It was Shelley Jofre who came to me on my tv one night and gave me the title of my crook

    Reply
  3. Anne-Marie says

    April 20, 2013 at 7:09 am

    It was James Blunt that gave me my title “out of my mind” he seemed to be the only one to me at the time who understood what it was like to be “out of your mind” better than any doctor.

    Reply
  4. Claudius says

    April 20, 2013 at 5:22 pm

    THat name “Alastair Benbow” still gives me the creeps. He was reponsible for the safety of Paxil/Seroxat and dismissed any complaints about excruciating withdrawal as early as 2002.
    One addition to the leaflet about the urge to use the 5-10% reduction rule could have saved me and many others from a years-long hell of stopping attempts, reinstatements and now an alreay more than 5 years lasting disability due to protracted withdrawal syndrome.
    Thank you mr. Benbow!
    All respect for mr. Healy.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Withdrawal Syndromes: Lost in Translation
  • Over-Diagnosing or Under-Diagnosing
  • The Future of Health App-ointments
  • Repairing Ruptures in Clinical Care
  • Restoring the Magic to Healthcare

Blog Categories

Footer

Contact

Media Contact

Terms | Privacy

Follow us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Search

Copyright © 2025 · Data Based Medicine Global Ltd.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok