Microsoft word - recovery -schizophrenia - bipolar.doc
Is There a Psychopharmacology of Recovery from Schizophrenia? Medical parallel: treatment of complicated medical illness such as cancer requires clinician to be good strategist and good technician; same applies to complicated psychiatric illness such as schizophrenia Current challenges in treating severe mental illness: cure unlikely for most patients; -more medication choices than ever, -more chances to “get it right” -more chances to “get it wrong”; -controversy about degree to which newer medications can improve outcome; -newer antipsychotic medications still have burden of side effects different from that of older antipsychotics (eg, newer antipsychotics have reduced neurologic burden but increased metabolic burden) Treatment models in schizophrenia: -phase-of-illness model goal of keeping patient stable and avoiding relapse; -hierarchical model, -treatment progresses in linear fashion, from stabilizing patient to reducing burden of treatment and/or burden of disease to recovery (no consensus on what constitutes
recovery in schizophrenia; clinician, patient and family, and insurance company have differing definitions) Treatment goals in schizophrenia: remission—concept derived from treatment of affective disorders, in which it means patient has no symptoms; in schizophrenia, it means symptoms may be present but do not interfere with patient’s functioning or quality of life; recovery—defined by President’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health as “process in which people are able to live, work, learn, and participate fully in their communities; for some individuals, recovery is the ability to live a fulfilling and productive life despite a disability”; ie, patient may experience symptoms but still lead full productive life Recovery model in schizophrenia: key assumptions -deterioration not inevitable - stability marks beginning, not end, of treatment; -goals are for achieving individual’s health rather than comparing him or her to others with persistent illness; -specific goals chosen by patient, not family or clinician Reasons recovery-oriented treatment realistic in schizophrenia: -ascendancy of neurodevelopmental model over neurodegenerative model;
-evidence for continued improvement over and above stabilization with newer medications; -evidence that psychosocial interventions can reduce persistent symptoms; -consistency of differences of side-effect profiles across antipsychotic treatment options Recovery-oriented approach to medication management: -patient sets goals and frustrations; -match frustrations with target symptom that can be treated and -work with patient to identify priority symptom to treat -advise patient not to stop medications -Persistent positive symptoms: optimize current medication regimen before changing medications; -anticholinergics attenuate response to antipsychotics; - -antidepressants delay or attenuate response to antipsychotics; -rule out nonpharmacologic causes of poor treatment response Cognition: news mixed; Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE) study showed that -newer antipsychotics have limited benefits on cognition,
relative to older antipsychotics; -anticholinergic estimated to account for ≈50% of cognitive dysfunction in patients taking anticholinergic; - -when asked which symptoms most frustrating, most patients say cognitive symptoms and affective symptoms trump positive symptoms and negative symptoms; -first consideration is not to make cognitive symptoms worse -Depression: newer antipsychotics better for attenuating comorbid depression; if depression continues, consider whether antidepressant or psychosocial intervention better adjunct, remembering that antidepressants can aggravate psychosis in some patients Adverse events and burden of treatment: theoretically, antipsychotic response can be achieved without side effects; difficult and requires good strategy; extrapyramidal side effects and sedation not necessary components of treatment; -assess level of distress and risks of treatment modalities New Treatment Options for Bipolar Disorder Monotherapy: in registration studies, in both mania and depression, antipsychotics provide 20% benefit (on average) over placebo; average number of medications in patients with bipolar disorder is 5 Divalproex (Depakote): monotherapy—studies found that “loading divalproex could be effective,” and loading strategy used in registration studies for divalproex extended release (ER); starting dosage 25 mg/kg per day, rounded up to nearest 500, then increased by another 500 mg on day 3; combination therapy— in American approach, foundational therapy is mood stabilizer (lithium or divalproex), with atypical antipsychotic added; in European approach, foundational therapy is antipsychotic, with mood stabilizer added; in European trial, valproate added to antipsychotic achieved extra benefit of 20% to 25% over antipsychotic monotherapy Carbamazepine (Tegretol): monotherapy—benefit ≈20% over placebo; starting dosage 400 mg/day in divided doses produced “fair bit of toxicity”; suggest that starting with 200 mg/day and increasing by 200 mg every other day decreases toxicity; carbamazepine lowers blood
levels of “almost everything” except maybe ziprasidone; combination therapy— in trial of acute mania where olanzapine (Zyprexa) or placebo added to carbamazepine, no additional benefit seen; in study where risperidone added to carbamazepine, 40% decrease in risperidone blood levels, and patients on carbamazepine had to be censored to see add-on risperidone separate from placebo and other mood stabilizers; carbamazepine should have no pharmacokinetic interaction with lithium, excreted renally, lithium, even olanzapine, failed to show additional benefit when added to carbamazepine Bipolar disorder: patients symptomatic about half the time, and depression more common than mood elevation; Systematic Treatment Enhancement Program (STEP) showed in depressed patients that adding antidepressant to mood stabilizer does not add much benefit over mood stabilizer alone, and mood stabilizer alone achieved only ≈25% response; with mood stabilizer as monotherapy in depressed patients, perhaps adding antidepressant later; if antidepressant does not work, try atypical antipsychotic
Pramipexole (Miramex): 2 trials show it may work as add-on, but only 22 patients total, and “there were some mood switches”; speaker starts with 0.125 mg at bedtime and increases every 4 days to 1.75 mg; “look out for nausea” Other add-ons: 1 trial showed 22% response rate to modafinil (Provigil), with 4.9% switch rate; gabapentin shown not to be effective as primary treatment for mania or for treatmentresistant rapid-cycling bipolar disorder, but may be useful in comorbid conditions such as anxiety or pain Lamotrigine: in trials, lamotrigine worked well in terms of response rate, but placebo worked well also; not indicated for acute bipolar depression or acute mania; may be effective in preventing recurrent depression; combination of lamotrigine and lithium may prevent depressive and manic episodes; in study, lamotrigine effective in treatment-resistant rapid cycling Topiramate Topomax): ineffective in acute mania, but patients lost weight; may be effective in treating comorbid disorders such as eating disorders, alcohol dependence, and migraine; can cause metabolic acidosis
Zonisamide (Zonegran): produced weight loss in obese people with no psychiatric disorder and in obese people with euthymic medicated bipolar disorder; long half life; cannot be used by patients with sulfonamide allergy; weight loss and tolerability adequate in one third of patients, intolerance in onethird, and it “just doesn’t work” one-third; metabolic acidosis can occur Oxcarbazepine (Trileptal): “data not too encouraging”; consider oxcarbazepine if patient has failed carbamazepine or is too unreliable to comply with blood testing associated with carbamazepine Atypical antipsychotics: all seem to work in mania; clozapine is only atypical antipsychotic not approved by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in bipolar mania; clozapine helpful if patient unable to sleep, but requires blood testing because of risk for agranulocytosis Risperidone: response ≈20% compared to placebo; if added to lithium or divalproex, additional benefit seen Olanzapine: response rate 20% to 25%; doses in trials 10 mg/day to 20 mg/day; in head-to-head trial with divalproex, olanzapine slightly better in efficacy, but divalproex slightly better in tolerability;
in head-to-head trial with lithium, olanzapine slightly better in relapsing mania, but associated with more weight gain than lithium Olanzapine plus fluoxetine combination: response “so-so” with 7.5 mg of olanzapine and 40 mg of fluoxetine per day; “if you absolutely have to use an antidepressant in bipolar depression and you want to do evidence-based medicine, this is what you would do”; in head-to-head trial with lamotrigine, combination had 9% response rate vs 7% weight gain Quetiapine (Sertoquel): response rate ≈17%; must be titrated to avoid hypotension Other atypical antipsychotics: ziprasidone (Geodon) and aripiprazole (Abilify), “we know [they] work in acute mania”; aripiprazole has maintenance indication; asenapine (Saphris)—separated from placebo on primary-outcome measure but not on response rate Emerging uses for atypical antipsychotics in bipolar disorder: primary therapies—olanzapine for mania, maintenance, and, when combined with fluoxetine, depression; risperidone, ziprasidone, and asenapine for mania;
quetiapine for mania and depression; aripiprazole for mania and maintenance; adjunctive therapies—olanzapine and risperidone for mania; quetiapine for mania and maintenance; clozapine for treatment resistance Conclusions: many new agents with diverse mechanistic efficacy and side-effect profiles in development; new anticonvulsants as class not effective in acute mania and have variable efficacy in bipolar disorders and comorbid conditions; newer antipsychotics as class effective in acute mania and show emerging efficacy in acute depression and maintenance
SUMMARY OF PRODUCT CHARACTERISTICS NAME OF THE MEDICINAL PRODUCT QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE COMPOSITION Each soft gelatin capsule contains 1mg phytomenadione. For a full list of excipients, see section 6.1. PHARMACEUTICAL FORM Capsule, soft The dark brown soft capsule contains a clear, odourless pale yellow liquid. CLINICAL PARTICULARS Therapeutic indications Neokay i
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