Case report: Male with acute new-onset suicidal ideation tied to SARS-CoV-2

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Tue, 02/08/2022 - 16:56

An otherwise healthy 55-year-old male, with no previous psychiatric or medical history, sought care with a family medicine physician for the first time in decades.

Medical symptoms began Oct. 9, 2021, with “some leg weakness and mild sniffles.” Since he was going to be at a public event, he decided to take a PCR test for the SARS-CoV-2 virus on Oct. 13. The patient tested positive.

His symptoms continued to worsen, and he experienced severe body fatigue, sleep disturbance, and lethargy. “A few days after my positive test, the cognitive and physical symptoms dramatically ramped up,” the patient recalled.

Dr. Renée S. Kohanski

Because of those worsening symptoms, on Oct. 20, the patient obtained a new patient appointment with a family medicine physician. After a telemedicine evaluation, the family medicine physician began a multifaceted early outpatient COVID-19 treatment protocol,1 as I (C.M.W.) and colleagues wrote about late last year. However, this treatment began late in the course because of the patient’s initial resistance to seek care.

Dr. Craig M. Wax

This early outpatient treatment protocol for COVID-19 included vitamin D3 125 mcg (5,000 ICU), N-acetylcysteine (NAC) 600 mg every day x 30 days; acetylsalicylic acid 325 mg every day x 30 days; azithromycin 250 mg b.i.d. before every meal x 10 days; hydroxychloroquine sulfate 200 mg b.i.d. x 10 days; ivermectin 3 mg, 5 pills daily x 10 days; zinc sulfate 220 mg (50 mg elemental) every day x 30 days; and a prednisone taper (30 mg daily x 3 days, tapering down 5 mg every 3 days). Hydroxyzine 50 mg at bedtime as needed was added for sleep. The patient did not comment to the family physician on any of the psychological or psychiatric symptoms and responded appropriately to questions during the Oct. 20 initial evaluation.

However, he later described that around the time the PCR was positive, “COVID twisted my brain. I could not think straight. Every thought required 50 times the effort.” For example, he was watching a simple YouTube video for work and “everything was confusing me ... it rattled me, and I couldn’t understand it.” He described his COVID-19 mind as: “The words in my head would come out in a jumbled order, like the message from the words in my brain to my mouth would get crossed. I had trouble spelling and texting. Total cognitive breakdown. I couldn’t do simple mathematics.”

Despite his physical exhaustion, he endured a 3-day period of sleep deprivation. During this time, he recalled looking up at the roof and thinking, “I need to jump off the roof” or thinking, “I might want to throw myself under a bus.” He did not initially reveal his suicidal thoughts to his family medicine physician. After beginning COVID-19 treatment, the patient had two nights of sleep and felt notably improved, and his physical symptoms began to remit. However, the sleeplessness quickly returned “with a vengeance” along with “silly suicidal thoughts.” The thoughts took on a more obsessional quality. For example, he repeatedly thought of jumping out of his second-story bedroom to the living room below and was preoccupied by continually looking at people’s roofs and thinking about jumping. Those thoughts intensified and culminated in his “going missing,” leading his wife to call the police. It was discovered that he had driven to a local bridge and was contemplating jumping off.

After that “going missing” incident, the patient and his wife reached out to their family medicine physician. He reevaluated the patient and, given the new information about the psychiatric symptoms, strongly recommended stat crisis and psychiatric consultation. After discussing the case on the same day, both the family medicine physician and the psychiatrist recommended stat hospital emergency department (ED) assessment on Oct. 29. In the ED, a head CT without contrast at the recommendation of both psychiatrist and family physician, routine electrolytes, CBC with differential, and EKG all were within normal limits. The ED initially discharged him home after crisis evaluation, deciding he was not an imminent risk to himself or others.

The next day, the psychiatrist spoke on the phone with the patient, family medicine physician, and the patient’s wife to arrange an initial assessment. At that time, it remained unclear to all whether the obsessional thoughts had resolved to such a degree that the patient could resist acting upon them. Further, the patient’s sleep architecture had not returned to normal. All agreed another emergency ED assessment was indicated. Ultimately, after voluntary re-evaluation and a difficult hold in the crisis unit, the patient was admitted for psychiatric hospitalization on Oct. 29 and discharged on Nov. 4.

In the psychiatric hospital, venlafaxine XR was started and titrated to 75 mg. The patient was discovered to be hypertensive, and hydrochlorothiazide was started. The discharge diagnosis was major depressive disorder, single episode, severe, without psychotic features.
 

 

 

Posthospitalization course

The patient’s clinical course cleared remarkably. He was seen for his initial psychiatric outpatient assessment postpsychiatric hospitalization on Nov. 9, as he had not yet been formally evaluated by the psychiatrist because of the emergency situation.

Gabapentin 300 mg by mouth at bedtime was started, and his sleep architecture was restored. The initial plan to titrate venlafaxine XR into dual selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor dose range was terminated, and his psychiatrist considered tapering and discontinuing the venlafaxine XR. A clinical examination, additional history, and collateral data no longer necessarily pointed to an active major depressive disorder or even unspecified depressive disorder, though to be sure, the patient was taking 75 mg of venlafaxine XR. While there were seasonal stressors, historically, nothing had risen to the level of MDD.

The obsessions driving his thoughts to jump off buildings and bridges had completely remitted. His cognitive ability returned to baseline with an ability to focus and perform the complicated tasks of his high-intensity work by the Dec. 8 psychiatric examination, where he was accompanied by his wife. He described feeling like, “I snapped back to like I was before this crazy stuff happened.” His mood was reported as, “Very good; like my old self” and this was confirmed by his wife. His affect was calmer and less tense. He was now using gabapentin sparingly for sleep. We continued to entertain discontinuing the venlafaxine XR, considering this recent severe episode likely driven by the COVID-19 virus. The decision was made to continue venlafaxine XR through the winter rather than discontinuing, remaining on the conservative side of treatment. The patient’s diagnosis was changed from “MDD, single episode,” to “mood disorder due to known physiologic condition (COVID-19) (F06.31) with depressive features; resolving.” At the patient’s follow-up examination on Jan. 5, 2022, he was continuing to do well, stating, “The whole series of crazy events happened to someone else.” The hydrochlorothiazide had been discontinued, and the patient’s blood pressure and pulse were normal at 119/81 and 69, respectively. He had made strategic changes at work to lessen stressors during the typically difficult months.
 

Discussion

Literature has discussed neuropsychiatric sequelae of COVID-19.2 The cited example questions whether psychiatric symptoms are tied directly to the viral infection or to the “host’s immune response.” We believe our case represents a direct neurocognitive/neuropsychiatric insult due to the COVID-19 infection.

This case presents a 55-year-old male with no previous psychiatric or medical history with new onset significant and debilitating cognitive impairment and obsessive thoughts of throwing himself from his bedroom balcony ending up at a bridge struggling with an irrational thought of jumping; ultimately requiring psychiatric hospitalization for acute suicidal thoughts. The patient’s psychiatric symptoms arose prior to any and all medication treatment. The obsessive thoughts correlated both with the onset of SARS-CoV-2 infection and a period of sleep deprivation subsequent to the infection. A course of steroid treatment and taper were started after the onset of neurocognitive-psychiatric symptoms, though there is close timing. We submit that the patient experienced, as part of the initial neurocognitive psychiatric initiating cascade, a COVID-19–induced sleep deprivation that was not etiologic but part of the process; since, even when sleep returned to normal, it was still several weeks before full cognitive function returned to baseline.

An argument could be made for possible MDD or unspecified depressive disorder, as historically there had been work-related stressors for the patient at this time of year because of the chronological nature of his work; though previously nothing presented with obsessional suicidal thinking and nothing with any cognitive impairment – let alone to this incapacitating degree.

The patient describes his seasonal work much like an accountant’s work at the beginning of each year. In the patient’s case, the months of September and October are historically “nonstop, working days,” which then slow down in the winter months for a period of recuperation. In gathering his past history of symptoms, he denied neurovegetative symptoms to meet full diagnostic criteria for MDD or unspecified depressive disorder, absent this episode in the presence of SARS-CoV-2 infection.

We could also consider a contributory negative “organic push” by the viral load and prednisone helping to express an underlying unspecified depression or MDD, but for the profound and unusual presentation. There was little prodrome of depressive symptoms (again, he reported his “typical” extraordinary work burden for this time of year, which is common in his industry).

In this patient, the symptoms have remitted completely. However, the patient is currently taking venlafaxine XR 75 mg. We have considered tapering and discontinuing the venlafaxine – since it is not entirely clear that he needs to be on this medication – so this question remains an open one. We did decide, however, to continue the venlafaxine until after the winter months and to reassess at that time.
 

 

 

Conclusion

The patient presented with new onset psychological and psychiatric symptoms in addition to physiologic symptoms; the former symptoms were not revealed prior to initial family medicine evaluation. As the symptoms worsened, he and his wife sought additional consultation with family physician, psychiatrists, and ED. Steroid treatment may have played a part in exacerbation of symptoms, but the neuropsychiatric cognitive symptoms were present prior to initiation of all pharmacologic and medical treatment. The successful outcome of this case was based upon quick action and collaboration between the family medicine physician, the psychiatrist, and the ED physician. The value of communication, assessment, and action via phone call and text cannot be overstated. Future considerations include further large-scale evaluation of multifaceted early treatment of patients with COVID-19 within the first 72 hours of symptoms to prevent not only hospitalization, morbidity, and mortality, but newly recognized psychological and psychiatric syndromes.3,4

Lastly, fluvoxamine might have been a better choice for adjunctive early treatment of COVID-19.5 As a matter of distinction, if a lingering mood disorder or obsessive-compulsive disorder remain a result of SARS-CoV-2 or if one were to start an antidepressant during the course of illness, it would be reasonable to consider fluvoxamine as a potential first-line agent.

Dr. Kohanski is a fellowship trained forensic psychiatrist and a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology. She maintains a private practice in Somerset, N.J., and is a frequent media commentator and medical podcaster. Dr. Kohanski has no conflicts of interest. Dr. Wax is a residency-trained osteopathic family medicine physician in independent private practice in Mullica Hill, N.J. He has authored multiple papers over 2 decades on topics such as SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 early treatment. He has been a speaker and media host over 2 decades and served on the National Physicians Council on Healthcare Policy’s congressional subcommittee. Dr. Wax has no conflicts of interest.

References

1. Rev Cardiovasc Med. 2020 Dec 30;21(4):517-30.

2. Brain Behav Immun. 2020 Jul;87:34-9.

3. Trav Med Infect Dis. 2020 May-Jun 35;10738.

4. Kirsch S. “Early treatment for COVID is key to better outcomes.” Times of India. 2021 May 21.

5. Lancet. 2022 Jan 1;10(1):E42-E51.

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An otherwise healthy 55-year-old male, with no previous psychiatric or medical history, sought care with a family medicine physician for the first time in decades.

Medical symptoms began Oct. 9, 2021, with “some leg weakness and mild sniffles.” Since he was going to be at a public event, he decided to take a PCR test for the SARS-CoV-2 virus on Oct. 13. The patient tested positive.

His symptoms continued to worsen, and he experienced severe body fatigue, sleep disturbance, and lethargy. “A few days after my positive test, the cognitive and physical symptoms dramatically ramped up,” the patient recalled.

Dr. Renée S. Kohanski

Because of those worsening symptoms, on Oct. 20, the patient obtained a new patient appointment with a family medicine physician. After a telemedicine evaluation, the family medicine physician began a multifaceted early outpatient COVID-19 treatment protocol,1 as I (C.M.W.) and colleagues wrote about late last year. However, this treatment began late in the course because of the patient’s initial resistance to seek care.

Dr. Craig M. Wax

This early outpatient treatment protocol for COVID-19 included vitamin D3 125 mcg (5,000 ICU), N-acetylcysteine (NAC) 600 mg every day x 30 days; acetylsalicylic acid 325 mg every day x 30 days; azithromycin 250 mg b.i.d. before every meal x 10 days; hydroxychloroquine sulfate 200 mg b.i.d. x 10 days; ivermectin 3 mg, 5 pills daily x 10 days; zinc sulfate 220 mg (50 mg elemental) every day x 30 days; and a prednisone taper (30 mg daily x 3 days, tapering down 5 mg every 3 days). Hydroxyzine 50 mg at bedtime as needed was added for sleep. The patient did not comment to the family physician on any of the psychological or psychiatric symptoms and responded appropriately to questions during the Oct. 20 initial evaluation.

However, he later described that around the time the PCR was positive, “COVID twisted my brain. I could not think straight. Every thought required 50 times the effort.” For example, he was watching a simple YouTube video for work and “everything was confusing me ... it rattled me, and I couldn’t understand it.” He described his COVID-19 mind as: “The words in my head would come out in a jumbled order, like the message from the words in my brain to my mouth would get crossed. I had trouble spelling and texting. Total cognitive breakdown. I couldn’t do simple mathematics.”

Despite his physical exhaustion, he endured a 3-day period of sleep deprivation. During this time, he recalled looking up at the roof and thinking, “I need to jump off the roof” or thinking, “I might want to throw myself under a bus.” He did not initially reveal his suicidal thoughts to his family medicine physician. After beginning COVID-19 treatment, the patient had two nights of sleep and felt notably improved, and his physical symptoms began to remit. However, the sleeplessness quickly returned “with a vengeance” along with “silly suicidal thoughts.” The thoughts took on a more obsessional quality. For example, he repeatedly thought of jumping out of his second-story bedroom to the living room below and was preoccupied by continually looking at people’s roofs and thinking about jumping. Those thoughts intensified and culminated in his “going missing,” leading his wife to call the police. It was discovered that he had driven to a local bridge and was contemplating jumping off.

After that “going missing” incident, the patient and his wife reached out to their family medicine physician. He reevaluated the patient and, given the new information about the psychiatric symptoms, strongly recommended stat crisis and psychiatric consultation. After discussing the case on the same day, both the family medicine physician and the psychiatrist recommended stat hospital emergency department (ED) assessment on Oct. 29. In the ED, a head CT without contrast at the recommendation of both psychiatrist and family physician, routine electrolytes, CBC with differential, and EKG all were within normal limits. The ED initially discharged him home after crisis evaluation, deciding he was not an imminent risk to himself or others.

The next day, the psychiatrist spoke on the phone with the patient, family medicine physician, and the patient’s wife to arrange an initial assessment. At that time, it remained unclear to all whether the obsessional thoughts had resolved to such a degree that the patient could resist acting upon them. Further, the patient’s sleep architecture had not returned to normal. All agreed another emergency ED assessment was indicated. Ultimately, after voluntary re-evaluation and a difficult hold in the crisis unit, the patient was admitted for psychiatric hospitalization on Oct. 29 and discharged on Nov. 4.

In the psychiatric hospital, venlafaxine XR was started and titrated to 75 mg. The patient was discovered to be hypertensive, and hydrochlorothiazide was started. The discharge diagnosis was major depressive disorder, single episode, severe, without psychotic features.
 

 

 

Posthospitalization course

The patient’s clinical course cleared remarkably. He was seen for his initial psychiatric outpatient assessment postpsychiatric hospitalization on Nov. 9, as he had not yet been formally evaluated by the psychiatrist because of the emergency situation.

Gabapentin 300 mg by mouth at bedtime was started, and his sleep architecture was restored. The initial plan to titrate venlafaxine XR into dual selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor dose range was terminated, and his psychiatrist considered tapering and discontinuing the venlafaxine XR. A clinical examination, additional history, and collateral data no longer necessarily pointed to an active major depressive disorder or even unspecified depressive disorder, though to be sure, the patient was taking 75 mg of venlafaxine XR. While there were seasonal stressors, historically, nothing had risen to the level of MDD.

The obsessions driving his thoughts to jump off buildings and bridges had completely remitted. His cognitive ability returned to baseline with an ability to focus and perform the complicated tasks of his high-intensity work by the Dec. 8 psychiatric examination, where he was accompanied by his wife. He described feeling like, “I snapped back to like I was before this crazy stuff happened.” His mood was reported as, “Very good; like my old self” and this was confirmed by his wife. His affect was calmer and less tense. He was now using gabapentin sparingly for sleep. We continued to entertain discontinuing the venlafaxine XR, considering this recent severe episode likely driven by the COVID-19 virus. The decision was made to continue venlafaxine XR through the winter rather than discontinuing, remaining on the conservative side of treatment. The patient’s diagnosis was changed from “MDD, single episode,” to “mood disorder due to known physiologic condition (COVID-19) (F06.31) with depressive features; resolving.” At the patient’s follow-up examination on Jan. 5, 2022, he was continuing to do well, stating, “The whole series of crazy events happened to someone else.” The hydrochlorothiazide had been discontinued, and the patient’s blood pressure and pulse were normal at 119/81 and 69, respectively. He had made strategic changes at work to lessen stressors during the typically difficult months.
 

Discussion

Literature has discussed neuropsychiatric sequelae of COVID-19.2 The cited example questions whether psychiatric symptoms are tied directly to the viral infection or to the “host’s immune response.” We believe our case represents a direct neurocognitive/neuropsychiatric insult due to the COVID-19 infection.

This case presents a 55-year-old male with no previous psychiatric or medical history with new onset significant and debilitating cognitive impairment and obsessive thoughts of throwing himself from his bedroom balcony ending up at a bridge struggling with an irrational thought of jumping; ultimately requiring psychiatric hospitalization for acute suicidal thoughts. The patient’s psychiatric symptoms arose prior to any and all medication treatment. The obsessive thoughts correlated both with the onset of SARS-CoV-2 infection and a period of sleep deprivation subsequent to the infection. A course of steroid treatment and taper were started after the onset of neurocognitive-psychiatric symptoms, though there is close timing. We submit that the patient experienced, as part of the initial neurocognitive psychiatric initiating cascade, a COVID-19–induced sleep deprivation that was not etiologic but part of the process; since, even when sleep returned to normal, it was still several weeks before full cognitive function returned to baseline.

An argument could be made for possible MDD or unspecified depressive disorder, as historically there had been work-related stressors for the patient at this time of year because of the chronological nature of his work; though previously nothing presented with obsessional suicidal thinking and nothing with any cognitive impairment – let alone to this incapacitating degree.

The patient describes his seasonal work much like an accountant’s work at the beginning of each year. In the patient’s case, the months of September and October are historically “nonstop, working days,” which then slow down in the winter months for a period of recuperation. In gathering his past history of symptoms, he denied neurovegetative symptoms to meet full diagnostic criteria for MDD or unspecified depressive disorder, absent this episode in the presence of SARS-CoV-2 infection.

We could also consider a contributory negative “organic push” by the viral load and prednisone helping to express an underlying unspecified depression or MDD, but for the profound and unusual presentation. There was little prodrome of depressive symptoms (again, he reported his “typical” extraordinary work burden for this time of year, which is common in his industry).

In this patient, the symptoms have remitted completely. However, the patient is currently taking venlafaxine XR 75 mg. We have considered tapering and discontinuing the venlafaxine – since it is not entirely clear that he needs to be on this medication – so this question remains an open one. We did decide, however, to continue the venlafaxine until after the winter months and to reassess at that time.
 

 

 

Conclusion

The patient presented with new onset psychological and psychiatric symptoms in addition to physiologic symptoms; the former symptoms were not revealed prior to initial family medicine evaluation. As the symptoms worsened, he and his wife sought additional consultation with family physician, psychiatrists, and ED. Steroid treatment may have played a part in exacerbation of symptoms, but the neuropsychiatric cognitive symptoms were present prior to initiation of all pharmacologic and medical treatment. The successful outcome of this case was based upon quick action and collaboration between the family medicine physician, the psychiatrist, and the ED physician. The value of communication, assessment, and action via phone call and text cannot be overstated. Future considerations include further large-scale evaluation of multifaceted early treatment of patients with COVID-19 within the first 72 hours of symptoms to prevent not only hospitalization, morbidity, and mortality, but newly recognized psychological and psychiatric syndromes.3,4

Lastly, fluvoxamine might have been a better choice for adjunctive early treatment of COVID-19.5 As a matter of distinction, if a lingering mood disorder or obsessive-compulsive disorder remain a result of SARS-CoV-2 or if one were to start an antidepressant during the course of illness, it would be reasonable to consider fluvoxamine as a potential first-line agent.

Dr. Kohanski is a fellowship trained forensic psychiatrist and a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology. She maintains a private practice in Somerset, N.J., and is a frequent media commentator and medical podcaster. Dr. Kohanski has no conflicts of interest. Dr. Wax is a residency-trained osteopathic family medicine physician in independent private practice in Mullica Hill, N.J. He has authored multiple papers over 2 decades on topics such as SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 early treatment. He has been a speaker and media host over 2 decades and served on the National Physicians Council on Healthcare Policy’s congressional subcommittee. Dr. Wax has no conflicts of interest.

References

1. Rev Cardiovasc Med. 2020 Dec 30;21(4):517-30.

2. Brain Behav Immun. 2020 Jul;87:34-9.

3. Trav Med Infect Dis. 2020 May-Jun 35;10738.

4. Kirsch S. “Early treatment for COVID is key to better outcomes.” Times of India. 2021 May 21.

5. Lancet. 2022 Jan 1;10(1):E42-E51.

An otherwise healthy 55-year-old male, with no previous psychiatric or medical history, sought care with a family medicine physician for the first time in decades.

Medical symptoms began Oct. 9, 2021, with “some leg weakness and mild sniffles.” Since he was going to be at a public event, he decided to take a PCR test for the SARS-CoV-2 virus on Oct. 13. The patient tested positive.

His symptoms continued to worsen, and he experienced severe body fatigue, sleep disturbance, and lethargy. “A few days after my positive test, the cognitive and physical symptoms dramatically ramped up,” the patient recalled.

Dr. Renée S. Kohanski

Because of those worsening symptoms, on Oct. 20, the patient obtained a new patient appointment with a family medicine physician. After a telemedicine evaluation, the family medicine physician began a multifaceted early outpatient COVID-19 treatment protocol,1 as I (C.M.W.) and colleagues wrote about late last year. However, this treatment began late in the course because of the patient’s initial resistance to seek care.

Dr. Craig M. Wax

This early outpatient treatment protocol for COVID-19 included vitamin D3 125 mcg (5,000 ICU), N-acetylcysteine (NAC) 600 mg every day x 30 days; acetylsalicylic acid 325 mg every day x 30 days; azithromycin 250 mg b.i.d. before every meal x 10 days; hydroxychloroquine sulfate 200 mg b.i.d. x 10 days; ivermectin 3 mg, 5 pills daily x 10 days; zinc sulfate 220 mg (50 mg elemental) every day x 30 days; and a prednisone taper (30 mg daily x 3 days, tapering down 5 mg every 3 days). Hydroxyzine 50 mg at bedtime as needed was added for sleep. The patient did not comment to the family physician on any of the psychological or psychiatric symptoms and responded appropriately to questions during the Oct. 20 initial evaluation.

However, he later described that around the time the PCR was positive, “COVID twisted my brain. I could not think straight. Every thought required 50 times the effort.” For example, he was watching a simple YouTube video for work and “everything was confusing me ... it rattled me, and I couldn’t understand it.” He described his COVID-19 mind as: “The words in my head would come out in a jumbled order, like the message from the words in my brain to my mouth would get crossed. I had trouble spelling and texting. Total cognitive breakdown. I couldn’t do simple mathematics.”

Despite his physical exhaustion, he endured a 3-day period of sleep deprivation. During this time, he recalled looking up at the roof and thinking, “I need to jump off the roof” or thinking, “I might want to throw myself under a bus.” He did not initially reveal his suicidal thoughts to his family medicine physician. After beginning COVID-19 treatment, the patient had two nights of sleep and felt notably improved, and his physical symptoms began to remit. However, the sleeplessness quickly returned “with a vengeance” along with “silly suicidal thoughts.” The thoughts took on a more obsessional quality. For example, he repeatedly thought of jumping out of his second-story bedroom to the living room below and was preoccupied by continually looking at people’s roofs and thinking about jumping. Those thoughts intensified and culminated in his “going missing,” leading his wife to call the police. It was discovered that he had driven to a local bridge and was contemplating jumping off.

After that “going missing” incident, the patient and his wife reached out to their family medicine physician. He reevaluated the patient and, given the new information about the psychiatric symptoms, strongly recommended stat crisis and psychiatric consultation. After discussing the case on the same day, both the family medicine physician and the psychiatrist recommended stat hospital emergency department (ED) assessment on Oct. 29. In the ED, a head CT without contrast at the recommendation of both psychiatrist and family physician, routine electrolytes, CBC with differential, and EKG all were within normal limits. The ED initially discharged him home after crisis evaluation, deciding he was not an imminent risk to himself or others.

The next day, the psychiatrist spoke on the phone with the patient, family medicine physician, and the patient’s wife to arrange an initial assessment. At that time, it remained unclear to all whether the obsessional thoughts had resolved to such a degree that the patient could resist acting upon them. Further, the patient’s sleep architecture had not returned to normal. All agreed another emergency ED assessment was indicated. Ultimately, after voluntary re-evaluation and a difficult hold in the crisis unit, the patient was admitted for psychiatric hospitalization on Oct. 29 and discharged on Nov. 4.

In the psychiatric hospital, venlafaxine XR was started and titrated to 75 mg. The patient was discovered to be hypertensive, and hydrochlorothiazide was started. The discharge diagnosis was major depressive disorder, single episode, severe, without psychotic features.
 

 

 

Posthospitalization course

The patient’s clinical course cleared remarkably. He was seen for his initial psychiatric outpatient assessment postpsychiatric hospitalization on Nov. 9, as he had not yet been formally evaluated by the psychiatrist because of the emergency situation.

Gabapentin 300 mg by mouth at bedtime was started, and his sleep architecture was restored. The initial plan to titrate venlafaxine XR into dual selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor dose range was terminated, and his psychiatrist considered tapering and discontinuing the venlafaxine XR. A clinical examination, additional history, and collateral data no longer necessarily pointed to an active major depressive disorder or even unspecified depressive disorder, though to be sure, the patient was taking 75 mg of venlafaxine XR. While there were seasonal stressors, historically, nothing had risen to the level of MDD.

The obsessions driving his thoughts to jump off buildings and bridges had completely remitted. His cognitive ability returned to baseline with an ability to focus and perform the complicated tasks of his high-intensity work by the Dec. 8 psychiatric examination, where he was accompanied by his wife. He described feeling like, “I snapped back to like I was before this crazy stuff happened.” His mood was reported as, “Very good; like my old self” and this was confirmed by his wife. His affect was calmer and less tense. He was now using gabapentin sparingly for sleep. We continued to entertain discontinuing the venlafaxine XR, considering this recent severe episode likely driven by the COVID-19 virus. The decision was made to continue venlafaxine XR through the winter rather than discontinuing, remaining on the conservative side of treatment. The patient’s diagnosis was changed from “MDD, single episode,” to “mood disorder due to known physiologic condition (COVID-19) (F06.31) with depressive features; resolving.” At the patient’s follow-up examination on Jan. 5, 2022, he was continuing to do well, stating, “The whole series of crazy events happened to someone else.” The hydrochlorothiazide had been discontinued, and the patient’s blood pressure and pulse were normal at 119/81 and 69, respectively. He had made strategic changes at work to lessen stressors during the typically difficult months.
 

Discussion

Literature has discussed neuropsychiatric sequelae of COVID-19.2 The cited example questions whether psychiatric symptoms are tied directly to the viral infection or to the “host’s immune response.” We believe our case represents a direct neurocognitive/neuropsychiatric insult due to the COVID-19 infection.

This case presents a 55-year-old male with no previous psychiatric or medical history with new onset significant and debilitating cognitive impairment and obsessive thoughts of throwing himself from his bedroom balcony ending up at a bridge struggling with an irrational thought of jumping; ultimately requiring psychiatric hospitalization for acute suicidal thoughts. The patient’s psychiatric symptoms arose prior to any and all medication treatment. The obsessive thoughts correlated both with the onset of SARS-CoV-2 infection and a period of sleep deprivation subsequent to the infection. A course of steroid treatment and taper were started after the onset of neurocognitive-psychiatric symptoms, though there is close timing. We submit that the patient experienced, as part of the initial neurocognitive psychiatric initiating cascade, a COVID-19–induced sleep deprivation that was not etiologic but part of the process; since, even when sleep returned to normal, it was still several weeks before full cognitive function returned to baseline.

An argument could be made for possible MDD or unspecified depressive disorder, as historically there had been work-related stressors for the patient at this time of year because of the chronological nature of his work; though previously nothing presented with obsessional suicidal thinking and nothing with any cognitive impairment – let alone to this incapacitating degree.

The patient describes his seasonal work much like an accountant’s work at the beginning of each year. In the patient’s case, the months of September and October are historically “nonstop, working days,” which then slow down in the winter months for a period of recuperation. In gathering his past history of symptoms, he denied neurovegetative symptoms to meet full diagnostic criteria for MDD or unspecified depressive disorder, absent this episode in the presence of SARS-CoV-2 infection.

We could also consider a contributory negative “organic push” by the viral load and prednisone helping to express an underlying unspecified depression or MDD, but for the profound and unusual presentation. There was little prodrome of depressive symptoms (again, he reported his “typical” extraordinary work burden for this time of year, which is common in his industry).

In this patient, the symptoms have remitted completely. However, the patient is currently taking venlafaxine XR 75 mg. We have considered tapering and discontinuing the venlafaxine – since it is not entirely clear that he needs to be on this medication – so this question remains an open one. We did decide, however, to continue the venlafaxine until after the winter months and to reassess at that time.
 

 

 

Conclusion

The patient presented with new onset psychological and psychiatric symptoms in addition to physiologic symptoms; the former symptoms were not revealed prior to initial family medicine evaluation. As the symptoms worsened, he and his wife sought additional consultation with family physician, psychiatrists, and ED. Steroid treatment may have played a part in exacerbation of symptoms, but the neuropsychiatric cognitive symptoms were present prior to initiation of all pharmacologic and medical treatment. The successful outcome of this case was based upon quick action and collaboration between the family medicine physician, the psychiatrist, and the ED physician. The value of communication, assessment, and action via phone call and text cannot be overstated. Future considerations include further large-scale evaluation of multifaceted early treatment of patients with COVID-19 within the first 72 hours of symptoms to prevent not only hospitalization, morbidity, and mortality, but newly recognized psychological and psychiatric syndromes.3,4

Lastly, fluvoxamine might have been a better choice for adjunctive early treatment of COVID-19.5 As a matter of distinction, if a lingering mood disorder or obsessive-compulsive disorder remain a result of SARS-CoV-2 or if one were to start an antidepressant during the course of illness, it would be reasonable to consider fluvoxamine as a potential first-line agent.

Dr. Kohanski is a fellowship trained forensic psychiatrist and a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology. She maintains a private practice in Somerset, N.J., and is a frequent media commentator and medical podcaster. Dr. Kohanski has no conflicts of interest. Dr. Wax is a residency-trained osteopathic family medicine physician in independent private practice in Mullica Hill, N.J. He has authored multiple papers over 2 decades on topics such as SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 early treatment. He has been a speaker and media host over 2 decades and served on the National Physicians Council on Healthcare Policy’s congressional subcommittee. Dr. Wax has no conflicts of interest.

References

1. Rev Cardiovasc Med. 2020 Dec 30;21(4):517-30.

2. Brain Behav Immun. 2020 Jul;87:34-9.

3. Trav Med Infect Dis. 2020 May-Jun 35;10738.

4. Kirsch S. “Early treatment for COVID is key to better outcomes.” Times of India. 2021 May 21.

5. Lancet. 2022 Jan 1;10(1):E42-E51.

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We physicians must pull together as a knowledge community

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Tue, 11/30/2021 - 10:13

The COVID-19 pandemic is a biosocial phenomenon. Patients and doctors alike find themselves assigned to groups designated as responsible and wise, or selfish and irrational, based strictly upon their personal assessments of medical risk. This trend in our culture is represented by threats of disciplinary action issued by medical regulators against physicians who are perceived to be undermining the public health message by spreading “misinformation.”

Dr. Renée S. Kohanski

Our review of the literature reveals many references to “misinformation” but no definition narrow and precise enough to be interpreted consistently in a disciplinary environment. More pressing, this ambiguous word’s use is correlated with negative meaning and innuendo, often discrediting valuable information a priori without actual data points.

Dr. Robert S. Emmons

The most basic definition available is Merriam Webster’s: “incorrect or misleading information.” This definition includes no point of reference against which competing scientific claims can be measured.

Claudia E. Haupt, PhD, a political scientist and law professor, articulates a useful framework for understanding the relationship between medicine and state regulators. In the Yale Law Journal, Dr. Haupt wrote: “Knowledge communities have specialized expertise and are closest to those affected; they must have the freedom to work things out for themselves. The professions as knowledge communities have a fundamental interest in not having the state (or anyone else, for that matter) corrupt or distort what amounts to the state of the art in their respective fields.”

Injecting the artificial term “misinformation” into the science information ecosystem obfuscates and impedes the very ability of this vital knowledge community to perform its raison d’être. Use of the term misinformation with no clear scientific parameters ultimately makes it into a word that discredits, restrains, and incites, rather than attending to healing or promoting progress.

Time has certainly shown us that science is anything but settled on all things COVID. If the scientific community accepts disrespect as the response of choice to difference of opinion and practice, we lose the trust in one another as colleagues; we need to keep scientific inquiry and exploration alive. Curiosity, equanimity, and tolerance are key components of the professional attitude as we deftly maneuver against the virus together.

In the face of deadly disease, it is especially imperative that intelligent, thoughtful, highly respected scientists, researchers, and physicians have room to safely share their knowledge and clinical experience. The Association of American Physicians and Surgeons has published a statement on scientific integrity that can be used as a measuring stick for claims about misinformation in medicine. We call on physicians to pull together as a knowledge community. Kindness and respect for patients starts with kindness and respect for one another as colleagues.
 

Dr. Kohanski is in private practice in Somerset, N.J., and is a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology. She disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Emmons is part-time clinical associate professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of Vermont, Burlington, and is a past chair of the Ethics Committee for the Vermont District Branch of the American Psychiatric Association. He is in private practice in Moretown, Vt., and disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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The COVID-19 pandemic is a biosocial phenomenon. Patients and doctors alike find themselves assigned to groups designated as responsible and wise, or selfish and irrational, based strictly upon their personal assessments of medical risk. This trend in our culture is represented by threats of disciplinary action issued by medical regulators against physicians who are perceived to be undermining the public health message by spreading “misinformation.”

Dr. Renée S. Kohanski

Our review of the literature reveals many references to “misinformation” but no definition narrow and precise enough to be interpreted consistently in a disciplinary environment. More pressing, this ambiguous word’s use is correlated with negative meaning and innuendo, often discrediting valuable information a priori without actual data points.

Dr. Robert S. Emmons

The most basic definition available is Merriam Webster’s: “incorrect or misleading information.” This definition includes no point of reference against which competing scientific claims can be measured.

Claudia E. Haupt, PhD, a political scientist and law professor, articulates a useful framework for understanding the relationship between medicine and state regulators. In the Yale Law Journal, Dr. Haupt wrote: “Knowledge communities have specialized expertise and are closest to those affected; they must have the freedom to work things out for themselves. The professions as knowledge communities have a fundamental interest in not having the state (or anyone else, for that matter) corrupt or distort what amounts to the state of the art in their respective fields.”

Injecting the artificial term “misinformation” into the science information ecosystem obfuscates and impedes the very ability of this vital knowledge community to perform its raison d’être. Use of the term misinformation with no clear scientific parameters ultimately makes it into a word that discredits, restrains, and incites, rather than attending to healing or promoting progress.

Time has certainly shown us that science is anything but settled on all things COVID. If the scientific community accepts disrespect as the response of choice to difference of opinion and practice, we lose the trust in one another as colleagues; we need to keep scientific inquiry and exploration alive. Curiosity, equanimity, and tolerance are key components of the professional attitude as we deftly maneuver against the virus together.

In the face of deadly disease, it is especially imperative that intelligent, thoughtful, highly respected scientists, researchers, and physicians have room to safely share their knowledge and clinical experience. The Association of American Physicians and Surgeons has published a statement on scientific integrity that can be used as a measuring stick for claims about misinformation in medicine. We call on physicians to pull together as a knowledge community. Kindness and respect for patients starts with kindness and respect for one another as colleagues.
 

Dr. Kohanski is in private practice in Somerset, N.J., and is a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology. She disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Emmons is part-time clinical associate professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of Vermont, Burlington, and is a past chair of the Ethics Committee for the Vermont District Branch of the American Psychiatric Association. He is in private practice in Moretown, Vt., and disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

The COVID-19 pandemic is a biosocial phenomenon. Patients and doctors alike find themselves assigned to groups designated as responsible and wise, or selfish and irrational, based strictly upon their personal assessments of medical risk. This trend in our culture is represented by threats of disciplinary action issued by medical regulators against physicians who are perceived to be undermining the public health message by spreading “misinformation.”

Dr. Renée S. Kohanski

Our review of the literature reveals many references to “misinformation” but no definition narrow and precise enough to be interpreted consistently in a disciplinary environment. More pressing, this ambiguous word’s use is correlated with negative meaning and innuendo, often discrediting valuable information a priori without actual data points.

Dr. Robert S. Emmons

The most basic definition available is Merriam Webster’s: “incorrect or misleading information.” This definition includes no point of reference against which competing scientific claims can be measured.

Claudia E. Haupt, PhD, a political scientist and law professor, articulates a useful framework for understanding the relationship between medicine and state regulators. In the Yale Law Journal, Dr. Haupt wrote: “Knowledge communities have specialized expertise and are closest to those affected; they must have the freedom to work things out for themselves. The professions as knowledge communities have a fundamental interest in not having the state (or anyone else, for that matter) corrupt or distort what amounts to the state of the art in their respective fields.”

Injecting the artificial term “misinformation” into the science information ecosystem obfuscates and impedes the very ability of this vital knowledge community to perform its raison d’être. Use of the term misinformation with no clear scientific parameters ultimately makes it into a word that discredits, restrains, and incites, rather than attending to healing or promoting progress.

Time has certainly shown us that science is anything but settled on all things COVID. If the scientific community accepts disrespect as the response of choice to difference of opinion and practice, we lose the trust in one another as colleagues; we need to keep scientific inquiry and exploration alive. Curiosity, equanimity, and tolerance are key components of the professional attitude as we deftly maneuver against the virus together.

In the face of deadly disease, it is especially imperative that intelligent, thoughtful, highly respected scientists, researchers, and physicians have room to safely share their knowledge and clinical experience. The Association of American Physicians and Surgeons has published a statement on scientific integrity that can be used as a measuring stick for claims about misinformation in medicine. We call on physicians to pull together as a knowledge community. Kindness and respect for patients starts with kindness and respect for one another as colleagues.
 

Dr. Kohanski is in private practice in Somerset, N.J., and is a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology. She disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Emmons is part-time clinical associate professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of Vermont, Burlington, and is a past chair of the Ethics Committee for the Vermont District Branch of the American Psychiatric Association. He is in private practice in Moretown, Vt., and disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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Let’s not criticize off-label prescribing

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Changed
Thu, 08/26/2021 - 15:49

The public health crisis sparked by COVID-19 has engendered much debate in the realm where politics, journalism, law, and medicine meet.

Dr. Robert S. Emmons

Doctors have used the media to name other doctors as sources of harmful misinformation, in some cases going so far as to invoke medical practice board oversight as a potential intervention when doctors make public statements deemed too far out of bounds scientifically. Over the past year, some physicians have been harshly criticized for speaking about off-label prescribing, a widely accepted part of everyday medical practice.

The science and ethics of off-label prescribing have not changed; what has changed is the quality of dialogue around it. As psychiatrists, it does not fall within our scope of practice to offer definitive public opinions on the treatment of COVID-19, nor is that our purpose here. However, we can speak to a process that damages patients and doctors alike by undermining trust. All of this heat around bad medical information, in our opinion, amounts to using the methods of other fields to evaluate science and clinical practice. A remedy, then, to improve the quality of public medical intelligence would be to clarify the rules of scientific debate and to once again clearly state that off-label prescribing is part and parcel of the good practice of clinical medicine.

Dr. Renée S. Kohanski


Physicians who work in the field of professional discipline have thought about the limits of propriety in making charges of impropriety. We (R.S.E. and R.S.K.) asked the American Psychiatric Association’s Ethics Committee to expand upon its existing commentary on innovative practice and making allegations of professional misconduct. We used the committee’s answers to our questions as the basis for the arguments we are making in this piece.

The APA’s Ethics Committee uses clear-cut benchmarks to define innovative medical care: “The standards of care ... evolve with evidence from research and observations of practice. Among the expected supports for innovative practice are scientific testing, peer-reviewed publication, replication, and broad or widespread acceptance within a relevant scientific or professional community.” When it comes to off-label prescribing for any medical condition, it is easy enough to ascertain whether clinical reports have appeared in peer-reviewed journals.

Two of the biggest blockbusters in psychiatry, chlorpromazine and lithium, began as drugs used for other conditions almost since the inception of our field. In other words, the use of these drugs for mental illness began, in today’s jargon, as off-label. We practitioners of psychiatry live in the land of off-label prescribing and have always comfortably done so. In fact, almost all of medicine does. The key in today’s world of best-practice medicine is obtaining a truly informed consent.

For COVID-19, our incredible psychotropic molecules may once again be doing some trail-blazing off-label work. Late last year, Eric J. Lenze, MD, professor of psychiatry and director of the Healthy Mind Lab at Washington University in St. Louis, reported in a preliminary study of adult outpatients with symptomatic COVID-19 that those treated with fluvoxamine “had a lower likelihood of clinical deterioration over 15 days,” compared with those on placebo (JAMA. 2020;324[22]:2292-300). We were heartened to see Dr. Lenze discuss his work on a recent “60 Minutes” segment. David Seftel, MD, MBA, a clinician who administered fluvoxamine as early treatment for a COVID-19 outbreak that occurred in a community of racetrack employees and their families in the San Francisco Bay Area, also was featured. Rather than waiting for the results of large clinical trials, Dr. Lenze and Dr. Seftel proceeded, based on reports published in peer-reviewed journals, to treat patients whose lives were at risk.

If we find ourselves strongly disagreeing about the science of off-label prescribing, the proper response is to critique methodologies, not the character or competence of colleagues. The APA Ethics Committee discourages use of the media as a forum for making allegations of incompetent or unethical practice: “Judgments regarding violations of established norms of ethical or professional conduct should be made not by individuals but by bodies authorized to take evidence and make informed decisions.”

At least one state legislature is taking action to protect patients’ access to the doctors they trust. In Arizona, SB 1416 passed in the Senate and is now working its way through the House. This bill would prohibit medical boards from disciplining doctors for speaking out about or prescribing off-label drugs when a reasonable basis for use exists.

Physicians in all specialties would do well to studiously observe the conventions of their profession when it comes to critiquing their colleagues. Psychological research on the “backfire effect” suggests that heavy-handed campaigns to enforce medical consensus will only harden minds in ways that neither advance science nor improve the quality of clinical decision-making.

Medical disciplinary boards and the news media were neither designed nor are they equipped to adjudicate scientific debates. Science is never settled: Hypothesis and theory are always open to testing and revision as new evidence emerges. There is a place in medicine for formal disciplinary processes, as well-delineated by professional bodies such as the APA Ethics Committee. Another important part of protecting the public is to support an environment of scientific inquiry in which diversity of opinion is welcomed. As physicians, we translate science into excellent clinical care every day in our practices, and we advance science by sharing what we learn through friendly collegial communication and collaboration.

Dr. Emmons is part-time clinical associate professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of Vermont, Burlington, and is a past chair of the Ethics Committee for the Vermont District Branch of the American Psychiatric Association. He is in private practice in Moretown, Vt., and disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Kohanski is in private practice in Dayton, N.J., and is a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology. She also is the host and author of Clinical Correlation, a series of the Psychcast. Dr. Kohanski disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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The public health crisis sparked by COVID-19 has engendered much debate in the realm where politics, journalism, law, and medicine meet.

Dr. Robert S. Emmons

Doctors have used the media to name other doctors as sources of harmful misinformation, in some cases going so far as to invoke medical practice board oversight as a potential intervention when doctors make public statements deemed too far out of bounds scientifically. Over the past year, some physicians have been harshly criticized for speaking about off-label prescribing, a widely accepted part of everyday medical practice.

The science and ethics of off-label prescribing have not changed; what has changed is the quality of dialogue around it. As psychiatrists, it does not fall within our scope of practice to offer definitive public opinions on the treatment of COVID-19, nor is that our purpose here. However, we can speak to a process that damages patients and doctors alike by undermining trust. All of this heat around bad medical information, in our opinion, amounts to using the methods of other fields to evaluate science and clinical practice. A remedy, then, to improve the quality of public medical intelligence would be to clarify the rules of scientific debate and to once again clearly state that off-label prescribing is part and parcel of the good practice of clinical medicine.

Dr. Renée S. Kohanski


Physicians who work in the field of professional discipline have thought about the limits of propriety in making charges of impropriety. We (R.S.E. and R.S.K.) asked the American Psychiatric Association’s Ethics Committee to expand upon its existing commentary on innovative practice and making allegations of professional misconduct. We used the committee’s answers to our questions as the basis for the arguments we are making in this piece.

The APA’s Ethics Committee uses clear-cut benchmarks to define innovative medical care: “The standards of care ... evolve with evidence from research and observations of practice. Among the expected supports for innovative practice are scientific testing, peer-reviewed publication, replication, and broad or widespread acceptance within a relevant scientific or professional community.” When it comes to off-label prescribing for any medical condition, it is easy enough to ascertain whether clinical reports have appeared in peer-reviewed journals.

Two of the biggest blockbusters in psychiatry, chlorpromazine and lithium, began as drugs used for other conditions almost since the inception of our field. In other words, the use of these drugs for mental illness began, in today’s jargon, as off-label. We practitioners of psychiatry live in the land of off-label prescribing and have always comfortably done so. In fact, almost all of medicine does. The key in today’s world of best-practice medicine is obtaining a truly informed consent.

For COVID-19, our incredible psychotropic molecules may once again be doing some trail-blazing off-label work. Late last year, Eric J. Lenze, MD, professor of psychiatry and director of the Healthy Mind Lab at Washington University in St. Louis, reported in a preliminary study of adult outpatients with symptomatic COVID-19 that those treated with fluvoxamine “had a lower likelihood of clinical deterioration over 15 days,” compared with those on placebo (JAMA. 2020;324[22]:2292-300). We were heartened to see Dr. Lenze discuss his work on a recent “60 Minutes” segment. David Seftel, MD, MBA, a clinician who administered fluvoxamine as early treatment for a COVID-19 outbreak that occurred in a community of racetrack employees and their families in the San Francisco Bay Area, also was featured. Rather than waiting for the results of large clinical trials, Dr. Lenze and Dr. Seftel proceeded, based on reports published in peer-reviewed journals, to treat patients whose lives were at risk.

If we find ourselves strongly disagreeing about the science of off-label prescribing, the proper response is to critique methodologies, not the character or competence of colleagues. The APA Ethics Committee discourages use of the media as a forum for making allegations of incompetent or unethical practice: “Judgments regarding violations of established norms of ethical or professional conduct should be made not by individuals but by bodies authorized to take evidence and make informed decisions.”

At least one state legislature is taking action to protect patients’ access to the doctors they trust. In Arizona, SB 1416 passed in the Senate and is now working its way through the House. This bill would prohibit medical boards from disciplining doctors for speaking out about or prescribing off-label drugs when a reasonable basis for use exists.

Physicians in all specialties would do well to studiously observe the conventions of their profession when it comes to critiquing their colleagues. Psychological research on the “backfire effect” suggests that heavy-handed campaigns to enforce medical consensus will only harden minds in ways that neither advance science nor improve the quality of clinical decision-making.

Medical disciplinary boards and the news media were neither designed nor are they equipped to adjudicate scientific debates. Science is never settled: Hypothesis and theory are always open to testing and revision as new evidence emerges. There is a place in medicine for formal disciplinary processes, as well-delineated by professional bodies such as the APA Ethics Committee. Another important part of protecting the public is to support an environment of scientific inquiry in which diversity of opinion is welcomed. As physicians, we translate science into excellent clinical care every day in our practices, and we advance science by sharing what we learn through friendly collegial communication and collaboration.

Dr. Emmons is part-time clinical associate professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of Vermont, Burlington, and is a past chair of the Ethics Committee for the Vermont District Branch of the American Psychiatric Association. He is in private practice in Moretown, Vt., and disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Kohanski is in private practice in Dayton, N.J., and is a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology. She also is the host and author of Clinical Correlation, a series of the Psychcast. Dr. Kohanski disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

The public health crisis sparked by COVID-19 has engendered much debate in the realm where politics, journalism, law, and medicine meet.

Dr. Robert S. Emmons

Doctors have used the media to name other doctors as sources of harmful misinformation, in some cases going so far as to invoke medical practice board oversight as a potential intervention when doctors make public statements deemed too far out of bounds scientifically. Over the past year, some physicians have been harshly criticized for speaking about off-label prescribing, a widely accepted part of everyday medical practice.

The science and ethics of off-label prescribing have not changed; what has changed is the quality of dialogue around it. As psychiatrists, it does not fall within our scope of practice to offer definitive public opinions on the treatment of COVID-19, nor is that our purpose here. However, we can speak to a process that damages patients and doctors alike by undermining trust. All of this heat around bad medical information, in our opinion, amounts to using the methods of other fields to evaluate science and clinical practice. A remedy, then, to improve the quality of public medical intelligence would be to clarify the rules of scientific debate and to once again clearly state that off-label prescribing is part and parcel of the good practice of clinical medicine.

Dr. Renée S. Kohanski


Physicians who work in the field of professional discipline have thought about the limits of propriety in making charges of impropriety. We (R.S.E. and R.S.K.) asked the American Psychiatric Association’s Ethics Committee to expand upon its existing commentary on innovative practice and making allegations of professional misconduct. We used the committee’s answers to our questions as the basis for the arguments we are making in this piece.

The APA’s Ethics Committee uses clear-cut benchmarks to define innovative medical care: “The standards of care ... evolve with evidence from research and observations of practice. Among the expected supports for innovative practice are scientific testing, peer-reviewed publication, replication, and broad or widespread acceptance within a relevant scientific or professional community.” When it comes to off-label prescribing for any medical condition, it is easy enough to ascertain whether clinical reports have appeared in peer-reviewed journals.

Two of the biggest blockbusters in psychiatry, chlorpromazine and lithium, began as drugs used for other conditions almost since the inception of our field. In other words, the use of these drugs for mental illness began, in today’s jargon, as off-label. We practitioners of psychiatry live in the land of off-label prescribing and have always comfortably done so. In fact, almost all of medicine does. The key in today’s world of best-practice medicine is obtaining a truly informed consent.

For COVID-19, our incredible psychotropic molecules may once again be doing some trail-blazing off-label work. Late last year, Eric J. Lenze, MD, professor of psychiatry and director of the Healthy Mind Lab at Washington University in St. Louis, reported in a preliminary study of adult outpatients with symptomatic COVID-19 that those treated with fluvoxamine “had a lower likelihood of clinical deterioration over 15 days,” compared with those on placebo (JAMA. 2020;324[22]:2292-300). We were heartened to see Dr. Lenze discuss his work on a recent “60 Minutes” segment. David Seftel, MD, MBA, a clinician who administered fluvoxamine as early treatment for a COVID-19 outbreak that occurred in a community of racetrack employees and their families in the San Francisco Bay Area, also was featured. Rather than waiting for the results of large clinical trials, Dr. Lenze and Dr. Seftel proceeded, based on reports published in peer-reviewed journals, to treat patients whose lives were at risk.

If we find ourselves strongly disagreeing about the science of off-label prescribing, the proper response is to critique methodologies, not the character or competence of colleagues. The APA Ethics Committee discourages use of the media as a forum for making allegations of incompetent or unethical practice: “Judgments regarding violations of established norms of ethical or professional conduct should be made not by individuals but by bodies authorized to take evidence and make informed decisions.”

At least one state legislature is taking action to protect patients’ access to the doctors they trust. In Arizona, SB 1416 passed in the Senate and is now working its way through the House. This bill would prohibit medical boards from disciplining doctors for speaking out about or prescribing off-label drugs when a reasonable basis for use exists.

Physicians in all specialties would do well to studiously observe the conventions of their profession when it comes to critiquing their colleagues. Psychological research on the “backfire effect” suggests that heavy-handed campaigns to enforce medical consensus will only harden minds in ways that neither advance science nor improve the quality of clinical decision-making.

Medical disciplinary boards and the news media were neither designed nor are they equipped to adjudicate scientific debates. Science is never settled: Hypothesis and theory are always open to testing and revision as new evidence emerges. There is a place in medicine for formal disciplinary processes, as well-delineated by professional bodies such as the APA Ethics Committee. Another important part of protecting the public is to support an environment of scientific inquiry in which diversity of opinion is welcomed. As physicians, we translate science into excellent clinical care every day in our practices, and we advance science by sharing what we learn through friendly collegial communication and collaboration.

Dr. Emmons is part-time clinical associate professor in the department of psychiatry at the University of Vermont, Burlington, and is a past chair of the Ethics Committee for the Vermont District Branch of the American Psychiatric Association. He is in private practice in Moretown, Vt., and disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Kohanski is in private practice in Dayton, N.J., and is a diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology. She also is the host and author of Clinical Correlation, a series of the Psychcast. Dr. Kohanski disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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