Asian American teens have highest rate of suicidal ideation

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– In an unexpected finding, researchers discovered that Asian American adolescents had the highest rate of suicidal ideation, per a 2019 national survey of high-school students. According to a weighted analysis, 24% of Asian Americans reported thinking about or planning suicide vs. 22% of Whites and Blacks and 20% of Hispanics (P < .01).

“We were shocked,” said study lead author Esha Hansoti, MD, who conducted the research at UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, and is now a psychiatry resident at Zucker Hillside Hospital Northwell/Hofstra in Glen Oaks, NY. The findings were released at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

Dr. Esha Hansoti

Dr. Hansoti and colleagues launched the analysis in light of sparse research into Asian American mental health, she said. Even within this population, she said, mental illness “tends to be overlooked” and discussion of the topic may be considered taboo.

For the new study, researchers analyzed the 2019 Youth Risk Behavior Survey, conducted biennially by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which had more than 13,000 participants in grades 9-12.

A weighted bivariate analysis of 618 Asian American adolescents – adjusted for age, sex, and depressive symptoms – found no statistically significant impact on suicidal ideation by gender, age, substance use, sexual/physical dating violence, or fluency in English.

However, several groups had a statistically significant higher risk, including victims of forced sexual intercourse and those who were threatened or bullied at school.

Those who didn’t get mostly A grades were also at high risk: Adolescents with mostly Ds and Fs were more likely to have acknowledged suicidal ideation than those with mostly As (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 3.2).

Gays and lesbians (AOR = 7.9 vs. heterosexuals), and bisexuals (AOR = 5.2 vs. heterosexuals) also showed sharply higher rates of suicidal ideation.

It’s not clear why Asian American adolescents may be at higher risk of suicidal ideation. The survey was completed prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, which spawned bigotry against people of Asian descent and an ongoing outbreak of high-profile violence against Asian Americans across the country.

Dr. Hansoti noted that Asian Americans face the pressures to live up to the standards of being a “model minority.” In addition, “very few Asian American adolescents are taken to a therapist, and few mental health providers are Asian Americans.”

She urged fellow psychiatrists “to remember that our perceptions of Asian Americans might hinder some of the diagnoses we could be making. Be thoughtful about how their ethnicity and race affects their presentation and their own perception of their illness.”

She added that Asian Americans may experience mental illness and anxiety “more somatically and physically than emotionally.”

In an interview, Anne Saw, PhD, associate professor of clinical-community psychology at DePaul University, Chicago, said the findings are “helpful for corroborating other studies identifying risk factors of suicidal ideation among Asian American adolescents. Since this research utilizes the Youth Risk Behavior Survey, these findings can be compared with risk factors of suicidal ideation among adolescents from other racial/ethnic backgrounds to pinpoint general as well as specific risk factors, thus informing how we can tailor interventions for specific groups.”

Dr. Anne Saw

According to Dr. Saw, while it’s clear that suicide is a leading cause of death among Asian American adolescents, it’s still unknown which specific subgroups other than girls and LGBTIA+ individuals are especially vulnerable and which culturally tailored interventions are most effective for decreasing suicide risk.

“Psychiatrists should understand that risk and protective factors for suicidal behavior in Asian American adolescents are multifaceted and require careful attention and intervention across different environments,” she said.

No funding and no disclosures were reported.

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– In an unexpected finding, researchers discovered that Asian American adolescents had the highest rate of suicidal ideation, per a 2019 national survey of high-school students. According to a weighted analysis, 24% of Asian Americans reported thinking about or planning suicide vs. 22% of Whites and Blacks and 20% of Hispanics (P < .01).

“We were shocked,” said study lead author Esha Hansoti, MD, who conducted the research at UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, and is now a psychiatry resident at Zucker Hillside Hospital Northwell/Hofstra in Glen Oaks, NY. The findings were released at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

Dr. Esha Hansoti

Dr. Hansoti and colleagues launched the analysis in light of sparse research into Asian American mental health, she said. Even within this population, she said, mental illness “tends to be overlooked” and discussion of the topic may be considered taboo.

For the new study, researchers analyzed the 2019 Youth Risk Behavior Survey, conducted biennially by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which had more than 13,000 participants in grades 9-12.

A weighted bivariate analysis of 618 Asian American adolescents – adjusted for age, sex, and depressive symptoms – found no statistically significant impact on suicidal ideation by gender, age, substance use, sexual/physical dating violence, or fluency in English.

However, several groups had a statistically significant higher risk, including victims of forced sexual intercourse and those who were threatened or bullied at school.

Those who didn’t get mostly A grades were also at high risk: Adolescents with mostly Ds and Fs were more likely to have acknowledged suicidal ideation than those with mostly As (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 3.2).

Gays and lesbians (AOR = 7.9 vs. heterosexuals), and bisexuals (AOR = 5.2 vs. heterosexuals) also showed sharply higher rates of suicidal ideation.

It’s not clear why Asian American adolescents may be at higher risk of suicidal ideation. The survey was completed prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, which spawned bigotry against people of Asian descent and an ongoing outbreak of high-profile violence against Asian Americans across the country.

Dr. Hansoti noted that Asian Americans face the pressures to live up to the standards of being a “model minority.” In addition, “very few Asian American adolescents are taken to a therapist, and few mental health providers are Asian Americans.”

She urged fellow psychiatrists “to remember that our perceptions of Asian Americans might hinder some of the diagnoses we could be making. Be thoughtful about how their ethnicity and race affects their presentation and their own perception of their illness.”

She added that Asian Americans may experience mental illness and anxiety “more somatically and physically than emotionally.”

In an interview, Anne Saw, PhD, associate professor of clinical-community psychology at DePaul University, Chicago, said the findings are “helpful for corroborating other studies identifying risk factors of suicidal ideation among Asian American adolescents. Since this research utilizes the Youth Risk Behavior Survey, these findings can be compared with risk factors of suicidal ideation among adolescents from other racial/ethnic backgrounds to pinpoint general as well as specific risk factors, thus informing how we can tailor interventions for specific groups.”

Dr. Anne Saw

According to Dr. Saw, while it’s clear that suicide is a leading cause of death among Asian American adolescents, it’s still unknown which specific subgroups other than girls and LGBTIA+ individuals are especially vulnerable and which culturally tailored interventions are most effective for decreasing suicide risk.

“Psychiatrists should understand that risk and protective factors for suicidal behavior in Asian American adolescents are multifaceted and require careful attention and intervention across different environments,” she said.

No funding and no disclosures were reported.

– In an unexpected finding, researchers discovered that Asian American adolescents had the highest rate of suicidal ideation, per a 2019 national survey of high-school students. According to a weighted analysis, 24% of Asian Americans reported thinking about or planning suicide vs. 22% of Whites and Blacks and 20% of Hispanics (P < .01).

“We were shocked,” said study lead author Esha Hansoti, MD, who conducted the research at UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, and is now a psychiatry resident at Zucker Hillside Hospital Northwell/Hofstra in Glen Oaks, NY. The findings were released at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

Dr. Esha Hansoti

Dr. Hansoti and colleagues launched the analysis in light of sparse research into Asian American mental health, she said. Even within this population, she said, mental illness “tends to be overlooked” and discussion of the topic may be considered taboo.

For the new study, researchers analyzed the 2019 Youth Risk Behavior Survey, conducted biennially by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which had more than 13,000 participants in grades 9-12.

A weighted bivariate analysis of 618 Asian American adolescents – adjusted for age, sex, and depressive symptoms – found no statistically significant impact on suicidal ideation by gender, age, substance use, sexual/physical dating violence, or fluency in English.

However, several groups had a statistically significant higher risk, including victims of forced sexual intercourse and those who were threatened or bullied at school.

Those who didn’t get mostly A grades were also at high risk: Adolescents with mostly Ds and Fs were more likely to have acknowledged suicidal ideation than those with mostly As (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 3.2).

Gays and lesbians (AOR = 7.9 vs. heterosexuals), and bisexuals (AOR = 5.2 vs. heterosexuals) also showed sharply higher rates of suicidal ideation.

It’s not clear why Asian American adolescents may be at higher risk of suicidal ideation. The survey was completed prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, which spawned bigotry against people of Asian descent and an ongoing outbreak of high-profile violence against Asian Americans across the country.

Dr. Hansoti noted that Asian Americans face the pressures to live up to the standards of being a “model minority.” In addition, “very few Asian American adolescents are taken to a therapist, and few mental health providers are Asian Americans.”

She urged fellow psychiatrists “to remember that our perceptions of Asian Americans might hinder some of the diagnoses we could be making. Be thoughtful about how their ethnicity and race affects their presentation and their own perception of their illness.”

She added that Asian Americans may experience mental illness and anxiety “more somatically and physically than emotionally.”

In an interview, Anne Saw, PhD, associate professor of clinical-community psychology at DePaul University, Chicago, said the findings are “helpful for corroborating other studies identifying risk factors of suicidal ideation among Asian American adolescents. Since this research utilizes the Youth Risk Behavior Survey, these findings can be compared with risk factors of suicidal ideation among adolescents from other racial/ethnic backgrounds to pinpoint general as well as specific risk factors, thus informing how we can tailor interventions for specific groups.”

Dr. Anne Saw

According to Dr. Saw, while it’s clear that suicide is a leading cause of death among Asian American adolescents, it’s still unknown which specific subgroups other than girls and LGBTIA+ individuals are especially vulnerable and which culturally tailored interventions are most effective for decreasing suicide risk.

“Psychiatrists should understand that risk and protective factors for suicidal behavior in Asian American adolescents are multifaceted and require careful attention and intervention across different environments,” she said.

No funding and no disclosures were reported.

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Schizophrenia patients in long-term facilities benefit from lower-dose antipsychotics

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Changed
Thu, 06/09/2022 - 16:26

NEW ORLEANS – Patients with treatment-refractory schizophrenia in a long-term forensic facility showed significant stabilization following reduced doses of long-acting injectable antipsychotics, a study revealed.

“There is an argument by some experts in the field that state hospital populations represent a different set of patients who require higher antipsychotic dosages, with no alternative, but I don’t agree with that,” study lead author Mujeeb U. Shad, MD, GME-psychiatry program director and adjunct professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said in an interview.

In reducing doses, “patients appeared to blossom, becoming more active and less ‘zombie-like’; they started taking more interest in activities and their social [involvement] increased,” he said.

Dr. Mujeeb U. Shad

The study was among several presenting pros and cons of high antipsychotic doses at the 2022 annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

Higher doses of antipsychotics are often relied upon when patients with acute psychosis fail to respond to standard treatment, however evidence supporting the approach is lacking.

And while some studies in fact show no benefit from the higher-dose maintenance therapy over conventional or even lower doses of antipsychotics, evidence regarding forensic patients hospitalized in long-term psychiatric facilities is also scant.

Meanwhile, the need to restore competency among those patients can be more pressing than normal.

“In a forensic population where executive cognitive function is one of the key elements to restore competency to stand trial, the continuation of high-dose therapy with excessive dopamine blockade may further compromise preexisting executive dysfunction to delay competency restoration,” Dr. Shad notes in the study.

The study describes a case series in which antipsychotic doses were lowered among 22 of Dr. Shad’s patients who had been determined to be incompetent to stand trial and referred to a state hospital to restore their competency.

With the objective of regaining the mental fitness to stand trial and being discharged from the facility, those on high doses of therapy, defined as a dose greater than 50% of the average package-insert dose, had their doses reduced to conventional dosages.

The approach led to as many as 68% of the patients being stabilized and discharged after having their competency restored, without symptom relapse, following an average antipsychotic dose reduction of 44%.

The average time to discharge following the dose reduction was just 2.3 months, after an average total hospitalization time of 11 months.

The shortest hospitalization durations (less than 7 months) were observed among those who did not receive changes in doses as they were already achieving efficacy with standard dosages.

Among two patients who were treated subtherapeutically, dose increases were required and they had the longest overall hospitalization (14.5 months)
 

Additional benefits of reduced dosages

Dr. Shad noted that, in addition to the earlier discharges, patients also had reductions in their polypharmacy, and in prolactin.

“We know that high prolactin level is such a huge problem, especially for female patients because it can cause osteoporosis, infertility, and abnormal menstruation, and the reductions in hyperprolactinemia can help reduce weight gain,” he said.

Dr. Shad added that he let some of those effects be his guide in making dose reductions.

“I was trying to gradually minimize the dose while monitoring the patients for relapse, and I used extrapyramidal symptoms and prolactin levels as my guide, looking for a sweet spot with the dosing,” he said.

“For example, if patients were taking an average of about 40-60 mg of a drug, I brought it down close to 20 mg, or close to the average package insert,” Dr. Shad said.

Key concerns among clinicians about reducing antipsychotic doses include the emergence of discontinuation or rebound symptoms, including psychosis, akathisia, or Parkinsonian symptoms, and studies, including a recent meta-analysis have supported those concerns, urging caution in reducing doses below standard levels.

However, Dr. Shad said his series suggests that reducing doses gradually while carefully monitoring extrapyramidal symptoms and prolactin levels may indeed pay off.

“They’re not the perfect guides, but they’re good guides, and with the right approach, [some] may be able to do this,” Dr. Shad said.

“However, the key to a successful dose reduction or discontinuation of an [antipsychotic medication] is to avoid abrupt discontinuation and follow a gradual dose reduction while monitoring symptoms and tolerability,” he said.

Dr. T. Scott Stroup

Commenting on the research, T. Scott Stroup, MD, a professor of psychiatry at Columbia University, New York, chimed in on the side of urging caution with higher doses and supporting possible benefits with the lower-dose approach.

“I agree that people who need antipsychotic medications should receive the lowest effective dose and that often this is identified by careful dose reduction,” he said in an interview.

Dr. Shad and Stroup had no disclosures to report.
 

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NEW ORLEANS – Patients with treatment-refractory schizophrenia in a long-term forensic facility showed significant stabilization following reduced doses of long-acting injectable antipsychotics, a study revealed.

“There is an argument by some experts in the field that state hospital populations represent a different set of patients who require higher antipsychotic dosages, with no alternative, but I don’t agree with that,” study lead author Mujeeb U. Shad, MD, GME-psychiatry program director and adjunct professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said in an interview.

In reducing doses, “patients appeared to blossom, becoming more active and less ‘zombie-like’; they started taking more interest in activities and their social [involvement] increased,” he said.

Dr. Mujeeb U. Shad

The study was among several presenting pros and cons of high antipsychotic doses at the 2022 annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

Higher doses of antipsychotics are often relied upon when patients with acute psychosis fail to respond to standard treatment, however evidence supporting the approach is lacking.

And while some studies in fact show no benefit from the higher-dose maintenance therapy over conventional or even lower doses of antipsychotics, evidence regarding forensic patients hospitalized in long-term psychiatric facilities is also scant.

Meanwhile, the need to restore competency among those patients can be more pressing than normal.

“In a forensic population where executive cognitive function is one of the key elements to restore competency to stand trial, the continuation of high-dose therapy with excessive dopamine blockade may further compromise preexisting executive dysfunction to delay competency restoration,” Dr. Shad notes in the study.

The study describes a case series in which antipsychotic doses were lowered among 22 of Dr. Shad’s patients who had been determined to be incompetent to stand trial and referred to a state hospital to restore their competency.

With the objective of regaining the mental fitness to stand trial and being discharged from the facility, those on high doses of therapy, defined as a dose greater than 50% of the average package-insert dose, had their doses reduced to conventional dosages.

The approach led to as many as 68% of the patients being stabilized and discharged after having their competency restored, without symptom relapse, following an average antipsychotic dose reduction of 44%.

The average time to discharge following the dose reduction was just 2.3 months, after an average total hospitalization time of 11 months.

The shortest hospitalization durations (less than 7 months) were observed among those who did not receive changes in doses as they were already achieving efficacy with standard dosages.

Among two patients who were treated subtherapeutically, dose increases were required and they had the longest overall hospitalization (14.5 months)
 

Additional benefits of reduced dosages

Dr. Shad noted that, in addition to the earlier discharges, patients also had reductions in their polypharmacy, and in prolactin.

“We know that high prolactin level is such a huge problem, especially for female patients because it can cause osteoporosis, infertility, and abnormal menstruation, and the reductions in hyperprolactinemia can help reduce weight gain,” he said.

Dr. Shad added that he let some of those effects be his guide in making dose reductions.

“I was trying to gradually minimize the dose while monitoring the patients for relapse, and I used extrapyramidal symptoms and prolactin levels as my guide, looking for a sweet spot with the dosing,” he said.

“For example, if patients were taking an average of about 40-60 mg of a drug, I brought it down close to 20 mg, or close to the average package insert,” Dr. Shad said.

Key concerns among clinicians about reducing antipsychotic doses include the emergence of discontinuation or rebound symptoms, including psychosis, akathisia, or Parkinsonian symptoms, and studies, including a recent meta-analysis have supported those concerns, urging caution in reducing doses below standard levels.

However, Dr. Shad said his series suggests that reducing doses gradually while carefully monitoring extrapyramidal symptoms and prolactin levels may indeed pay off.

“They’re not the perfect guides, but they’re good guides, and with the right approach, [some] may be able to do this,” Dr. Shad said.

“However, the key to a successful dose reduction or discontinuation of an [antipsychotic medication] is to avoid abrupt discontinuation and follow a gradual dose reduction while monitoring symptoms and tolerability,” he said.

Dr. T. Scott Stroup

Commenting on the research, T. Scott Stroup, MD, a professor of psychiatry at Columbia University, New York, chimed in on the side of urging caution with higher doses and supporting possible benefits with the lower-dose approach.

“I agree that people who need antipsychotic medications should receive the lowest effective dose and that often this is identified by careful dose reduction,” he said in an interview.

Dr. Shad and Stroup had no disclosures to report.
 

NEW ORLEANS – Patients with treatment-refractory schizophrenia in a long-term forensic facility showed significant stabilization following reduced doses of long-acting injectable antipsychotics, a study revealed.

“There is an argument by some experts in the field that state hospital populations represent a different set of patients who require higher antipsychotic dosages, with no alternative, but I don’t agree with that,” study lead author Mujeeb U. Shad, MD, GME-psychiatry program director and adjunct professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said in an interview.

In reducing doses, “patients appeared to blossom, becoming more active and less ‘zombie-like’; they started taking more interest in activities and their social [involvement] increased,” he said.

Dr. Mujeeb U. Shad

The study was among several presenting pros and cons of high antipsychotic doses at the 2022 annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

Higher doses of antipsychotics are often relied upon when patients with acute psychosis fail to respond to standard treatment, however evidence supporting the approach is lacking.

And while some studies in fact show no benefit from the higher-dose maintenance therapy over conventional or even lower doses of antipsychotics, evidence regarding forensic patients hospitalized in long-term psychiatric facilities is also scant.

Meanwhile, the need to restore competency among those patients can be more pressing than normal.

“In a forensic population where executive cognitive function is one of the key elements to restore competency to stand trial, the continuation of high-dose therapy with excessive dopamine blockade may further compromise preexisting executive dysfunction to delay competency restoration,” Dr. Shad notes in the study.

The study describes a case series in which antipsychotic doses were lowered among 22 of Dr. Shad’s patients who had been determined to be incompetent to stand trial and referred to a state hospital to restore their competency.

With the objective of regaining the mental fitness to stand trial and being discharged from the facility, those on high doses of therapy, defined as a dose greater than 50% of the average package-insert dose, had their doses reduced to conventional dosages.

The approach led to as many as 68% of the patients being stabilized and discharged after having their competency restored, without symptom relapse, following an average antipsychotic dose reduction of 44%.

The average time to discharge following the dose reduction was just 2.3 months, after an average total hospitalization time of 11 months.

The shortest hospitalization durations (less than 7 months) were observed among those who did not receive changes in doses as they were already achieving efficacy with standard dosages.

Among two patients who were treated subtherapeutically, dose increases were required and they had the longest overall hospitalization (14.5 months)
 

Additional benefits of reduced dosages

Dr. Shad noted that, in addition to the earlier discharges, patients also had reductions in their polypharmacy, and in prolactin.

“We know that high prolactin level is such a huge problem, especially for female patients because it can cause osteoporosis, infertility, and abnormal menstruation, and the reductions in hyperprolactinemia can help reduce weight gain,” he said.

Dr. Shad added that he let some of those effects be his guide in making dose reductions.

“I was trying to gradually minimize the dose while monitoring the patients for relapse, and I used extrapyramidal symptoms and prolactin levels as my guide, looking for a sweet spot with the dosing,” he said.

“For example, if patients were taking an average of about 40-60 mg of a drug, I brought it down close to 20 mg, or close to the average package insert,” Dr. Shad said.

Key concerns among clinicians about reducing antipsychotic doses include the emergence of discontinuation or rebound symptoms, including psychosis, akathisia, or Parkinsonian symptoms, and studies, including a recent meta-analysis have supported those concerns, urging caution in reducing doses below standard levels.

However, Dr. Shad said his series suggests that reducing doses gradually while carefully monitoring extrapyramidal symptoms and prolactin levels may indeed pay off.

“They’re not the perfect guides, but they’re good guides, and with the right approach, [some] may be able to do this,” Dr. Shad said.

“However, the key to a successful dose reduction or discontinuation of an [antipsychotic medication] is to avoid abrupt discontinuation and follow a gradual dose reduction while monitoring symptoms and tolerability,” he said.

Dr. T. Scott Stroup

Commenting on the research, T. Scott Stroup, MD, a professor of psychiatry at Columbia University, New York, chimed in on the side of urging caution with higher doses and supporting possible benefits with the lower-dose approach.

“I agree that people who need antipsychotic medications should receive the lowest effective dose and that often this is identified by careful dose reduction,” he said in an interview.

Dr. Shad and Stroup had no disclosures to report.
 

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Long-term schizophrenia treatment may not always be necessary

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Fri, 06/03/2022 - 14:16

NEW ORLEANS – Patients with new-onset schizophrenia often ask psychiatrist Stephen R. Marder, MD, whether they’ll need to be on medications forever to treat the disorder. Now, he said, research is showing that the answer isn’t always yes.

In many cases, “it’s an open question” whether lifelong medical treatment is needed, said Dr. Marder, a professor at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at the University of California, Los Angeles, who spoke in a presentation about schizophrenia treatment at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

Dr. Stephen Marder

According to Dr. Marder, research about relapses suggests that there may be a subpopulation of patients who can come off antipsychotics and remain in remission or partial remission. “The problem,” he said, “is that group is very hard to identify.”

Indeed, he highlighted a 2017 study that suggested perhaps 20% of patients with schizophrenia may remain stable over the long term after stopping medication. The study noted choosing the best candidates isn’t simple, as “we do not have clinical measures or biomarkers that allow us to identify them prospectively. Because relapses and delays in the treatment of psychosis have been associated with poorer outcomes, there may be risk associated with withholding or discontinuing medication.”

There are more complications. There’s some evidence that antipsychotic drugs reduce brain volume, Dr. Marder said. But on the other hand, each psychotic episode can itself be harmful. “There is clear evidence that for each psychotic episode, they can take longer to improve, and they need higher doses.”

What to do? “My suggestion for most patients is to keep them on a relatively mild dose of an antipsychotic,” Dr. Marder said, “then to have a gradual decrease in the dose. I’ve done it in many patients.”

Which drug is best over the long term – oral or long-acting injectable antipsychotics? “It’s a hard question to answer because if you rely on randomized clinical trials – with patients who signed consent and are willing to be in a study like that – the subjects are sometimes not the ones who benefit the most from the long-acting drugs. So for many of the randomized clinical trials, the data was incomplete, and it was hard to make the case.”

But if you combine meta-analyses and cohort studies, as a 2021 study did, “you come up with a really clear answer: LAIs [long-acting injectables] are superior. They lead to a superior outcomes when it comes to rehospitalization and psychotic relapse,” Dr. Marder said.

That study reported that “LAIs were more beneficial than oral antipsychotics in 60 [18.3%] of 328 comparisons, not different in 252 [76.8%] comparisons, and less beneficial in 16 [4.9%] comparisons.”
 

More schizophrenia treatment pearls

People with schizophrenia – including those who aren’t on medication – face three times the risk of developing type 2 diabetes as the general population, “maybe because there’s a shared genetic risk for both disorders,” Dr. Marder said. “Those of you who have a lot of schizophrenia patients, I suspect you’re monitoring if they’re treating their type 2 diabetes and their obesity.”

Which antipsychotics are the best option for these patients? He highlighted a 2020 systematic review and meta-analysis that offers helpful insight into connections between 18 drugs and factors like weight and cholesterol.

Dr. Marder added that “if somebody has an elevation in their triglycerides or [hemoglobin] A1c in one single fasting blood glucose during the first 6 weeks of treatment, even if they haven’t been rated, it suggests that they’re developing insulin resistance.” At that point, he said, it’s a good idea to reconsider the medication choice.

Also, he said, keep in mind that “there’s substantial evidence that metformin is the appropriate treatment for patients who begin to demonstrate insulin resistance. It also works sometimes for weight loss.”

Exercise in people with schizophrenia can pay important dividends. A 2016 meta-analysis suggests that “not only does exercise for people with schizophrenia lead to better cardiovascular health, it’s good for the brain and improves cognitive functioning,” Dr. Marder said. “It’s not easy sometimes to get people with schizophrenia to exercise, but it’s many times worth the effort.”

Dr. Marder reported consulting for Boehringer Ingelheim, Lundbeck, Otsuka, Roche, Neurocrine, Sunovion, Newron, Merck, and Biogen; editor of UptoDate and Schizophrenia Bulletin Open; and research support from Boehringer Ingelheim.
 

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NEW ORLEANS – Patients with new-onset schizophrenia often ask psychiatrist Stephen R. Marder, MD, whether they’ll need to be on medications forever to treat the disorder. Now, he said, research is showing that the answer isn’t always yes.

In many cases, “it’s an open question” whether lifelong medical treatment is needed, said Dr. Marder, a professor at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at the University of California, Los Angeles, who spoke in a presentation about schizophrenia treatment at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

Dr. Stephen Marder

According to Dr. Marder, research about relapses suggests that there may be a subpopulation of patients who can come off antipsychotics and remain in remission or partial remission. “The problem,” he said, “is that group is very hard to identify.”

Indeed, he highlighted a 2017 study that suggested perhaps 20% of patients with schizophrenia may remain stable over the long term after stopping medication. The study noted choosing the best candidates isn’t simple, as “we do not have clinical measures or biomarkers that allow us to identify them prospectively. Because relapses and delays in the treatment of psychosis have been associated with poorer outcomes, there may be risk associated with withholding or discontinuing medication.”

There are more complications. There’s some evidence that antipsychotic drugs reduce brain volume, Dr. Marder said. But on the other hand, each psychotic episode can itself be harmful. “There is clear evidence that for each psychotic episode, they can take longer to improve, and they need higher doses.”

What to do? “My suggestion for most patients is to keep them on a relatively mild dose of an antipsychotic,” Dr. Marder said, “then to have a gradual decrease in the dose. I’ve done it in many patients.”

Which drug is best over the long term – oral or long-acting injectable antipsychotics? “It’s a hard question to answer because if you rely on randomized clinical trials – with patients who signed consent and are willing to be in a study like that – the subjects are sometimes not the ones who benefit the most from the long-acting drugs. So for many of the randomized clinical trials, the data was incomplete, and it was hard to make the case.”

But if you combine meta-analyses and cohort studies, as a 2021 study did, “you come up with a really clear answer: LAIs [long-acting injectables] are superior. They lead to a superior outcomes when it comes to rehospitalization and psychotic relapse,” Dr. Marder said.

That study reported that “LAIs were more beneficial than oral antipsychotics in 60 [18.3%] of 328 comparisons, not different in 252 [76.8%] comparisons, and less beneficial in 16 [4.9%] comparisons.”
 

More schizophrenia treatment pearls

People with schizophrenia – including those who aren’t on medication – face three times the risk of developing type 2 diabetes as the general population, “maybe because there’s a shared genetic risk for both disorders,” Dr. Marder said. “Those of you who have a lot of schizophrenia patients, I suspect you’re monitoring if they’re treating their type 2 diabetes and their obesity.”

Which antipsychotics are the best option for these patients? He highlighted a 2020 systematic review and meta-analysis that offers helpful insight into connections between 18 drugs and factors like weight and cholesterol.

Dr. Marder added that “if somebody has an elevation in their triglycerides or [hemoglobin] A1c in one single fasting blood glucose during the first 6 weeks of treatment, even if they haven’t been rated, it suggests that they’re developing insulin resistance.” At that point, he said, it’s a good idea to reconsider the medication choice.

Also, he said, keep in mind that “there’s substantial evidence that metformin is the appropriate treatment for patients who begin to demonstrate insulin resistance. It also works sometimes for weight loss.”

Exercise in people with schizophrenia can pay important dividends. A 2016 meta-analysis suggests that “not only does exercise for people with schizophrenia lead to better cardiovascular health, it’s good for the brain and improves cognitive functioning,” Dr. Marder said. “It’s not easy sometimes to get people with schizophrenia to exercise, but it’s many times worth the effort.”

Dr. Marder reported consulting for Boehringer Ingelheim, Lundbeck, Otsuka, Roche, Neurocrine, Sunovion, Newron, Merck, and Biogen; editor of UptoDate and Schizophrenia Bulletin Open; and research support from Boehringer Ingelheim.
 

NEW ORLEANS – Patients with new-onset schizophrenia often ask psychiatrist Stephen R. Marder, MD, whether they’ll need to be on medications forever to treat the disorder. Now, he said, research is showing that the answer isn’t always yes.

In many cases, “it’s an open question” whether lifelong medical treatment is needed, said Dr. Marder, a professor at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at the University of California, Los Angeles, who spoke in a presentation about schizophrenia treatment at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

Dr. Stephen Marder

According to Dr. Marder, research about relapses suggests that there may be a subpopulation of patients who can come off antipsychotics and remain in remission or partial remission. “The problem,” he said, “is that group is very hard to identify.”

Indeed, he highlighted a 2017 study that suggested perhaps 20% of patients with schizophrenia may remain stable over the long term after stopping medication. The study noted choosing the best candidates isn’t simple, as “we do not have clinical measures or biomarkers that allow us to identify them prospectively. Because relapses and delays in the treatment of psychosis have been associated with poorer outcomes, there may be risk associated with withholding or discontinuing medication.”

There are more complications. There’s some evidence that antipsychotic drugs reduce brain volume, Dr. Marder said. But on the other hand, each psychotic episode can itself be harmful. “There is clear evidence that for each psychotic episode, they can take longer to improve, and they need higher doses.”

What to do? “My suggestion for most patients is to keep them on a relatively mild dose of an antipsychotic,” Dr. Marder said, “then to have a gradual decrease in the dose. I’ve done it in many patients.”

Which drug is best over the long term – oral or long-acting injectable antipsychotics? “It’s a hard question to answer because if you rely on randomized clinical trials – with patients who signed consent and are willing to be in a study like that – the subjects are sometimes not the ones who benefit the most from the long-acting drugs. So for many of the randomized clinical trials, the data was incomplete, and it was hard to make the case.”

But if you combine meta-analyses and cohort studies, as a 2021 study did, “you come up with a really clear answer: LAIs [long-acting injectables] are superior. They lead to a superior outcomes when it comes to rehospitalization and psychotic relapse,” Dr. Marder said.

That study reported that “LAIs were more beneficial than oral antipsychotics in 60 [18.3%] of 328 comparisons, not different in 252 [76.8%] comparisons, and less beneficial in 16 [4.9%] comparisons.”
 

More schizophrenia treatment pearls

People with schizophrenia – including those who aren’t on medication – face three times the risk of developing type 2 diabetes as the general population, “maybe because there’s a shared genetic risk for both disorders,” Dr. Marder said. “Those of you who have a lot of schizophrenia patients, I suspect you’re monitoring if they’re treating their type 2 diabetes and their obesity.”

Which antipsychotics are the best option for these patients? He highlighted a 2020 systematic review and meta-analysis that offers helpful insight into connections between 18 drugs and factors like weight and cholesterol.

Dr. Marder added that “if somebody has an elevation in their triglycerides or [hemoglobin] A1c in one single fasting blood glucose during the first 6 weeks of treatment, even if they haven’t been rated, it suggests that they’re developing insulin resistance.” At that point, he said, it’s a good idea to reconsider the medication choice.

Also, he said, keep in mind that “there’s substantial evidence that metformin is the appropriate treatment for patients who begin to demonstrate insulin resistance. It also works sometimes for weight loss.”

Exercise in people with schizophrenia can pay important dividends. A 2016 meta-analysis suggests that “not only does exercise for people with schizophrenia lead to better cardiovascular health, it’s good for the brain and improves cognitive functioning,” Dr. Marder said. “It’s not easy sometimes to get people with schizophrenia to exercise, but it’s many times worth the effort.”

Dr. Marder reported consulting for Boehringer Ingelheim, Lundbeck, Otsuka, Roche, Neurocrine, Sunovion, Newron, Merck, and Biogen; editor of UptoDate and Schizophrenia Bulletin Open; and research support from Boehringer Ingelheim.
 

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High-dose antipsychotics show some benefit in treatment-resistant cases

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Fri, 06/03/2022 - 09:51

– Patients with severe schizophrenia who fail to respond to treatment with standard doses of second-generation antipsychotics show significant improvement with – and tolerance of – higher maintenance doses of the drugs, new research shows.

“The use of [higher doses of] long-acting injectable second-generation antipsychotics shows improvement not only in treatment adherence, but also in diminished relapses and suicide attempts compared with other previous treatment options used with these severely ill patients,” lead author Juan Jose Fernandez-Miranda, MD, said in an interview.

Dr. Juan Jose Fernandez-Miranda

Dr. Fernandez-Miranda, of the Mental Health Service of the Principality of Asturias, in Gijón, Spain, underscored the tolerability of the novel approach of high doses: “No important side effects were found, and less than occurred with previous treatments,” he said.

While higher doses of second-generation antipsychotics for patients with treatment refractory schizophrenia are sometimes considered necessary, particularly with acute psychosis, evidence of benefits of the approach is lacking, and there are concerns about adverse events such as extrapyramidal symptoms and hyperprolactinemia.

To investigate the effects, the authors evaluated patients in a community-based, case managed program with severe, (CGI-S = 5), resistant schizophrenia.

All had been treated in the previous 3 years with at least two different antipsychotics, including clozapine in a few cases, with poor outcomes when receiving standard doses, and eligibility included being at risk of medication noncompliance, and/or experiencing a lack of effectiveness or adverse effects with previous antipsychotics.

For the second 3 years of the observational study, they were treated with doses of at least 75 mg of risperidone long-acting injectable (n = 60), 175 mg or more of monthly paliperidone palmitate (n = 60), or 600 mg or higher of aripiprazole once monthly (n = 30).

During the study, the average antipsychotic doses were: risperidone 111.2 mg/14 days; paliperidone palmitate 231.2 mg. eq./28 days; and aripiprazole 780 mg/28 days. In addition to the intensive pharmacological intervention, patients received psychosocial integrated intervention, as in the previous 3 years.

Over the 3 years with the higher maintenance doses, significant improvements were observed with all of the injectable treatment groups in terms of decreases on the Clinical Global Impression Scale – Severity score (CGI-S; P < .01) and in the four areas of the World Health Organization Disability Schedule (WHO-DAS), including in self-care, occupational, family, and social measures (P < .01 through P < .001).

Scores on the Medication Adherence Rating Scale (MARS), increased with all of the long-acting injectables (P < .01), particularly with paliperidone palmitate and aripiprazole.

Patients had significant decreases in hospital admissions at the end of the 36-month treatments and reductions in suicide attempts (both P < .001), compared with the previous 3 years, without any differences across the three injectables.

Importantly, tolerability was good for all of the long-acting antidepressants, with reductions in side effects as well as biological parameters compared with previous treatments, notably in the aripiprazole group.

While reductions in weight and prolactin levels were observed in all long-acting treatments, the differences were statistically significant only among patients treated with aripiprazole (P < .05), as was expected.

Two patients treated with aripiprazole discontinued treatment because of side effects from treatment, and the rate was five with paliperidone palmitate and nine with risperidone.

One person in the aripiprazole group discontinued because of a lack of effectiveness, while two discontinued in the paliperidone palmitate group and four with risperidone.

Dr. Fernandez-Miranda noted that “both the intensive case-managed multicomponent treatment and use of high doses of long-acting antipsychotics were in all probability linked to the high adherence and positive clinical outcomes.”

The results provide evidence that “long-acting second-generation antipsychotics are a remarkable option for patients with severe schizophrenia and a background of treatment discontinuation or intolerable adverse effects with other antipsychotics,” Dr. Fernandez-Miranda added.

“We suggest that, in some illness critical conditions, high doses of long-acting second-generation antipsychotics could represent an alternative to clozapine,” he added.


 

 

 

Some hesitation warranted

Commenting on the study, T. Scott Stroup, MD, MPH, professor of psychiatry at Columbia University, New York, noted the key limitations of a lack of randomization and comparison group of clozapine or typical-dose long-acting injectables.

Dr. T. Scott Stroup

“In addition, pre-post or mirror-image designs may be affected by expectation bias and regression to the mean,” he said in an interview.

“I don’t doubt that some patients do well on relatively high doses of long-acting injectable medications and that some tolerate these doses,” he noted “Most adverse effects are dose related, but without a typical-dose comparison group we cannot assess this.”

Ultimately, Dr. Stroup recommends sticking with standard recommendations – at least to start.

“My take-home message is that clozapine remains the treatment of choice for treatment-resistant schizophrenia, and in most cases clozapine should be tried before considering high-dose long-acting injectables,” he said. 

“If there is uncertainty about whether someone is taking a prescribed oral antipsychotic medication, then a trial of a typical dose of a long-acting injectable is a good option to rule out pseudo-treatment resistance.”

Furthermore, “this study doesn’t affect the recommendation that people who need antipsychotic medications should receive the lowest effective dose,” he said.

The authors and Dr. Stroup had no disclosures to report.

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– Patients with severe schizophrenia who fail to respond to treatment with standard doses of second-generation antipsychotics show significant improvement with – and tolerance of – higher maintenance doses of the drugs, new research shows.

“The use of [higher doses of] long-acting injectable second-generation antipsychotics shows improvement not only in treatment adherence, but also in diminished relapses and suicide attempts compared with other previous treatment options used with these severely ill patients,” lead author Juan Jose Fernandez-Miranda, MD, said in an interview.

Dr. Juan Jose Fernandez-Miranda

Dr. Fernandez-Miranda, of the Mental Health Service of the Principality of Asturias, in Gijón, Spain, underscored the tolerability of the novel approach of high doses: “No important side effects were found, and less than occurred with previous treatments,” he said.

While higher doses of second-generation antipsychotics for patients with treatment refractory schizophrenia are sometimes considered necessary, particularly with acute psychosis, evidence of benefits of the approach is lacking, and there are concerns about adverse events such as extrapyramidal symptoms and hyperprolactinemia.

To investigate the effects, the authors evaluated patients in a community-based, case managed program with severe, (CGI-S = 5), resistant schizophrenia.

All had been treated in the previous 3 years with at least two different antipsychotics, including clozapine in a few cases, with poor outcomes when receiving standard doses, and eligibility included being at risk of medication noncompliance, and/or experiencing a lack of effectiveness or adverse effects with previous antipsychotics.

For the second 3 years of the observational study, they were treated with doses of at least 75 mg of risperidone long-acting injectable (n = 60), 175 mg or more of monthly paliperidone palmitate (n = 60), or 600 mg or higher of aripiprazole once monthly (n = 30).

During the study, the average antipsychotic doses were: risperidone 111.2 mg/14 days; paliperidone palmitate 231.2 mg. eq./28 days; and aripiprazole 780 mg/28 days. In addition to the intensive pharmacological intervention, patients received psychosocial integrated intervention, as in the previous 3 years.

Over the 3 years with the higher maintenance doses, significant improvements were observed with all of the injectable treatment groups in terms of decreases on the Clinical Global Impression Scale – Severity score (CGI-S; P < .01) and in the four areas of the World Health Organization Disability Schedule (WHO-DAS), including in self-care, occupational, family, and social measures (P < .01 through P < .001).

Scores on the Medication Adherence Rating Scale (MARS), increased with all of the long-acting injectables (P < .01), particularly with paliperidone palmitate and aripiprazole.

Patients had significant decreases in hospital admissions at the end of the 36-month treatments and reductions in suicide attempts (both P < .001), compared with the previous 3 years, without any differences across the three injectables.

Importantly, tolerability was good for all of the long-acting antidepressants, with reductions in side effects as well as biological parameters compared with previous treatments, notably in the aripiprazole group.

While reductions in weight and prolactin levels were observed in all long-acting treatments, the differences were statistically significant only among patients treated with aripiprazole (P < .05), as was expected.

Two patients treated with aripiprazole discontinued treatment because of side effects from treatment, and the rate was five with paliperidone palmitate and nine with risperidone.

One person in the aripiprazole group discontinued because of a lack of effectiveness, while two discontinued in the paliperidone palmitate group and four with risperidone.

Dr. Fernandez-Miranda noted that “both the intensive case-managed multicomponent treatment and use of high doses of long-acting antipsychotics were in all probability linked to the high adherence and positive clinical outcomes.”

The results provide evidence that “long-acting second-generation antipsychotics are a remarkable option for patients with severe schizophrenia and a background of treatment discontinuation or intolerable adverse effects with other antipsychotics,” Dr. Fernandez-Miranda added.

“We suggest that, in some illness critical conditions, high doses of long-acting second-generation antipsychotics could represent an alternative to clozapine,” he added.


 

 

 

Some hesitation warranted

Commenting on the study, T. Scott Stroup, MD, MPH, professor of psychiatry at Columbia University, New York, noted the key limitations of a lack of randomization and comparison group of clozapine or typical-dose long-acting injectables.

Dr. T. Scott Stroup

“In addition, pre-post or mirror-image designs may be affected by expectation bias and regression to the mean,” he said in an interview.

“I don’t doubt that some patients do well on relatively high doses of long-acting injectable medications and that some tolerate these doses,” he noted “Most adverse effects are dose related, but without a typical-dose comparison group we cannot assess this.”

Ultimately, Dr. Stroup recommends sticking with standard recommendations – at least to start.

“My take-home message is that clozapine remains the treatment of choice for treatment-resistant schizophrenia, and in most cases clozapine should be tried before considering high-dose long-acting injectables,” he said. 

“If there is uncertainty about whether someone is taking a prescribed oral antipsychotic medication, then a trial of a typical dose of a long-acting injectable is a good option to rule out pseudo-treatment resistance.”

Furthermore, “this study doesn’t affect the recommendation that people who need antipsychotic medications should receive the lowest effective dose,” he said.

The authors and Dr. Stroup had no disclosures to report.

– Patients with severe schizophrenia who fail to respond to treatment with standard doses of second-generation antipsychotics show significant improvement with – and tolerance of – higher maintenance doses of the drugs, new research shows.

“The use of [higher doses of] long-acting injectable second-generation antipsychotics shows improvement not only in treatment adherence, but also in diminished relapses and suicide attempts compared with other previous treatment options used with these severely ill patients,” lead author Juan Jose Fernandez-Miranda, MD, said in an interview.

Dr. Juan Jose Fernandez-Miranda

Dr. Fernandez-Miranda, of the Mental Health Service of the Principality of Asturias, in Gijón, Spain, underscored the tolerability of the novel approach of high doses: “No important side effects were found, and less than occurred with previous treatments,” he said.

While higher doses of second-generation antipsychotics for patients with treatment refractory schizophrenia are sometimes considered necessary, particularly with acute psychosis, evidence of benefits of the approach is lacking, and there are concerns about adverse events such as extrapyramidal symptoms and hyperprolactinemia.

To investigate the effects, the authors evaluated patients in a community-based, case managed program with severe, (CGI-S = 5), resistant schizophrenia.

All had been treated in the previous 3 years with at least two different antipsychotics, including clozapine in a few cases, with poor outcomes when receiving standard doses, and eligibility included being at risk of medication noncompliance, and/or experiencing a lack of effectiveness or adverse effects with previous antipsychotics.

For the second 3 years of the observational study, they were treated with doses of at least 75 mg of risperidone long-acting injectable (n = 60), 175 mg or more of monthly paliperidone palmitate (n = 60), or 600 mg or higher of aripiprazole once monthly (n = 30).

During the study, the average antipsychotic doses were: risperidone 111.2 mg/14 days; paliperidone palmitate 231.2 mg. eq./28 days; and aripiprazole 780 mg/28 days. In addition to the intensive pharmacological intervention, patients received psychosocial integrated intervention, as in the previous 3 years.

Over the 3 years with the higher maintenance doses, significant improvements were observed with all of the injectable treatment groups in terms of decreases on the Clinical Global Impression Scale – Severity score (CGI-S; P < .01) and in the four areas of the World Health Organization Disability Schedule (WHO-DAS), including in self-care, occupational, family, and social measures (P < .01 through P < .001).

Scores on the Medication Adherence Rating Scale (MARS), increased with all of the long-acting injectables (P < .01), particularly with paliperidone palmitate and aripiprazole.

Patients had significant decreases in hospital admissions at the end of the 36-month treatments and reductions in suicide attempts (both P < .001), compared with the previous 3 years, without any differences across the three injectables.

Importantly, tolerability was good for all of the long-acting antidepressants, with reductions in side effects as well as biological parameters compared with previous treatments, notably in the aripiprazole group.

While reductions in weight and prolactin levels were observed in all long-acting treatments, the differences were statistically significant only among patients treated with aripiprazole (P < .05), as was expected.

Two patients treated with aripiprazole discontinued treatment because of side effects from treatment, and the rate was five with paliperidone palmitate and nine with risperidone.

One person in the aripiprazole group discontinued because of a lack of effectiveness, while two discontinued in the paliperidone palmitate group and four with risperidone.

Dr. Fernandez-Miranda noted that “both the intensive case-managed multicomponent treatment and use of high doses of long-acting antipsychotics were in all probability linked to the high adherence and positive clinical outcomes.”

The results provide evidence that “long-acting second-generation antipsychotics are a remarkable option for patients with severe schizophrenia and a background of treatment discontinuation or intolerable adverse effects with other antipsychotics,” Dr. Fernandez-Miranda added.

“We suggest that, in some illness critical conditions, high doses of long-acting second-generation antipsychotics could represent an alternative to clozapine,” he added.


 

 

 

Some hesitation warranted

Commenting on the study, T. Scott Stroup, MD, MPH, professor of psychiatry at Columbia University, New York, noted the key limitations of a lack of randomization and comparison group of clozapine or typical-dose long-acting injectables.

Dr. T. Scott Stroup

“In addition, pre-post or mirror-image designs may be affected by expectation bias and regression to the mean,” he said in an interview.

“I don’t doubt that some patients do well on relatively high doses of long-acting injectable medications and that some tolerate these doses,” he noted “Most adverse effects are dose related, but without a typical-dose comparison group we cannot assess this.”

Ultimately, Dr. Stroup recommends sticking with standard recommendations – at least to start.

“My take-home message is that clozapine remains the treatment of choice for treatment-resistant schizophrenia, and in most cases clozapine should be tried before considering high-dose long-acting injectables,” he said. 

“If there is uncertainty about whether someone is taking a prescribed oral antipsychotic medication, then a trial of a typical dose of a long-acting injectable is a good option to rule out pseudo-treatment resistance.”

Furthermore, “this study doesn’t affect the recommendation that people who need antipsychotic medications should receive the lowest effective dose,” he said.

The authors and Dr. Stroup had no disclosures to report.

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High rates of med student burnout during COVID

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Thu, 06/02/2022 - 15:14

NEW ORLEANS – The COVID-19 pandemic has challenged the academic and psychological stability of medical students, leading to high rates of burnout.

Researchers surveyed 613 medical students representing all years of a medical program during the last week of the Spring semester of 2021.

Based on the Maslach Burnout Inventory-Student Survey (MBI-SS), more than half (54%) of the students had symptoms of burnout.

Eighty percent of students scored high on emotional exhaustion, 57% scored high on cynicism, and 36% scored low on academic effectiveness.

Compared with male medical students, female medical students were more apt to exhibit signs of burnout (60% vs. 44%), emotional exhaustion (80% vs. 73%), and cynicism (62% vs. 49%).

After adjusting for associated factors, female medical students were significantly more likely to suffer from burnout than male students (odds ratio, 1.90; 95% confidence interval, 1.34-2.70; P < .001).

Smoking was also linked to higher likelihood of burnout among medical students (OR, 2.12; 95% CI, 1.18-3.81; P < .05). The death of a family member from COVID-19 also put medical students at heightened risk for burnout (OR, 1.60; 95% CI, 1.08-2.36; P < .05).

The survey results were presented at the American Psychiatric Association (APA) Annual Meeting.

The findings point to the need to study burnout prevalence in universities and develop strategies to promote the mental health of future physicians, presenter Sofia Jezzini-Martínez, fourth-year medical student, Autonomous University of Nuevo Leon, Monterrey, Mexico, wrote in her conference abstract.

In related research presented at the APA meeting, researchers surveyed second-, third-, and fourth-year medical students from California during the pandemic.

Roughly 80% exhibited symptoms of anxiety and 68% exhibited depressive symptoms, of whom about 18% also reported having thoughts of suicide.

Yet only about half of the medical students exhibiting anxiety or depressive symptoms sought help from a mental health professional, and 20% reported using substances to cope with stress.

“Given that the pandemic is ongoing, we hope to draw attention to mental health needs of medical students and influence medical schools to direct appropriate and timely resources to this group,” presenter Sarthak Angal, MD, psychiatry resident, Kaiser Permanente San Jose Medical Center, California, wrote in his conference abstract.
 

Managing expectations

Weighing in on medical student burnout, Ihuoma Njoku, MD, department of psychiatry and neurobehavioral sciences, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, noted that, “particularly for women in multiple fields, including medicine, there’s a lot of burden placed on them.”

“Women are pulled in a lot of different directions and have increased demands, which may help explain their higher rate of burnout,” Dr. Njoku commented.

She noted that these surveys were conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic, “a period when students’ education experience was a lot different than what they expected and maybe what they wanted.”

Dr. Njoku noted that the challenges of the pandemic are particularly hard on fourth-year medical students.

“A big part of fourth year is applying to residency, and many were doing virtual interviews for residency. That makes it hard to really get an appreciation of the place you will spend the next three to eight years of your life,” she told this news organization.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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NEW ORLEANS – The COVID-19 pandemic has challenged the academic and psychological stability of medical students, leading to high rates of burnout.

Researchers surveyed 613 medical students representing all years of a medical program during the last week of the Spring semester of 2021.

Based on the Maslach Burnout Inventory-Student Survey (MBI-SS), more than half (54%) of the students had symptoms of burnout.

Eighty percent of students scored high on emotional exhaustion, 57% scored high on cynicism, and 36% scored low on academic effectiveness.

Compared with male medical students, female medical students were more apt to exhibit signs of burnout (60% vs. 44%), emotional exhaustion (80% vs. 73%), and cynicism (62% vs. 49%).

After adjusting for associated factors, female medical students were significantly more likely to suffer from burnout than male students (odds ratio, 1.90; 95% confidence interval, 1.34-2.70; P < .001).

Smoking was also linked to higher likelihood of burnout among medical students (OR, 2.12; 95% CI, 1.18-3.81; P < .05). The death of a family member from COVID-19 also put medical students at heightened risk for burnout (OR, 1.60; 95% CI, 1.08-2.36; P < .05).

The survey results were presented at the American Psychiatric Association (APA) Annual Meeting.

The findings point to the need to study burnout prevalence in universities and develop strategies to promote the mental health of future physicians, presenter Sofia Jezzini-Martínez, fourth-year medical student, Autonomous University of Nuevo Leon, Monterrey, Mexico, wrote in her conference abstract.

In related research presented at the APA meeting, researchers surveyed second-, third-, and fourth-year medical students from California during the pandemic.

Roughly 80% exhibited symptoms of anxiety and 68% exhibited depressive symptoms, of whom about 18% also reported having thoughts of suicide.

Yet only about half of the medical students exhibiting anxiety or depressive symptoms sought help from a mental health professional, and 20% reported using substances to cope with stress.

“Given that the pandemic is ongoing, we hope to draw attention to mental health needs of medical students and influence medical schools to direct appropriate and timely resources to this group,” presenter Sarthak Angal, MD, psychiatry resident, Kaiser Permanente San Jose Medical Center, California, wrote in his conference abstract.
 

Managing expectations

Weighing in on medical student burnout, Ihuoma Njoku, MD, department of psychiatry and neurobehavioral sciences, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, noted that, “particularly for women in multiple fields, including medicine, there’s a lot of burden placed on them.”

“Women are pulled in a lot of different directions and have increased demands, which may help explain their higher rate of burnout,” Dr. Njoku commented.

She noted that these surveys were conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic, “a period when students’ education experience was a lot different than what they expected and maybe what they wanted.”

Dr. Njoku noted that the challenges of the pandemic are particularly hard on fourth-year medical students.

“A big part of fourth year is applying to residency, and many were doing virtual interviews for residency. That makes it hard to really get an appreciation of the place you will spend the next three to eight years of your life,” she told this news organization.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

NEW ORLEANS – The COVID-19 pandemic has challenged the academic and psychological stability of medical students, leading to high rates of burnout.

Researchers surveyed 613 medical students representing all years of a medical program during the last week of the Spring semester of 2021.

Based on the Maslach Burnout Inventory-Student Survey (MBI-SS), more than half (54%) of the students had symptoms of burnout.

Eighty percent of students scored high on emotional exhaustion, 57% scored high on cynicism, and 36% scored low on academic effectiveness.

Compared with male medical students, female medical students were more apt to exhibit signs of burnout (60% vs. 44%), emotional exhaustion (80% vs. 73%), and cynicism (62% vs. 49%).

After adjusting for associated factors, female medical students were significantly more likely to suffer from burnout than male students (odds ratio, 1.90; 95% confidence interval, 1.34-2.70; P < .001).

Smoking was also linked to higher likelihood of burnout among medical students (OR, 2.12; 95% CI, 1.18-3.81; P < .05). The death of a family member from COVID-19 also put medical students at heightened risk for burnout (OR, 1.60; 95% CI, 1.08-2.36; P < .05).

The survey results were presented at the American Psychiatric Association (APA) Annual Meeting.

The findings point to the need to study burnout prevalence in universities and develop strategies to promote the mental health of future physicians, presenter Sofia Jezzini-Martínez, fourth-year medical student, Autonomous University of Nuevo Leon, Monterrey, Mexico, wrote in her conference abstract.

In related research presented at the APA meeting, researchers surveyed second-, third-, and fourth-year medical students from California during the pandemic.

Roughly 80% exhibited symptoms of anxiety and 68% exhibited depressive symptoms, of whom about 18% also reported having thoughts of suicide.

Yet only about half of the medical students exhibiting anxiety or depressive symptoms sought help from a mental health professional, and 20% reported using substances to cope with stress.

“Given that the pandemic is ongoing, we hope to draw attention to mental health needs of medical students and influence medical schools to direct appropriate and timely resources to this group,” presenter Sarthak Angal, MD, psychiatry resident, Kaiser Permanente San Jose Medical Center, California, wrote in his conference abstract.
 

Managing expectations

Weighing in on medical student burnout, Ihuoma Njoku, MD, department of psychiatry and neurobehavioral sciences, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, noted that, “particularly for women in multiple fields, including medicine, there’s a lot of burden placed on them.”

“Women are pulled in a lot of different directions and have increased demands, which may help explain their higher rate of burnout,” Dr. Njoku commented.

She noted that these surveys were conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic, “a period when students’ education experience was a lot different than what they expected and maybe what they wanted.”

Dr. Njoku noted that the challenges of the pandemic are particularly hard on fourth-year medical students.

“A big part of fourth year is applying to residency, and many were doing virtual interviews for residency. That makes it hard to really get an appreciation of the place you will spend the next three to eight years of your life,” she told this news organization.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Intensive outpatient PTSD treatment linked to fewer emergency encounters

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Thu, 06/02/2022 - 14:14

Adult patients who completed an intensive outpatient program (IOP) for post-traumatic stress disorder were significantly less likely over the following year to require inpatient or emergency psychiatric treatment, according to a new study released at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

In an analysis of 256 individuals, over the 12 months before they joined the IOP, 28.7% and 24.8% had inpatient and emergency department encounters, respectively, according to the researchers. Afterward, those numbers fell to 15.9% (P < .01) and 18.2% (P = .04), respectively.

“Engagement in IOP for patients with PTSD may help avoid the need for higher levels of care such as residential or inpatient treatment,” Nathan Lingafelter, MD, a psychiatrist and researcher at Kaiser Permanente in Oakland, Calif., said in an interview.

Dr. Lingafelter described IOP programs as typically “offering patients a combination of individual therapy, group therapy, and medication management all at an increased frequency of about 3 half-days per week. IOPs are thought to be helpful in helping patients with severe symptoms while they are still in the community – i.e., living in their homes, with their families, occasionally still working at reduced time.”

While other studies have examined the effects of IOP, “the existing literature focuses on how IOP reduces symptoms, rather than looking at how IOP involvement might be associated with patients utilizing different acute care resources,” he said. “Prior studies have also been conducted mostly in veteran populations and in populations with less diversity than our population in Oakland.”

For the new study, researchers tracked 256 IOP participants (83% female; mean age = 39; 44% White, 27% Black, 14% Hispanic, and 7% Asian). The wide majority – 85% – had comorbid depressive disorders.

“Patients are assigned a case manager when they enter the program who they can meet with individually, and they spend time attending group therapy sessions. Patients are also able to meet with a psychiatrist to discuss medications,” Dr. Lingafelter said. “A major component in both the group and individual therapy is helping patients identify which kind of interventions work for them and what we can do now that will help. IOP can really help clarify for patients what their trauma responses are and how to start treatments that actually fit their symptoms.”

The subjects had a mean 0.3 psychiatric encounters in the year before joining the program and 0.2 in the year after (P < .01). Their mean emergency department visits related to mental health fell from 0.5 to 0.3 (P = .03).

The study has limitations. Participants took part in IOP therapy from 2017 to 2018, before the pandemic disrupted mental health treatment. It does not examine whether medication use changed after IOP treatment. It is retrospective and doesn’t confirm that IOP had any positive effect.
 

Multiple benefits of IOP

In an interview, Deborah C. Beidel, PhD, director of UCF RESTORES at the University of Central Florida, Orlando, said IOP has several advantages as a treatment for PTSD. Her clinic, which focuses on PTSD treatment for military veterans, has used the approach to treat hundreds of people.

Dr. Deborah C. Beidel

“First, IOPs can address the stigma that surrounds mental health treatment. If you have a physical injury, you take time off from work to go to physical therapy, which is time-limited. If you have a stress injury, why not do the same? Take a few weeks, get it treated, and get back to work,” she said. “The second reason is that the most effective treatment for PTSD is exposure therapy, which is more effective when treatment sessions occur in a daily as opposed to a weekly or monthly time frame. Third, from a cost and feasibility perspective, an intensive program could reduce overall medical costs and get people back to work sooner.”

The new study is “definitely useful” since it examines the impact of IOP over a longer term, Dr. Beidel said. This kind of data “can influence policy, particularly with insurance companies. If we can build the evidence that short, intensive treatment produces better long-term outcomes, insurance companies will be more likely to pay for the IOP.”

The University of Central Florida program is funded by federal research grants and state funding, she said. “When we calculate the cost, it comes to about $10,000 in therapy time plus an average of about $3,000 in travel related costs – transportation, lodging, meals – for those who travel from out of state for our program.”

What’s next? “Further study is needed to characterize whether these findings are applicable to other practice settings, including virtual treatment programs; the long-term durability of these findings; and whether similar patterns of reduced resource use extend to non–mental health–specific care utilization,” said Dr. Lingafelter, the study’s lead author.

No study funding and no author disclosures were reported. Dr. Beidel disclosed IOP-related research support from the U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command–Military Operational Medicine Research Program.

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Adult patients who completed an intensive outpatient program (IOP) for post-traumatic stress disorder were significantly less likely over the following year to require inpatient or emergency psychiatric treatment, according to a new study released at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

In an analysis of 256 individuals, over the 12 months before they joined the IOP, 28.7% and 24.8% had inpatient and emergency department encounters, respectively, according to the researchers. Afterward, those numbers fell to 15.9% (P < .01) and 18.2% (P = .04), respectively.

“Engagement in IOP for patients with PTSD may help avoid the need for higher levels of care such as residential or inpatient treatment,” Nathan Lingafelter, MD, a psychiatrist and researcher at Kaiser Permanente in Oakland, Calif., said in an interview.

Dr. Lingafelter described IOP programs as typically “offering patients a combination of individual therapy, group therapy, and medication management all at an increased frequency of about 3 half-days per week. IOPs are thought to be helpful in helping patients with severe symptoms while they are still in the community – i.e., living in their homes, with their families, occasionally still working at reduced time.”

While other studies have examined the effects of IOP, “the existing literature focuses on how IOP reduces symptoms, rather than looking at how IOP involvement might be associated with patients utilizing different acute care resources,” he said. “Prior studies have also been conducted mostly in veteran populations and in populations with less diversity than our population in Oakland.”

For the new study, researchers tracked 256 IOP participants (83% female; mean age = 39; 44% White, 27% Black, 14% Hispanic, and 7% Asian). The wide majority – 85% – had comorbid depressive disorders.

“Patients are assigned a case manager when they enter the program who they can meet with individually, and they spend time attending group therapy sessions. Patients are also able to meet with a psychiatrist to discuss medications,” Dr. Lingafelter said. “A major component in both the group and individual therapy is helping patients identify which kind of interventions work for them and what we can do now that will help. IOP can really help clarify for patients what their trauma responses are and how to start treatments that actually fit their symptoms.”

The subjects had a mean 0.3 psychiatric encounters in the year before joining the program and 0.2 in the year after (P < .01). Their mean emergency department visits related to mental health fell from 0.5 to 0.3 (P = .03).

The study has limitations. Participants took part in IOP therapy from 2017 to 2018, before the pandemic disrupted mental health treatment. It does not examine whether medication use changed after IOP treatment. It is retrospective and doesn’t confirm that IOP had any positive effect.
 

Multiple benefits of IOP

In an interview, Deborah C. Beidel, PhD, director of UCF RESTORES at the University of Central Florida, Orlando, said IOP has several advantages as a treatment for PTSD. Her clinic, which focuses on PTSD treatment for military veterans, has used the approach to treat hundreds of people.

Dr. Deborah C. Beidel

“First, IOPs can address the stigma that surrounds mental health treatment. If you have a physical injury, you take time off from work to go to physical therapy, which is time-limited. If you have a stress injury, why not do the same? Take a few weeks, get it treated, and get back to work,” she said. “The second reason is that the most effective treatment for PTSD is exposure therapy, which is more effective when treatment sessions occur in a daily as opposed to a weekly or monthly time frame. Third, from a cost and feasibility perspective, an intensive program could reduce overall medical costs and get people back to work sooner.”

The new study is “definitely useful” since it examines the impact of IOP over a longer term, Dr. Beidel said. This kind of data “can influence policy, particularly with insurance companies. If we can build the evidence that short, intensive treatment produces better long-term outcomes, insurance companies will be more likely to pay for the IOP.”

The University of Central Florida program is funded by federal research grants and state funding, she said. “When we calculate the cost, it comes to about $10,000 in therapy time plus an average of about $3,000 in travel related costs – transportation, lodging, meals – for those who travel from out of state for our program.”

What’s next? “Further study is needed to characterize whether these findings are applicable to other practice settings, including virtual treatment programs; the long-term durability of these findings; and whether similar patterns of reduced resource use extend to non–mental health–specific care utilization,” said Dr. Lingafelter, the study’s lead author.

No study funding and no author disclosures were reported. Dr. Beidel disclosed IOP-related research support from the U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command–Military Operational Medicine Research Program.

Adult patients who completed an intensive outpatient program (IOP) for post-traumatic stress disorder were significantly less likely over the following year to require inpatient or emergency psychiatric treatment, according to a new study released at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

In an analysis of 256 individuals, over the 12 months before they joined the IOP, 28.7% and 24.8% had inpatient and emergency department encounters, respectively, according to the researchers. Afterward, those numbers fell to 15.9% (P < .01) and 18.2% (P = .04), respectively.

“Engagement in IOP for patients with PTSD may help avoid the need for higher levels of care such as residential or inpatient treatment,” Nathan Lingafelter, MD, a psychiatrist and researcher at Kaiser Permanente in Oakland, Calif., said in an interview.

Dr. Lingafelter described IOP programs as typically “offering patients a combination of individual therapy, group therapy, and medication management all at an increased frequency of about 3 half-days per week. IOPs are thought to be helpful in helping patients with severe symptoms while they are still in the community – i.e., living in their homes, with their families, occasionally still working at reduced time.”

While other studies have examined the effects of IOP, “the existing literature focuses on how IOP reduces symptoms, rather than looking at how IOP involvement might be associated with patients utilizing different acute care resources,” he said. “Prior studies have also been conducted mostly in veteran populations and in populations with less diversity than our population in Oakland.”

For the new study, researchers tracked 256 IOP participants (83% female; mean age = 39; 44% White, 27% Black, 14% Hispanic, and 7% Asian). The wide majority – 85% – had comorbid depressive disorders.

“Patients are assigned a case manager when they enter the program who they can meet with individually, and they spend time attending group therapy sessions. Patients are also able to meet with a psychiatrist to discuss medications,” Dr. Lingafelter said. “A major component in both the group and individual therapy is helping patients identify which kind of interventions work for them and what we can do now that will help. IOP can really help clarify for patients what their trauma responses are and how to start treatments that actually fit their symptoms.”

The subjects had a mean 0.3 psychiatric encounters in the year before joining the program and 0.2 in the year after (P < .01). Their mean emergency department visits related to mental health fell from 0.5 to 0.3 (P = .03).

The study has limitations. Participants took part in IOP therapy from 2017 to 2018, before the pandemic disrupted mental health treatment. It does not examine whether medication use changed after IOP treatment. It is retrospective and doesn’t confirm that IOP had any positive effect.
 

Multiple benefits of IOP

In an interview, Deborah C. Beidel, PhD, director of UCF RESTORES at the University of Central Florida, Orlando, said IOP has several advantages as a treatment for PTSD. Her clinic, which focuses on PTSD treatment for military veterans, has used the approach to treat hundreds of people.

Dr. Deborah C. Beidel

“First, IOPs can address the stigma that surrounds mental health treatment. If you have a physical injury, you take time off from work to go to physical therapy, which is time-limited. If you have a stress injury, why not do the same? Take a few weeks, get it treated, and get back to work,” she said. “The second reason is that the most effective treatment for PTSD is exposure therapy, which is more effective when treatment sessions occur in a daily as opposed to a weekly or monthly time frame. Third, from a cost and feasibility perspective, an intensive program could reduce overall medical costs and get people back to work sooner.”

The new study is “definitely useful” since it examines the impact of IOP over a longer term, Dr. Beidel said. This kind of data “can influence policy, particularly with insurance companies. If we can build the evidence that short, intensive treatment produces better long-term outcomes, insurance companies will be more likely to pay for the IOP.”

The University of Central Florida program is funded by federal research grants and state funding, she said. “When we calculate the cost, it comes to about $10,000 in therapy time plus an average of about $3,000 in travel related costs – transportation, lodging, meals – for those who travel from out of state for our program.”

What’s next? “Further study is needed to characterize whether these findings are applicable to other practice settings, including virtual treatment programs; the long-term durability of these findings; and whether similar patterns of reduced resource use extend to non–mental health–specific care utilization,” said Dr. Lingafelter, the study’s lead author.

No study funding and no author disclosures were reported. Dr. Beidel disclosed IOP-related research support from the U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command–Military Operational Medicine Research Program.

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Long COVID neuropsychiatric deficits greater than expected

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Wed, 06/22/2022 - 09:26

Patients experiencing brain fog and other persistent symptoms of long COVID show significant deficits on neuropsychiatric testing that correspond with prior acute COVID-19 infection, adding to mounting evidence of the significant toll the chronic condition can have on mental health.

“Many clinicians have observed the symptoms we describe in this study, however this report is among the first which identify the specific deficits using neuropsychological testing to better characterize the syndrome,” Sean T. Lynch, MD, first author of a study on the issue presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association, said in an interview.

Dr. Sean T. Lynch

Dr. Lynch, of the department of psychiatry, Westchester Medical Center Health System, Valhalla, N.Y., and his colleagues enrolled 60 participants who had experienced acute COVID-19 disease 6-8 months earlier and had undergone neuropsychological, psychiatric, medical, functional, and quality-of-life assessments. Results from the study were published online in the Journal of the Academy of Consultation–Liaison Psychiatry (2022 Jan 25. doi: 10.1016/j.jaclp.2022.01.003).

Among the study participants, 32 were seeking treatment for brain fog in a clinical program for survivors of COVID-19, while the remaining 28 were part of an ongoing longitudinal investigation of neuropsychological, medical, and psychiatric sequelae of COVID-19, but were not seeking care for the persistent symptoms.

Assessments for neurocognitive impairment included a battery of tests used in infectious and other diseases, including the Test of Premorbid Function, the Patient Assessment of Own Function, the Trail Making Test parts A and B, the Stroop Color and Word Test, and others.

Overall, the battery of assessments showed that 37 (62%) of participants had neuropsychological test impairment, with results below the 16th percentile in two tests, while 16 (27%) showed scores indicative of severe impairment (below the second percentile in at least one test and below the 16th percentile in one test).

Those reporting brain fog had scores that were even lower than expected on tests of attention, processing speed, memory, and executive function. And among those reporting brain fog, significantly more had scores reflecting severe impairment compared with the controls (38% vs. 14%; P < .04).

“Based on what we’ve observed in our patients and what others have previously reported, we did expect to find some impairment in this study sample,” Dr. Lynch noted.

“However, we were surprised to find that 27% of the study sample had extremely low neuropsychological test scores, meaning that they scored at least two standard deviations below the expected score on at least one neuropsychological test based on their age and level of education.”

The brain fog group also reported significantly higher levels of depression, fatigue, PTSD, and functional difficulties, and lower quality of life.

Severe impairment on the neuropsychological tests correlated with the extent of acute COVID-19 symptoms, as well as depression scores, number of medical comorbidities, and subjective cognitive complaints.

An analysis of serum levels of the inflammatory markers among 50 of the 60 participants showed that 45% of the patients had an elevated IL-6, 20% had elevated TNF-alpha, and 41% had elevated CRP, compared with reference ranges.

IL-6 levels were found to correlate with acute COVID-19 symptoms, the number of medical comorbidities, fatigue, and measures of executive function, while C-reactive protein (CRP) correlated with current COVID-19 symptoms and depression scores.

In terms of clinical factors that might predict low neuropsychological test scores, Dr. Lynch noted that the “markers that we found to be significant included severity of acute COVID-19 illness, current post-COVID-19 symptoms, measures of depression and anxiety, level of fatigue, and number of medical comorbidities.”

Dr. Lynch noted that the ongoing study will include up to 18-month follow-ups that are currently underway. “The [follow-ups] will examine if symptoms improve over time and evaluate if any intervention that took place was successful,” he said.


 

 

 

Survey supports findings

The detrimental effects of mental health symptoms in long COVID were further supported in another study at the APA meeting, an online survey of 787 survivors of acute COVID-19.

In the community survey, presented by Michael Van Ameringen, MD, a professor in the department of psychiatry and behavioral neurosciences at McMaster University, in Hamilton, Ont., all respondents (100%) reported having persistent symptoms of the virus, and as many as 68% indicated that they had not returned to normal functioning, despite only 15% of the respondents having been hospitalized with COVID-19.

A large proportion showed significant depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and the most commonly reported persistent symptoms were fatigue in 75.9% of respondents, brain fog in 67.9%, concentration difficulties in 61.1%, and weakness in 51.2%.

As many as 88.2% of patients said they experienced persistent neurocognitive symptoms, with poor memory and concentration; 56% reported problems with word finding; and 54.1% had slowed thinking.

The respondents showed high rates of anxiety (41.7%) as well as depression (61.4%) as determined by scores above 9 on the Generalized Anxiety Disorder–7 (GAD-7) and Patient Health Questionnaires (PHQ-9).

As many as 40.5% of respondents showed probable PTSD, with scores above 30 on the PTSD checklist (PCL-5). Their mean resilience score on the Brief Resilient Coping Scale was 13.5, suggesting low resilience.

Among the respondents, 43.3% said they had received past treatment for mental health, while 33.5% were currently receiving mental health treatment.

Dr. Van Ameringen noted the important limitation of the study being an online survey with no control group, but said the responses nevertheless raise the question of the role of prior psychiatric disorders in long COVID.

“In our sample, 40% of respondents had a past psychiatric history, so you wonder if that also makes you vulnerable to long COVID,” he said in an interview.

“About a third were getting psychiatric help, but I think the more impaired you are, the more likely you are to seek help.”

Those who were hospitalized with COVID-19 were at a higher risk of PTSD compared with those not hospitalized (P < .001), as were those under the age of 30 (P < .05) or between 31 and 50 vs. over 50 (P < .01).

Dr. Van Ameringen noted that the survey’s high rate of subjects who had not returned to normal functioning was especially striking.

“This is not a minor issue – these are people who are no longer functioning in society,” he said.
 

In pandemics, the brain tends to be ‘overlooked’

Further addressing the neurological effects of COVID-19 at the APA meeting, Avindra Nath, MD, clinical director of the National Institutes of Neurologic Disorders and Stroke in Bethesda, Md., noted that the persisting cognitive and psychiatric symptoms after illness, such as brain fog and depression and anxiety, are not necessarily unique to COVID-19.

Dr. Avindra Nath

“We have seen this before,” he said. “There have been at least seven or eight human coronaviruses, and the interesting thing is each one affects the brain and causes neurological complications.”

The effects are classified differently and have slightly different receptors, “but the consequences are the same.”

Of note, however, research published in The Lancet Psychiatry (2021 May. doi: 10.1016/S2215-0366[21]00084-5) revealed that symptoms such as dementia, mood, and anxiety are significantly higher after COVID-19 compared with other respiratory infections, with the differences increasing at 180 days since the index event.

Dr. Nath noted that, over the decades, he has observed that in pandemics “the brain tends to get overlooked.” He explained that “what can be most important in the end is what happened in the brain, because those are the things that really cause the long-term consequences.”

“These patients are depressed; they have dementia, they have brain fog, and even now that we recognize these issues, we haven’t done a very good job of studying them,” he said. “There’s so much we still don’t know, and a lot of patients are left with these symptoms and nowhere to go.”

Dr. Lynch, Dr. Van Ameringen, and Dr. Nath had no disclosures to report.

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Patients experiencing brain fog and other persistent symptoms of long COVID show significant deficits on neuropsychiatric testing that correspond with prior acute COVID-19 infection, adding to mounting evidence of the significant toll the chronic condition can have on mental health.

“Many clinicians have observed the symptoms we describe in this study, however this report is among the first which identify the specific deficits using neuropsychological testing to better characterize the syndrome,” Sean T. Lynch, MD, first author of a study on the issue presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association, said in an interview.

Dr. Sean T. Lynch

Dr. Lynch, of the department of psychiatry, Westchester Medical Center Health System, Valhalla, N.Y., and his colleagues enrolled 60 participants who had experienced acute COVID-19 disease 6-8 months earlier and had undergone neuropsychological, psychiatric, medical, functional, and quality-of-life assessments. Results from the study were published online in the Journal of the Academy of Consultation–Liaison Psychiatry (2022 Jan 25. doi: 10.1016/j.jaclp.2022.01.003).

Among the study participants, 32 were seeking treatment for brain fog in a clinical program for survivors of COVID-19, while the remaining 28 were part of an ongoing longitudinal investigation of neuropsychological, medical, and psychiatric sequelae of COVID-19, but were not seeking care for the persistent symptoms.

Assessments for neurocognitive impairment included a battery of tests used in infectious and other diseases, including the Test of Premorbid Function, the Patient Assessment of Own Function, the Trail Making Test parts A and B, the Stroop Color and Word Test, and others.

Overall, the battery of assessments showed that 37 (62%) of participants had neuropsychological test impairment, with results below the 16th percentile in two tests, while 16 (27%) showed scores indicative of severe impairment (below the second percentile in at least one test and below the 16th percentile in one test).

Those reporting brain fog had scores that were even lower than expected on tests of attention, processing speed, memory, and executive function. And among those reporting brain fog, significantly more had scores reflecting severe impairment compared with the controls (38% vs. 14%; P < .04).

“Based on what we’ve observed in our patients and what others have previously reported, we did expect to find some impairment in this study sample,” Dr. Lynch noted.

“However, we were surprised to find that 27% of the study sample had extremely low neuropsychological test scores, meaning that they scored at least two standard deviations below the expected score on at least one neuropsychological test based on their age and level of education.”

The brain fog group also reported significantly higher levels of depression, fatigue, PTSD, and functional difficulties, and lower quality of life.

Severe impairment on the neuropsychological tests correlated with the extent of acute COVID-19 symptoms, as well as depression scores, number of medical comorbidities, and subjective cognitive complaints.

An analysis of serum levels of the inflammatory markers among 50 of the 60 participants showed that 45% of the patients had an elevated IL-6, 20% had elevated TNF-alpha, and 41% had elevated CRP, compared with reference ranges.

IL-6 levels were found to correlate with acute COVID-19 symptoms, the number of medical comorbidities, fatigue, and measures of executive function, while C-reactive protein (CRP) correlated with current COVID-19 symptoms and depression scores.

In terms of clinical factors that might predict low neuropsychological test scores, Dr. Lynch noted that the “markers that we found to be significant included severity of acute COVID-19 illness, current post-COVID-19 symptoms, measures of depression and anxiety, level of fatigue, and number of medical comorbidities.”

Dr. Lynch noted that the ongoing study will include up to 18-month follow-ups that are currently underway. “The [follow-ups] will examine if symptoms improve over time and evaluate if any intervention that took place was successful,” he said.


 

 

 

Survey supports findings

The detrimental effects of mental health symptoms in long COVID were further supported in another study at the APA meeting, an online survey of 787 survivors of acute COVID-19.

In the community survey, presented by Michael Van Ameringen, MD, a professor in the department of psychiatry and behavioral neurosciences at McMaster University, in Hamilton, Ont., all respondents (100%) reported having persistent symptoms of the virus, and as many as 68% indicated that they had not returned to normal functioning, despite only 15% of the respondents having been hospitalized with COVID-19.

A large proportion showed significant depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and the most commonly reported persistent symptoms were fatigue in 75.9% of respondents, brain fog in 67.9%, concentration difficulties in 61.1%, and weakness in 51.2%.

As many as 88.2% of patients said they experienced persistent neurocognitive symptoms, with poor memory and concentration; 56% reported problems with word finding; and 54.1% had slowed thinking.

The respondents showed high rates of anxiety (41.7%) as well as depression (61.4%) as determined by scores above 9 on the Generalized Anxiety Disorder–7 (GAD-7) and Patient Health Questionnaires (PHQ-9).

As many as 40.5% of respondents showed probable PTSD, with scores above 30 on the PTSD checklist (PCL-5). Their mean resilience score on the Brief Resilient Coping Scale was 13.5, suggesting low resilience.

Among the respondents, 43.3% said they had received past treatment for mental health, while 33.5% were currently receiving mental health treatment.

Dr. Van Ameringen noted the important limitation of the study being an online survey with no control group, but said the responses nevertheless raise the question of the role of prior psychiatric disorders in long COVID.

“In our sample, 40% of respondents had a past psychiatric history, so you wonder if that also makes you vulnerable to long COVID,” he said in an interview.

“About a third were getting psychiatric help, but I think the more impaired you are, the more likely you are to seek help.”

Those who were hospitalized with COVID-19 were at a higher risk of PTSD compared with those not hospitalized (P < .001), as were those under the age of 30 (P < .05) or between 31 and 50 vs. over 50 (P < .01).

Dr. Van Ameringen noted that the survey’s high rate of subjects who had not returned to normal functioning was especially striking.

“This is not a minor issue – these are people who are no longer functioning in society,” he said.
 

In pandemics, the brain tends to be ‘overlooked’

Further addressing the neurological effects of COVID-19 at the APA meeting, Avindra Nath, MD, clinical director of the National Institutes of Neurologic Disorders and Stroke in Bethesda, Md., noted that the persisting cognitive and psychiatric symptoms after illness, such as brain fog and depression and anxiety, are not necessarily unique to COVID-19.

Dr. Avindra Nath

“We have seen this before,” he said. “There have been at least seven or eight human coronaviruses, and the interesting thing is each one affects the brain and causes neurological complications.”

The effects are classified differently and have slightly different receptors, “but the consequences are the same.”

Of note, however, research published in The Lancet Psychiatry (2021 May. doi: 10.1016/S2215-0366[21]00084-5) revealed that symptoms such as dementia, mood, and anxiety are significantly higher after COVID-19 compared with other respiratory infections, with the differences increasing at 180 days since the index event.

Dr. Nath noted that, over the decades, he has observed that in pandemics “the brain tends to get overlooked.” He explained that “what can be most important in the end is what happened in the brain, because those are the things that really cause the long-term consequences.”

“These patients are depressed; they have dementia, they have brain fog, and even now that we recognize these issues, we haven’t done a very good job of studying them,” he said. “There’s so much we still don’t know, and a lot of patients are left with these symptoms and nowhere to go.”

Dr. Lynch, Dr. Van Ameringen, and Dr. Nath had no disclosures to report.

Patients experiencing brain fog and other persistent symptoms of long COVID show significant deficits on neuropsychiatric testing that correspond with prior acute COVID-19 infection, adding to mounting evidence of the significant toll the chronic condition can have on mental health.

“Many clinicians have observed the symptoms we describe in this study, however this report is among the first which identify the specific deficits using neuropsychological testing to better characterize the syndrome,” Sean T. Lynch, MD, first author of a study on the issue presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association, said in an interview.

Dr. Sean T. Lynch

Dr. Lynch, of the department of psychiatry, Westchester Medical Center Health System, Valhalla, N.Y., and his colleagues enrolled 60 participants who had experienced acute COVID-19 disease 6-8 months earlier and had undergone neuropsychological, psychiatric, medical, functional, and quality-of-life assessments. Results from the study were published online in the Journal of the Academy of Consultation–Liaison Psychiatry (2022 Jan 25. doi: 10.1016/j.jaclp.2022.01.003).

Among the study participants, 32 were seeking treatment for brain fog in a clinical program for survivors of COVID-19, while the remaining 28 were part of an ongoing longitudinal investigation of neuropsychological, medical, and psychiatric sequelae of COVID-19, but were not seeking care for the persistent symptoms.

Assessments for neurocognitive impairment included a battery of tests used in infectious and other diseases, including the Test of Premorbid Function, the Patient Assessment of Own Function, the Trail Making Test parts A and B, the Stroop Color and Word Test, and others.

Overall, the battery of assessments showed that 37 (62%) of participants had neuropsychological test impairment, with results below the 16th percentile in two tests, while 16 (27%) showed scores indicative of severe impairment (below the second percentile in at least one test and below the 16th percentile in one test).

Those reporting brain fog had scores that were even lower than expected on tests of attention, processing speed, memory, and executive function. And among those reporting brain fog, significantly more had scores reflecting severe impairment compared with the controls (38% vs. 14%; P < .04).

“Based on what we’ve observed in our patients and what others have previously reported, we did expect to find some impairment in this study sample,” Dr. Lynch noted.

“However, we were surprised to find that 27% of the study sample had extremely low neuropsychological test scores, meaning that they scored at least two standard deviations below the expected score on at least one neuropsychological test based on their age and level of education.”

The brain fog group also reported significantly higher levels of depression, fatigue, PTSD, and functional difficulties, and lower quality of life.

Severe impairment on the neuropsychological tests correlated with the extent of acute COVID-19 symptoms, as well as depression scores, number of medical comorbidities, and subjective cognitive complaints.

An analysis of serum levels of the inflammatory markers among 50 of the 60 participants showed that 45% of the patients had an elevated IL-6, 20% had elevated TNF-alpha, and 41% had elevated CRP, compared with reference ranges.

IL-6 levels were found to correlate with acute COVID-19 symptoms, the number of medical comorbidities, fatigue, and measures of executive function, while C-reactive protein (CRP) correlated with current COVID-19 symptoms and depression scores.

In terms of clinical factors that might predict low neuropsychological test scores, Dr. Lynch noted that the “markers that we found to be significant included severity of acute COVID-19 illness, current post-COVID-19 symptoms, measures of depression and anxiety, level of fatigue, and number of medical comorbidities.”

Dr. Lynch noted that the ongoing study will include up to 18-month follow-ups that are currently underway. “The [follow-ups] will examine if symptoms improve over time and evaluate if any intervention that took place was successful,” he said.


 

 

 

Survey supports findings

The detrimental effects of mental health symptoms in long COVID were further supported in another study at the APA meeting, an online survey of 787 survivors of acute COVID-19.

In the community survey, presented by Michael Van Ameringen, MD, a professor in the department of psychiatry and behavioral neurosciences at McMaster University, in Hamilton, Ont., all respondents (100%) reported having persistent symptoms of the virus, and as many as 68% indicated that they had not returned to normal functioning, despite only 15% of the respondents having been hospitalized with COVID-19.

A large proportion showed significant depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and the most commonly reported persistent symptoms were fatigue in 75.9% of respondents, brain fog in 67.9%, concentration difficulties in 61.1%, and weakness in 51.2%.

As many as 88.2% of patients said they experienced persistent neurocognitive symptoms, with poor memory and concentration; 56% reported problems with word finding; and 54.1% had slowed thinking.

The respondents showed high rates of anxiety (41.7%) as well as depression (61.4%) as determined by scores above 9 on the Generalized Anxiety Disorder–7 (GAD-7) and Patient Health Questionnaires (PHQ-9).

As many as 40.5% of respondents showed probable PTSD, with scores above 30 on the PTSD checklist (PCL-5). Their mean resilience score on the Brief Resilient Coping Scale was 13.5, suggesting low resilience.

Among the respondents, 43.3% said they had received past treatment for mental health, while 33.5% were currently receiving mental health treatment.

Dr. Van Ameringen noted the important limitation of the study being an online survey with no control group, but said the responses nevertheless raise the question of the role of prior psychiatric disorders in long COVID.

“In our sample, 40% of respondents had a past psychiatric history, so you wonder if that also makes you vulnerable to long COVID,” he said in an interview.

“About a third were getting psychiatric help, but I think the more impaired you are, the more likely you are to seek help.”

Those who were hospitalized with COVID-19 were at a higher risk of PTSD compared with those not hospitalized (P < .001), as were those under the age of 30 (P < .05) or between 31 and 50 vs. over 50 (P < .01).

Dr. Van Ameringen noted that the survey’s high rate of subjects who had not returned to normal functioning was especially striking.

“This is not a minor issue – these are people who are no longer functioning in society,” he said.
 

In pandemics, the brain tends to be ‘overlooked’

Further addressing the neurological effects of COVID-19 at the APA meeting, Avindra Nath, MD, clinical director of the National Institutes of Neurologic Disorders and Stroke in Bethesda, Md., noted that the persisting cognitive and psychiatric symptoms after illness, such as brain fog and depression and anxiety, are not necessarily unique to COVID-19.

Dr. Avindra Nath

“We have seen this before,” he said. “There have been at least seven or eight human coronaviruses, and the interesting thing is each one affects the brain and causes neurological complications.”

The effects are classified differently and have slightly different receptors, “but the consequences are the same.”

Of note, however, research published in The Lancet Psychiatry (2021 May. doi: 10.1016/S2215-0366[21]00084-5) revealed that symptoms such as dementia, mood, and anxiety are significantly higher after COVID-19 compared with other respiratory infections, with the differences increasing at 180 days since the index event.

Dr. Nath noted that, over the decades, he has observed that in pandemics “the brain tends to get overlooked.” He explained that “what can be most important in the end is what happened in the brain, because those are the things that really cause the long-term consequences.”

“These patients are depressed; they have dementia, they have brain fog, and even now that we recognize these issues, we haven’t done a very good job of studying them,” he said. “There’s so much we still don’t know, and a lot of patients are left with these symptoms and nowhere to go.”

Dr. Lynch, Dr. Van Ameringen, and Dr. Nath had no disclosures to report.

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Medical trauma an under-recognized trigger for PTSD

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 05/31/2022 - 10:50

– Recent studies have confirmed that posttraumatic stress disorder can be triggered by health-related stress such as stints in the ICU and life-threatening medical emergencies, but most psychiatrists may not be aware of the latest research, according to an expert in mental trauma.

“This is true among children as well as adults, but it is not generally appreciated by psychiatrists and not at all by non-physicians,” said Charles B. Nemeroff, MD, PhD, professor and chair of the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Texas at Austin’s Dell Medical School, in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association. “It’s something that we all need to educate our colleagues about.”

Courtesy University of Texas, Austin
Dr. Charles B. Nemeroff


As Dr. Nemeroff noted in a wide-ranging discussion about the latest trends in PTSD diagnosis and treatment, the DSM-5 doesn’t yet mention medical trauma in its definition of PTSD but refers more vaguely to triggering events that involve “actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence.”

However, multiple recent studies have linked medical trauma to PTSD. A 2019 study in Intensive Care Medicine found that 25% of 99 patients who were treated for emergency respiratory or cardiovascular crises showed PTSD symptoms at 6 months, and the percentage of childhood cancer survivors with PTSD was estimated at as high as 22%, according to research published in Frontiers in Psychology.In 2013, a meta-analysis suggested that 23% of stroke survivors have PTSD symptoms within 1 year, and 11% after 1 year.
 

PTSD is unique

Dr. Nemeroff noted that PTSD is the only diagnosis in the DSM-5 that’s directly linked to an environmental event. Specifically, he said, PTSD is caused by “very unexpected traumatic events that occur outside the normal repertoire of human behavior.”

In response, “most people that have an acute stress disorder response will fundamentally extinguish it and end up returning to the baseline level of functioning,” he said. But those with PTSD do not recover.

Dr. Nemeroff recommends the use of the 20-question self-report tool known as PCL-5. “It’s your friend,” he said. “It takes a few minutes for the patients to fill out while in the front office, and it doesn’t cost anything. Most patients who have PTSD will have a score of 50-55, maybe 60. You’re going to try to get them down to below 30, and you’re going to give this to them every time they come to your office to follow their progress. It works like a charm.”

As for treatment, psychotherapy and medications remain standard, he said, although “PTSD is a tough disorder to treat.”

According to him, brief cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) – 4-5 sessions – has shown the greatest benefit and highest level of evidence in support when initiated within 4-30 days of trauma. Group therapy may be helpful, while it’s not clear if spiritual support and “psychological first aid” are useful during this time period.

There’s no evidence that medications such as SSRIs and atypical antipsychotics will prevent PTSD from developing; typical antipsychotics are not recommended. Individual or group “debriefing” is highly not recommended, Dr. Nemeroff said, because the experience can re-traumatize patients, as researchers learned after 9/11 when encouraging people to relive their experiences triggered PTSD and heartbreak.

Also not recommended: Benzodiazepines and formal psychotherapy in people without symptoms.

Exposure-based CBT has been proven to be successful, Dr. Nemeroff said, but it must be provided by a trained professional. “Going for a weekend course isn’t sufficient,” he said, and research suggests that group CBT is not as helpfulas individual CBT.

As for medication over the longer term, research supports SNRIs and SSRIs such as sertaline (Zoloft) and paroxetine (Paxil). Dr. Nemeroff is a fan of venlafaxine (Effexor): “It has a wide dose range. I can go from 75 to 150 milligrams at the low end and 450 and even 600 milligrams at the high end. I’ve had some amazing successes.”

In addition, atypical antipsychotics can be helpful in non-responders or psychotic PTSD patients, he said.

Dr. Nemeroff said he’s skeptical of ketamine as a treatment for PTSD, but he’s most hopeful about MDMA-assisted therapy due to “impressive data” regarding PTSD that was released last year. A bid for FDA approval is in the works, he said.

He added that data is promising from trials examining transcranial magnetic stimulationand (in work by his own team) electroconvulsive therapy. Both therapies are worth considering, he said.

Dr. Nemeroff reported multiple disclosures including research/grant support, stock holdings, scientific advisory board service, consulting relationships, board of director service, and patents.

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– Recent studies have confirmed that posttraumatic stress disorder can be triggered by health-related stress such as stints in the ICU and life-threatening medical emergencies, but most psychiatrists may not be aware of the latest research, according to an expert in mental trauma.

“This is true among children as well as adults, but it is not generally appreciated by psychiatrists and not at all by non-physicians,” said Charles B. Nemeroff, MD, PhD, professor and chair of the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Texas at Austin’s Dell Medical School, in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association. “It’s something that we all need to educate our colleagues about.”

Courtesy University of Texas, Austin
Dr. Charles B. Nemeroff


As Dr. Nemeroff noted in a wide-ranging discussion about the latest trends in PTSD diagnosis and treatment, the DSM-5 doesn’t yet mention medical trauma in its definition of PTSD but refers more vaguely to triggering events that involve “actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence.”

However, multiple recent studies have linked medical trauma to PTSD. A 2019 study in Intensive Care Medicine found that 25% of 99 patients who were treated for emergency respiratory or cardiovascular crises showed PTSD symptoms at 6 months, and the percentage of childhood cancer survivors with PTSD was estimated at as high as 22%, according to research published in Frontiers in Psychology.In 2013, a meta-analysis suggested that 23% of stroke survivors have PTSD symptoms within 1 year, and 11% after 1 year.
 

PTSD is unique

Dr. Nemeroff noted that PTSD is the only diagnosis in the DSM-5 that’s directly linked to an environmental event. Specifically, he said, PTSD is caused by “very unexpected traumatic events that occur outside the normal repertoire of human behavior.”

In response, “most people that have an acute stress disorder response will fundamentally extinguish it and end up returning to the baseline level of functioning,” he said. But those with PTSD do not recover.

Dr. Nemeroff recommends the use of the 20-question self-report tool known as PCL-5. “It’s your friend,” he said. “It takes a few minutes for the patients to fill out while in the front office, and it doesn’t cost anything. Most patients who have PTSD will have a score of 50-55, maybe 60. You’re going to try to get them down to below 30, and you’re going to give this to them every time they come to your office to follow their progress. It works like a charm.”

As for treatment, psychotherapy and medications remain standard, he said, although “PTSD is a tough disorder to treat.”

According to him, brief cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) – 4-5 sessions – has shown the greatest benefit and highest level of evidence in support when initiated within 4-30 days of trauma. Group therapy may be helpful, while it’s not clear if spiritual support and “psychological first aid” are useful during this time period.

There’s no evidence that medications such as SSRIs and atypical antipsychotics will prevent PTSD from developing; typical antipsychotics are not recommended. Individual or group “debriefing” is highly not recommended, Dr. Nemeroff said, because the experience can re-traumatize patients, as researchers learned after 9/11 when encouraging people to relive their experiences triggered PTSD and heartbreak.

Also not recommended: Benzodiazepines and formal psychotherapy in people without symptoms.

Exposure-based CBT has been proven to be successful, Dr. Nemeroff said, but it must be provided by a trained professional. “Going for a weekend course isn’t sufficient,” he said, and research suggests that group CBT is not as helpfulas individual CBT.

As for medication over the longer term, research supports SNRIs and SSRIs such as sertaline (Zoloft) and paroxetine (Paxil). Dr. Nemeroff is a fan of venlafaxine (Effexor): “It has a wide dose range. I can go from 75 to 150 milligrams at the low end and 450 and even 600 milligrams at the high end. I’ve had some amazing successes.”

In addition, atypical antipsychotics can be helpful in non-responders or psychotic PTSD patients, he said.

Dr. Nemeroff said he’s skeptical of ketamine as a treatment for PTSD, but he’s most hopeful about MDMA-assisted therapy due to “impressive data” regarding PTSD that was released last year. A bid for FDA approval is in the works, he said.

He added that data is promising from trials examining transcranial magnetic stimulationand (in work by his own team) electroconvulsive therapy. Both therapies are worth considering, he said.

Dr. Nemeroff reported multiple disclosures including research/grant support, stock holdings, scientific advisory board service, consulting relationships, board of director service, and patents.

– Recent studies have confirmed that posttraumatic stress disorder can be triggered by health-related stress such as stints in the ICU and life-threatening medical emergencies, but most psychiatrists may not be aware of the latest research, according to an expert in mental trauma.

“This is true among children as well as adults, but it is not generally appreciated by psychiatrists and not at all by non-physicians,” said Charles B. Nemeroff, MD, PhD, professor and chair of the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Texas at Austin’s Dell Medical School, in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association. “It’s something that we all need to educate our colleagues about.”

Courtesy University of Texas, Austin
Dr. Charles B. Nemeroff


As Dr. Nemeroff noted in a wide-ranging discussion about the latest trends in PTSD diagnosis and treatment, the DSM-5 doesn’t yet mention medical trauma in its definition of PTSD but refers more vaguely to triggering events that involve “actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence.”

However, multiple recent studies have linked medical trauma to PTSD. A 2019 study in Intensive Care Medicine found that 25% of 99 patients who were treated for emergency respiratory or cardiovascular crises showed PTSD symptoms at 6 months, and the percentage of childhood cancer survivors with PTSD was estimated at as high as 22%, according to research published in Frontiers in Psychology.In 2013, a meta-analysis suggested that 23% of stroke survivors have PTSD symptoms within 1 year, and 11% after 1 year.
 

PTSD is unique

Dr. Nemeroff noted that PTSD is the only diagnosis in the DSM-5 that’s directly linked to an environmental event. Specifically, he said, PTSD is caused by “very unexpected traumatic events that occur outside the normal repertoire of human behavior.”

In response, “most people that have an acute stress disorder response will fundamentally extinguish it and end up returning to the baseline level of functioning,” he said. But those with PTSD do not recover.

Dr. Nemeroff recommends the use of the 20-question self-report tool known as PCL-5. “It’s your friend,” he said. “It takes a few minutes for the patients to fill out while in the front office, and it doesn’t cost anything. Most patients who have PTSD will have a score of 50-55, maybe 60. You’re going to try to get them down to below 30, and you’re going to give this to them every time they come to your office to follow their progress. It works like a charm.”

As for treatment, psychotherapy and medications remain standard, he said, although “PTSD is a tough disorder to treat.”

According to him, brief cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) – 4-5 sessions – has shown the greatest benefit and highest level of evidence in support when initiated within 4-30 days of trauma. Group therapy may be helpful, while it’s not clear if spiritual support and “psychological first aid” are useful during this time period.

There’s no evidence that medications such as SSRIs and atypical antipsychotics will prevent PTSD from developing; typical antipsychotics are not recommended. Individual or group “debriefing” is highly not recommended, Dr. Nemeroff said, because the experience can re-traumatize patients, as researchers learned after 9/11 when encouraging people to relive their experiences triggered PTSD and heartbreak.

Also not recommended: Benzodiazepines and formal psychotherapy in people without symptoms.

Exposure-based CBT has been proven to be successful, Dr. Nemeroff said, but it must be provided by a trained professional. “Going for a weekend course isn’t sufficient,” he said, and research suggests that group CBT is not as helpfulas individual CBT.

As for medication over the longer term, research supports SNRIs and SSRIs such as sertaline (Zoloft) and paroxetine (Paxil). Dr. Nemeroff is a fan of venlafaxine (Effexor): “It has a wide dose range. I can go from 75 to 150 milligrams at the low end and 450 and even 600 milligrams at the high end. I’ve had some amazing successes.”

In addition, atypical antipsychotics can be helpful in non-responders or psychotic PTSD patients, he said.

Dr. Nemeroff said he’s skeptical of ketamine as a treatment for PTSD, but he’s most hopeful about MDMA-assisted therapy due to “impressive data” regarding PTSD that was released last year. A bid for FDA approval is in the works, he said.

He added that data is promising from trials examining transcranial magnetic stimulationand (in work by his own team) electroconvulsive therapy. Both therapies are worth considering, he said.

Dr. Nemeroff reported multiple disclosures including research/grant support, stock holdings, scientific advisory board service, consulting relationships, board of director service, and patents.

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Telepsychiatry helped maintain standard of schizophrenia care during COVID

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Fri, 05/27/2022 - 13:37

During the COVID-19 pandemic, mental health clinics in the United States successfully upheld the standard of care for patients with schizophrenia using telepsychiatry and long-acting injectable antipsychotics (LAIs), new survey data show.

“Mental health centers rose to the challenge and did what they needed to do for their patients,” study investigator Dawn Velligan, PhD, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, told this news organization.

“Some decided to put patients on longer-acting injectable formulations. Some centers gave injections outside to make people feel safer,” Dr. Velligan said.

She added that other patients who might not have had transportation, or were too afraid to come in, were switched to oral medications. However, “switching to orals isn’t something that should be done lightly. I would only want patients to switch to orals as a last resort, but you do what you have to do,” Dr. Velligan said.

The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.
 

No going back?

When COVID hit, many mental health clinics closed for in-person visits. “This was unprecedented and we wanted to understand how clinics adapted their services and clinical management of patients with schizophrenia” on LAIs, Dr. Velligan said.

She and her colleagues surveyed 35 mental health clinics, with one respondent at each clinic, between October and November 2020.

All 35 clinics reported using telepsychiatry; 15 had been using telepsychiatry before the pandemic, while 20 (57%) began using it after COVID hit.

Across outpatient visit types, telepsychiatry use for noninjection visits rose from 12%-15% before the pandemic to 45%-69% after the pandemic.

In addition, patients were more apt to keep their telehealth visit. The frequency of appointment “no shows” and/or cancellations for telepsychiatry visits decreased by roughly one-third after the pandemic, compared with before the pandemic.

For patients with schizophrenia treated with LAIs, the frequency of telepsychiatry visits increased in 46% of the clinics during the pandemic.

For these patients, management options included switching patients from LAIs to oral antipsychotics in 34% of clinics and switching patients to LAIs with longer injection intervals in 31% of clinics.

Chief barriers to telepsychiatry visits were low reimbursement rate and lack of access to technology/reliable Internet.

Nearly all respondents reported being satisfied with the use of telepsychiatry to support patients with schizophrenia, whether treated with LAIs (94%) or with oral antipsychotics (97%).

Sixty percent of respondents reported no change in medication adherence for patients treated with LAIs since the start of the pandemic, while less than half (43%) reported no change in adherence to oral antipsychotics.

Most respondents (69%) felt that telepsychiatry visits would very likely continue to be used in combination with in-person office visits after the pandemic.

“Telemedicine is here to stay,” Dr. Velligan said.
 

Moving to a ‘hybrid universe’

Hector Colon-Rivera, MD, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and president of the APA’s Hispanic Caucus, agrees.

Dr. Hector Colon-Rivera

Commenting on the findings, he noted that, because of shifts in care brought on by COVID, psychiatrists had to adopt telemedicine practices. As a result, many “now feel more comfortable” with telehealth visits for medication management and psychotherapy, said Dr. Colon-Rivera, who was not involved with the research.

He added this study is important because it shows that even patients with severe mental illness can be successfully managed with telepsychiatry, and with good adherence.

“Especially for patients with schizophrenia who have access issues, telepsychiatry is really helpful,” Dr. Colon-Rivera said.

“Telepsychiatry is becoming standard. Most clinics are moving to the hybrid universe now by having a telemedicine component and also seeing patients in person. Even places like emergency rooms and psychiatrists who do consults on medical floors are using telepsychiatry as an option,” he added.

Study funding was provided by Alkermes. Dr. Velligan has reported financial relationships with Alkermes, Otsuka, Janssen, and Lyndra. Dr. Colon-Rivera has reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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During the COVID-19 pandemic, mental health clinics in the United States successfully upheld the standard of care for patients with schizophrenia using telepsychiatry and long-acting injectable antipsychotics (LAIs), new survey data show.

“Mental health centers rose to the challenge and did what they needed to do for their patients,” study investigator Dawn Velligan, PhD, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, told this news organization.

“Some decided to put patients on longer-acting injectable formulations. Some centers gave injections outside to make people feel safer,” Dr. Velligan said.

She added that other patients who might not have had transportation, or were too afraid to come in, were switched to oral medications. However, “switching to orals isn’t something that should be done lightly. I would only want patients to switch to orals as a last resort, but you do what you have to do,” Dr. Velligan said.

The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.
 

No going back?

When COVID hit, many mental health clinics closed for in-person visits. “This was unprecedented and we wanted to understand how clinics adapted their services and clinical management of patients with schizophrenia” on LAIs, Dr. Velligan said.

She and her colleagues surveyed 35 mental health clinics, with one respondent at each clinic, between October and November 2020.

All 35 clinics reported using telepsychiatry; 15 had been using telepsychiatry before the pandemic, while 20 (57%) began using it after COVID hit.

Across outpatient visit types, telepsychiatry use for noninjection visits rose from 12%-15% before the pandemic to 45%-69% after the pandemic.

In addition, patients were more apt to keep their telehealth visit. The frequency of appointment “no shows” and/or cancellations for telepsychiatry visits decreased by roughly one-third after the pandemic, compared with before the pandemic.

For patients with schizophrenia treated with LAIs, the frequency of telepsychiatry visits increased in 46% of the clinics during the pandemic.

For these patients, management options included switching patients from LAIs to oral antipsychotics in 34% of clinics and switching patients to LAIs with longer injection intervals in 31% of clinics.

Chief barriers to telepsychiatry visits were low reimbursement rate and lack of access to technology/reliable Internet.

Nearly all respondents reported being satisfied with the use of telepsychiatry to support patients with schizophrenia, whether treated with LAIs (94%) or with oral antipsychotics (97%).

Sixty percent of respondents reported no change in medication adherence for patients treated with LAIs since the start of the pandemic, while less than half (43%) reported no change in adherence to oral antipsychotics.

Most respondents (69%) felt that telepsychiatry visits would very likely continue to be used in combination with in-person office visits after the pandemic.

“Telemedicine is here to stay,” Dr. Velligan said.
 

Moving to a ‘hybrid universe’

Hector Colon-Rivera, MD, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and president of the APA’s Hispanic Caucus, agrees.

Dr. Hector Colon-Rivera

Commenting on the findings, he noted that, because of shifts in care brought on by COVID, psychiatrists had to adopt telemedicine practices. As a result, many “now feel more comfortable” with telehealth visits for medication management and psychotherapy, said Dr. Colon-Rivera, who was not involved with the research.

He added this study is important because it shows that even patients with severe mental illness can be successfully managed with telepsychiatry, and with good adherence.

“Especially for patients with schizophrenia who have access issues, telepsychiatry is really helpful,” Dr. Colon-Rivera said.

“Telepsychiatry is becoming standard. Most clinics are moving to the hybrid universe now by having a telemedicine component and also seeing patients in person. Even places like emergency rooms and psychiatrists who do consults on medical floors are using telepsychiatry as an option,” he added.

Study funding was provided by Alkermes. Dr. Velligan has reported financial relationships with Alkermes, Otsuka, Janssen, and Lyndra. Dr. Colon-Rivera has reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, mental health clinics in the United States successfully upheld the standard of care for patients with schizophrenia using telepsychiatry and long-acting injectable antipsychotics (LAIs), new survey data show.

“Mental health centers rose to the challenge and did what they needed to do for their patients,” study investigator Dawn Velligan, PhD, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, told this news organization.

“Some decided to put patients on longer-acting injectable formulations. Some centers gave injections outside to make people feel safer,” Dr. Velligan said.

She added that other patients who might not have had transportation, or were too afraid to come in, were switched to oral medications. However, “switching to orals isn’t something that should be done lightly. I would only want patients to switch to orals as a last resort, but you do what you have to do,” Dr. Velligan said.

The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.
 

No going back?

When COVID hit, many mental health clinics closed for in-person visits. “This was unprecedented and we wanted to understand how clinics adapted their services and clinical management of patients with schizophrenia” on LAIs, Dr. Velligan said.

She and her colleagues surveyed 35 mental health clinics, with one respondent at each clinic, between October and November 2020.

All 35 clinics reported using telepsychiatry; 15 had been using telepsychiatry before the pandemic, while 20 (57%) began using it after COVID hit.

Across outpatient visit types, telepsychiatry use for noninjection visits rose from 12%-15% before the pandemic to 45%-69% after the pandemic.

In addition, patients were more apt to keep their telehealth visit. The frequency of appointment “no shows” and/or cancellations for telepsychiatry visits decreased by roughly one-third after the pandemic, compared with before the pandemic.

For patients with schizophrenia treated with LAIs, the frequency of telepsychiatry visits increased in 46% of the clinics during the pandemic.

For these patients, management options included switching patients from LAIs to oral antipsychotics in 34% of clinics and switching patients to LAIs with longer injection intervals in 31% of clinics.

Chief barriers to telepsychiatry visits were low reimbursement rate and lack of access to technology/reliable Internet.

Nearly all respondents reported being satisfied with the use of telepsychiatry to support patients with schizophrenia, whether treated with LAIs (94%) or with oral antipsychotics (97%).

Sixty percent of respondents reported no change in medication adherence for patients treated with LAIs since the start of the pandemic, while less than half (43%) reported no change in adherence to oral antipsychotics.

Most respondents (69%) felt that telepsychiatry visits would very likely continue to be used in combination with in-person office visits after the pandemic.

“Telemedicine is here to stay,” Dr. Velligan said.
 

Moving to a ‘hybrid universe’

Hector Colon-Rivera, MD, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and president of the APA’s Hispanic Caucus, agrees.

Dr. Hector Colon-Rivera

Commenting on the findings, he noted that, because of shifts in care brought on by COVID, psychiatrists had to adopt telemedicine practices. As a result, many “now feel more comfortable” with telehealth visits for medication management and psychotherapy, said Dr. Colon-Rivera, who was not involved with the research.

He added this study is important because it shows that even patients with severe mental illness can be successfully managed with telepsychiatry, and with good adherence.

“Especially for patients with schizophrenia who have access issues, telepsychiatry is really helpful,” Dr. Colon-Rivera said.

“Telepsychiatry is becoming standard. Most clinics are moving to the hybrid universe now by having a telemedicine component and also seeing patients in person. Even places like emergency rooms and psychiatrists who do consults on medical floors are using telepsychiatry as an option,” he added.

Study funding was provided by Alkermes. Dr. Velligan has reported financial relationships with Alkermes, Otsuka, Janssen, and Lyndra. Dr. Colon-Rivera has reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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‘Double-edged’ impact of sparring on the brains of MMA fighters

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Wed, 06/01/2022 - 14:44

Sparring among professional mixed martial arts (MMA) practitioners may have both positive and negative effects on the brain, early research suggests.

Investigators found sparring, defined as strategically hitting opponents with kicks, punches, and other strikes during practice sessions, is linked to increased white matter hyperintensities in the brain, pointing to possible vascular damage from repeated head trauma. However, the study results also show sparring was associated with a larger bilateral caudate which, in theory, is neuroprotective.

“From our preliminary study, sparring practice in MMA fighters may have a ‘double-edged sword’ effect on the brain,” study investigator Aaron Esagoff, a second-year medical student at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, told this news organization.

Aaron Esagoff


“The combination of complex movements along with constant strategy and anticipation of your opponent’s next move may provide a neuroprotective effect on the caudate,” Mr. Esagoff said. However, he added, more research is needed into understanding this particular finding.

The study results were presented at the American Psychiatric Association (APA) 2022 Annual Meeting.

Growing popularity

MMA is a full-contact combat sport that has become increasingly popular over the past 15 years. It combines techniques from boxing, wrestling, karate, judo, and jujitsu.

To prepare for fights, MMA practitioners incorporate sparring and grappling, which use techniques such as chokes and locks to submit an opponent. Head protection is sometimes incorporated during practice, but is not the norm during a fight, said Mr. Esagoff.

The study investigated sparring during practice rather than fights because, he said, MMA competitors only fight a few times a year but spend hundreds of hours training. “So the health effects of training are going to be really important,” he said.

As with other combat sports, MMA involves hits to the head. Previous research has shown repetitive head trauma can lead to neurodegenerative diseases, including chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and Alzheimer’s disease, Mr. Esagoff noted.

Previous studies have also linked more professional fights and years of fighting to a decrease in brain volume among MMA fighters, he added.

The new analysis was conducted as part of the Professional Fighters Brain Health Study, a longitudinal cohort study of MMA professional fighters. It included 92 fighters with data available on MRI and habits regarding practicing. The mean age of the participants was 30 years, 62% were White, and 85% were men.

The study examined sparring but did not include grappling because of “several challenges” with the current data analysis, Mr. Esagoff said. Researchers adjusted for age, sex, education, race, number of fights, total intracranial volume, and type of MRI scanner used.
 

A ‘highly strategic’ sport

Results showed a strong association between the number of sparring rounds per week and increased white matter hyperintensity volume (mcL) on MRI (P = .039).

This suggests white matter damage, possibly a result of direct neuronal injury, vascular damage, or immune modulation, said Mr. Esagoff. However, another mechanism may be involved, he added.

There was also a significant association between sparring and increased size of the caudate nucleus, an area of the brain involved in movement, learning, and memory (P = .014 for right caudate volume, P = .012 for left caudate volume).

There are some theories that might explain this finding, said Mr. Esagoff. For example, individuals who spar more may get better at avoiding impacts and injuries during a fight, which might in turn affect the size of the caudate.

The controlled movements and techniques used during sparring could also affect the caudate. “Some research has shown that behavior, learning, and/or exercise may increase the size of certain brain regions,” Mr. Esagoff said.

He noted the “highly strategic” nature of combat sports – and used the example of Brazilian jiu-jitsu. That sport “is known as human chess because it takes a thoughtful approach to defeat a larger opponent with base, leverage, and technique,” he said.

However, Mr. Esagoff stressed that while it is possible movements involved in MMA increase caudate size, this is just a theory at this point.

A study limitation was that fighters volunteered to participate and may not represent all fighters. As well, the study was cross-sectional and looked at only one point in time, so it cannot infer causation.

Overall, the new findings should help inform fighters, governing bodies, and the public about the potential risks and benefits of different styles of MMA fighting and practice, although more research is needed, said Mr. Esagoff.

He and his team now plan to conduct a longer-term study and investigate effects of grappling on brain structure and function in addition to sparring.
 

 

 

Jury still out

Commenting on the study, Howard Liu, MD, chair of the University of Nebraska Medical Center department of psychiatry and incoming chair of the APA’s Council on Communications, said the jury “is clearly still out” when it comes to the investigation of brain impacts.

Dr. Howard Liu

“We don’t know quite what these changes fully correlate to,” said Dr. Liu, who moderated a press briefing highlighting the study.

He underlined the importance of protecting athletes vulnerable to head trauma, be they professionals or those involved at the youth sports level.

Dr. Liu also noted the “extreme popularity” and rapid growth of MMA around the world, which he said provides an opportunity for researchers to study these professional fighters.

“This is a unique population that signed up in the midst of hundreds of hours of sparring to advance neuroscience, and that’s quite amazing,” he said.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Sparring among professional mixed martial arts (MMA) practitioners may have both positive and negative effects on the brain, early research suggests.

Investigators found sparring, defined as strategically hitting opponents with kicks, punches, and other strikes during practice sessions, is linked to increased white matter hyperintensities in the brain, pointing to possible vascular damage from repeated head trauma. However, the study results also show sparring was associated with a larger bilateral caudate which, in theory, is neuroprotective.

“From our preliminary study, sparring practice in MMA fighters may have a ‘double-edged sword’ effect on the brain,” study investigator Aaron Esagoff, a second-year medical student at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, told this news organization.

Aaron Esagoff


“The combination of complex movements along with constant strategy and anticipation of your opponent’s next move may provide a neuroprotective effect on the caudate,” Mr. Esagoff said. However, he added, more research is needed into understanding this particular finding.

The study results were presented at the American Psychiatric Association (APA) 2022 Annual Meeting.

Growing popularity

MMA is a full-contact combat sport that has become increasingly popular over the past 15 years. It combines techniques from boxing, wrestling, karate, judo, and jujitsu.

To prepare for fights, MMA practitioners incorporate sparring and grappling, which use techniques such as chokes and locks to submit an opponent. Head protection is sometimes incorporated during practice, but is not the norm during a fight, said Mr. Esagoff.

The study investigated sparring during practice rather than fights because, he said, MMA competitors only fight a few times a year but spend hundreds of hours training. “So the health effects of training are going to be really important,” he said.

As with other combat sports, MMA involves hits to the head. Previous research has shown repetitive head trauma can lead to neurodegenerative diseases, including chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and Alzheimer’s disease, Mr. Esagoff noted.

Previous studies have also linked more professional fights and years of fighting to a decrease in brain volume among MMA fighters, he added.

The new analysis was conducted as part of the Professional Fighters Brain Health Study, a longitudinal cohort study of MMA professional fighters. It included 92 fighters with data available on MRI and habits regarding practicing. The mean age of the participants was 30 years, 62% were White, and 85% were men.

The study examined sparring but did not include grappling because of “several challenges” with the current data analysis, Mr. Esagoff said. Researchers adjusted for age, sex, education, race, number of fights, total intracranial volume, and type of MRI scanner used.
 

A ‘highly strategic’ sport

Results showed a strong association between the number of sparring rounds per week and increased white matter hyperintensity volume (mcL) on MRI (P = .039).

This suggests white matter damage, possibly a result of direct neuronal injury, vascular damage, or immune modulation, said Mr. Esagoff. However, another mechanism may be involved, he added.

There was also a significant association between sparring and increased size of the caudate nucleus, an area of the brain involved in movement, learning, and memory (P = .014 for right caudate volume, P = .012 for left caudate volume).

There are some theories that might explain this finding, said Mr. Esagoff. For example, individuals who spar more may get better at avoiding impacts and injuries during a fight, which might in turn affect the size of the caudate.

The controlled movements and techniques used during sparring could also affect the caudate. “Some research has shown that behavior, learning, and/or exercise may increase the size of certain brain regions,” Mr. Esagoff said.

He noted the “highly strategic” nature of combat sports – and used the example of Brazilian jiu-jitsu. That sport “is known as human chess because it takes a thoughtful approach to defeat a larger opponent with base, leverage, and technique,” he said.

However, Mr. Esagoff stressed that while it is possible movements involved in MMA increase caudate size, this is just a theory at this point.

A study limitation was that fighters volunteered to participate and may not represent all fighters. As well, the study was cross-sectional and looked at only one point in time, so it cannot infer causation.

Overall, the new findings should help inform fighters, governing bodies, and the public about the potential risks and benefits of different styles of MMA fighting and practice, although more research is needed, said Mr. Esagoff.

He and his team now plan to conduct a longer-term study and investigate effects of grappling on brain structure and function in addition to sparring.
 

 

 

Jury still out

Commenting on the study, Howard Liu, MD, chair of the University of Nebraska Medical Center department of psychiatry and incoming chair of the APA’s Council on Communications, said the jury “is clearly still out” when it comes to the investigation of brain impacts.

Dr. Howard Liu

“We don’t know quite what these changes fully correlate to,” said Dr. Liu, who moderated a press briefing highlighting the study.

He underlined the importance of protecting athletes vulnerable to head trauma, be they professionals or those involved at the youth sports level.

Dr. Liu also noted the “extreme popularity” and rapid growth of MMA around the world, which he said provides an opportunity for researchers to study these professional fighters.

“This is a unique population that signed up in the midst of hundreds of hours of sparring to advance neuroscience, and that’s quite amazing,” he said.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Sparring among professional mixed martial arts (MMA) practitioners may have both positive and negative effects on the brain, early research suggests.

Investigators found sparring, defined as strategically hitting opponents with kicks, punches, and other strikes during practice sessions, is linked to increased white matter hyperintensities in the brain, pointing to possible vascular damage from repeated head trauma. However, the study results also show sparring was associated with a larger bilateral caudate which, in theory, is neuroprotective.

“From our preliminary study, sparring practice in MMA fighters may have a ‘double-edged sword’ effect on the brain,” study investigator Aaron Esagoff, a second-year medical student at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, told this news organization.

Aaron Esagoff


“The combination of complex movements along with constant strategy and anticipation of your opponent’s next move may provide a neuroprotective effect on the caudate,” Mr. Esagoff said. However, he added, more research is needed into understanding this particular finding.

The study results were presented at the American Psychiatric Association (APA) 2022 Annual Meeting.

Growing popularity

MMA is a full-contact combat sport that has become increasingly popular over the past 15 years. It combines techniques from boxing, wrestling, karate, judo, and jujitsu.

To prepare for fights, MMA practitioners incorporate sparring and grappling, which use techniques such as chokes and locks to submit an opponent. Head protection is sometimes incorporated during practice, but is not the norm during a fight, said Mr. Esagoff.

The study investigated sparring during practice rather than fights because, he said, MMA competitors only fight a few times a year but spend hundreds of hours training. “So the health effects of training are going to be really important,” he said.

As with other combat sports, MMA involves hits to the head. Previous research has shown repetitive head trauma can lead to neurodegenerative diseases, including chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and Alzheimer’s disease, Mr. Esagoff noted.

Previous studies have also linked more professional fights and years of fighting to a decrease in brain volume among MMA fighters, he added.

The new analysis was conducted as part of the Professional Fighters Brain Health Study, a longitudinal cohort study of MMA professional fighters. It included 92 fighters with data available on MRI and habits regarding practicing. The mean age of the participants was 30 years, 62% were White, and 85% were men.

The study examined sparring but did not include grappling because of “several challenges” with the current data analysis, Mr. Esagoff said. Researchers adjusted for age, sex, education, race, number of fights, total intracranial volume, and type of MRI scanner used.
 

A ‘highly strategic’ sport

Results showed a strong association between the number of sparring rounds per week and increased white matter hyperintensity volume (mcL) on MRI (P = .039).

This suggests white matter damage, possibly a result of direct neuronal injury, vascular damage, or immune modulation, said Mr. Esagoff. However, another mechanism may be involved, he added.

There was also a significant association between sparring and increased size of the caudate nucleus, an area of the brain involved in movement, learning, and memory (P = .014 for right caudate volume, P = .012 for left caudate volume).

There are some theories that might explain this finding, said Mr. Esagoff. For example, individuals who spar more may get better at avoiding impacts and injuries during a fight, which might in turn affect the size of the caudate.

The controlled movements and techniques used during sparring could also affect the caudate. “Some research has shown that behavior, learning, and/or exercise may increase the size of certain brain regions,” Mr. Esagoff said.

He noted the “highly strategic” nature of combat sports – and used the example of Brazilian jiu-jitsu. That sport “is known as human chess because it takes a thoughtful approach to defeat a larger opponent with base, leverage, and technique,” he said.

However, Mr. Esagoff stressed that while it is possible movements involved in MMA increase caudate size, this is just a theory at this point.

A study limitation was that fighters volunteered to participate and may not represent all fighters. As well, the study was cross-sectional and looked at only one point in time, so it cannot infer causation.

Overall, the new findings should help inform fighters, governing bodies, and the public about the potential risks and benefits of different styles of MMA fighting and practice, although more research is needed, said Mr. Esagoff.

He and his team now plan to conduct a longer-term study and investigate effects of grappling on brain structure and function in addition to sparring.
 

 

 

Jury still out

Commenting on the study, Howard Liu, MD, chair of the University of Nebraska Medical Center department of psychiatry and incoming chair of the APA’s Council on Communications, said the jury “is clearly still out” when it comes to the investigation of brain impacts.

Dr. Howard Liu

“We don’t know quite what these changes fully correlate to,” said Dr. Liu, who moderated a press briefing highlighting the study.

He underlined the importance of protecting athletes vulnerable to head trauma, be they professionals or those involved at the youth sports level.

Dr. Liu also noted the “extreme popularity” and rapid growth of MMA around the world, which he said provides an opportunity for researchers to study these professional fighters.

“This is a unique population that signed up in the midst of hundreds of hours of sparring to advance neuroscience, and that’s quite amazing,” he said.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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