Title: Objectives
1Objectives
- The importance of identifying and treating
bipolar disorder among patients with SUDs as
early as possible - Ways to address and treat bipolar patients' SUDs
through psychosocial interventions, integrated
care, or other treatment models - Psychopharmacologic treatment of patients with
bipolar disorder SUDs
2Early Identification of Bipolar Disorderin
Substance Use Disorder (BD-SUD)
- 7- to10-year lag diagnosing BD in the general
population - Clinical Barriers
- Substances as triggers ? more episodes
- Episodes as triggers ? substance use
- Diagnostic dilemmas and dismissals
- Its all due tosubstances.
- Its all due tobipolar disorder.
3Early Identification in BD-SUD
- System Barriers
- Financing
- Healthcare Organization
- Training and Culture
- SAMHSAs No Wrong Door Policy
- VHA Advantage There is no wrong door
- theoretically
4Principles of BD-SUD Treatment
- Parallel (not serial) treatment
- Goals of Parallel Treatment
- Get substances off the table for dealing with
illness and life - Stabilize symptoms to allow participation in
substance treatment
5Principles of BD-SUD Treatment
- Look for and seek out complications
- Depression
- Mania
- Subtle Psychosis
- Anxiety
- Perseverance
- Sometimes the 17th times a charm
- Collaboration beats confrontation
6Paternalistic Medicine
Thus I say
Yes I shall!
Fix me up!
Maternalistic Medicine
Load em on.
7Collaborative Practice
Values Expert Athlete
Technical Expert Coach
8Examples of Collaborative Interventions for BD-SUD
- Motivational Interviewing
- Miller Rollnick and others
- Integrated Group Therapy
- Weiss
- Life Goals Program Collaborative Chronic Care
- VA Cooperative Study 430
9Purposes of Psychosocial Interventions
- Supplement (not replace) pharmacologic treatment
- Enhance illness management skills
- Address independent determinants of disease
outcome (stressors, comorbidities) - Enhance social role function and quality of life
- Reduce depression
10Types of PsychosocialInterventions
- Psychotherapies Add-on
- Integrated Treatment Models Multimodal Packages
11Types of Individual Psychotherapy
- Psychodynamic (Past life events)
- Supportive (Current life events)
- Interpersonal (Social relationships)
- Cognitive Behavioral (Thought habits)
- Social Rhythm (Stabilizing social rhythms)
- Psychoeducation (Knowledge and coping strategies)
12Group Psychotherapy
- Mutual support
- Shared experiences
- Work on personal goals
- Stigma reduction
13Other Psychotherapy
- Family Therapy
- Challenges in relationships between family
members-conflict resolution - Increase supportive family relationships
- Self-help Groups
14Integrated Treatment Models
- Intensive Case Management
- Recovery-Oriented Programs
- Collaborative Chronic Care Models
15Intensive Case Management
- Involves mobile community outreach,
rehabilitative services via provider teams - Examples ACT, MHICM
- Effective for SMI and co-occurring SUD
- High start-up costs impede dissemination into
routine care
16Recovery-Oriented Programs
- Mental health recovery is a journey of healing
and transformation enabling a person with a
mental health problem to live a meaningful life
in a community of his or her choice while
striving to achieve his or her full potential.
SAMHSA 2005 - Include peer support, vocational training, family
involvement, and other services
17Collaborative Chronic Care Models
- Clinic-based tools to promote self-management and
continuity of care for chronic illnesses - VA CSP 430
- Self-management (Life Goals Program - group
sessions) - Delivery system/clinical information system
redesign - Decision support (Clinical Practice Guidelines)
18VA CSP 430 Chronic Care Model for Bipolar
Disorder
Decision Support (Guidelines)
Self-Management (Life Goals)
Delivery System (Care Manager)
19Life Goals Program
- Education, group interaction and support
- Personal symptom profile(s), warning signs
- Triggers and coping resources
- Personal cost-benefit analysis
- Action plan / personal care plan
- Destigmatization
20Responding to Depression/Stress by Drinking
Alcohol
Good Effects
Bad Effects
- I can finally sleep
- I dont get panic attacks
- I dont feel so down
- It gets me out of the house, and when I
socialize, I forget my troubles
- My wife gets mad at me
- Sometimes, it makes me not care feel like
killing myself - I feel terrible the next morning
21Medications for the Management of Bipolar Disorder
- Lithium
- Anticonvulsants
- Antipsychotics
- Antidepressants
- Benzodiazepines
22Medications for the SUD Treatment
- Acamprosate
- Amantadine
- Buprenorphine/Naloxone
- Bupropion
23Medications for SUD Treatment
- Disulfiram
- Methadone
- Naltrexone
- Nicotine replacement
24Inadequacy of Treatment
- Only 59 of patients with BD-SUD were on adequate
mood stabilizing regimens - Only 0.4 were receiving substance abuse-specific
medications
25Reasons for Non-Response
- Non-adherence
- Inadequate dosing
- Relapse to substance use
- Incorrect diagnosis/indication
- Drug interactions
- Adverse drug reactions
26Strength of Evidence
- Study design
- Randomized controlled trials
- Open-label trials
- Retrospective studies
- Case series/reports
- Outcome measures
27Lithium
- 2 open-label 12 week studies
- Cocaine dependent patients
- N16
- 3/16 decreased craving
- N10
- 5/10 decreased craving
- 3/10 cocaine free x 3 wks
28Lithium
- 6 wk, Randomized, Double Blind, Placebo
Controlled, Parallel group - Adolescent outpts (BD I, II or MD N25)
- Alcohol, marijuana, inhalant, cough syrup
- Percentage of positive urine drug screens
decreased in the lithium group (p0.028)
29Valproate
- 24 wk, open-label study in alcohol, cocaine or
SUD outpts (N9) - Decreased days of substance used (plt0.005)
30Valproate
- 24 wk, RCT, in BD I pts with alcohol dependence
receiving lithium (N59) - Fewer heavy drinking days (p0.02)
- Higher serum concentration correlated with
improved alcohol use outcomes - No significant changes in mood symptoms
31Lithium and Valproate
- 24 wk, open-label, in 56 with alcohol, cannabis,
and/or cocaine dependent outpts - 14 pts met DSM-IV criteria for full remission of
alcohol or drug use disorder after 6 months
32Carbamazepine
- 12 wk, placebo controlled, outpts with cocaine
dependence (N139) - N57 cocaine dependent with mood d/o
- N82 without mood d/o
- Decreased drug craving
- Significantly longer time to first cocaine use in
pts with mood disorders - No difference in cocaine use in pts without mood
disorders
33Gabapentin
- 43 pts with bipolar disorder resistant to
standard treatment received gabapentin
adjunctively for 8 wks (case series) - 18/43 (42) responded
- Alcohol abuse was associated with positive
response
34Lamotrigine
- 12 wk, open-label, in 30 cocaine dependent outpts
- Decreased craving and NS decrease days of use and
money spent on cocaine - No change in positive urine drug screens
35Aripiprazole
- 20 antipsychotic-treated pts with bipolar or
schizoaffective d/o and substance abuse switched
to open-label aripiprazole for 12 wks - 17 with alcohol dependence showed a reduction in
dollars spent (p0.042) and craving (p0.003) - 9 with cocaine-related d/o showed a reduction in
craving (p0.014) but not in use
36Quetiapine
- 12 wk, open-label, outpts with cocaine dependence
(N17) - Decreased craving and NS decrease in days of
cocaine use and money spent on cocaine - Slight increase in positive urine drug screens
- Subset with alcohol use (N14)
- Decrease in craving
- Decrease in days of alcohol use/wk but not
drinks/wk
37Ongoing RCTs
- Quetiapine vs risperidone in bipolar disorder
with stimulant dependence - Divalproex ER vs risperidone in BD-SUD
38Summary of Medications for Management of Bipolar
Disorder
- Few randomized controlled trials
- Most data with valproate and carbamazepine
- Trials are short duration (no long term trials)
- Small samples
- Comorbid substances vary in studies
- Definition of response
- Further research is needed
39Use Caution When Treating BD-SUD
- Impulsivity/Toxicity
- Tricyclics
- MAOIs
- Abuse
- Opiates
- Stimulants
- Barbiturates
- BZDs
40VANTS Call
- May 30, 2006
- 200 pm Eastern
- 1-800-767-1750
- Access Code 14945