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Crisis: Opportunity for Secondary Prevention

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Title: Crisis: Opportunity for Secondary Prevention


1
Crisis Opportunity for Secondary Prevention
  • Is Pharmacological Prophylaxis Effective in
    Preventing Posttraumatic Stress Disorder?

2
  • Dont know
  • but in the light of initial evidence
  • . Possibly

3
Prophylactic Treatment
  • Based on the premise that the likelihood of
    developing a long-term psychiatric disorder, in
    this instance posttraumatic stress disorder, may
    be reduced if effective treatments can be
    implemented before the disorder becomes entrenched

4
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
  • 26 years since PTSD was defined and formally
    included in the DSM
  • Clinically distinct entity that can be reliably
    described, measured, tracked back to a triggering
    event assigned to the brains memory alarm
    systems
  • Remains one of the most challenging anxiety
    disorders for researchers clinicians alike

5
Gaps in Knowledge
  • Gaps in our knowledge are myriad
  • Include a limited understanding of
  • The natural longitudinal course of psychological
    consequences from the immediate post-impact phase
    to months years after
  • The psychobiological mechanisms underlying both
    acute (in 1st month) and long-term stress
    reactions

6
Who gets PTSD who doesnt?
  • Little doubt that PTSD is a serious health
    problem
  • Incidence rates of PTSD after MVA range between
    19 and 47
  • Although coming to medical attention less
    frequently than MVAs, interpersonal traumas
    (rape, assault) often result in even higher rates
    of PTSD

7
Who gets PTSD who doesnt?
  • As many as 95 of individuals who are exposed to
    these events will experience some degree of
    posttraumatic distress
  • But despite the prevalence of acute stress
    reactions, there is also considerable evidence
    that the typical course of adaptation is to
    recover in the following weeks or months after
    exposure
  • However, 30 will develop a persistent,
    incapacitating disorder that conforms to criteria
    for PTSD, major depression or another psychiatric
    disorder

8
Vulnerable or Resilient?
  • Whether one develops a high-risk immediate
    reaction or PTSD itself - seems to be product of
    both nature nurture
  • Development and maintenance of PTSD may be
    predicted by different pre-traumatic, traumatic
    and posttraumatic factors

9
Meta-Analysis Of Risk Factors
for PTSD
Pre-Trauma Characteristics
Post-Trauma Characteristics
Gender
Psych History
Child Abuse
Prior Adversity

Stress
Severity
Social Support
Brewin et al., J
Consult Clin Psychiatry, 2000
10
Gene-Environment Interactions
  • A good predictor of who will develop PTSD after a
    catastrophic event is the way a person
    immediately reacts to the event
  • Another strong predictor is prior trauma since
    repeated stress appears to the sensitize the
    bodys stress systems to subsequent traumatic
    events
  • Recent reports demonstrating gene environment
    interactions between a polymorphism of the
    serotonin transporter gene, early life adversity,
    and the incidence of MDD suggest that genetic
    factors may also predict PTSD
  • Other genes that may be prime candidates for
    influencing stress-reactions include CRF and BDNF

Caspi et al., Science, 2003
11
Physiological Markers
  • Growing evidence that certain physiologic markers
    are also useful in predicting risk for PTSD
  • For example, decreased cortisol increased heart
    rate in the aftermath of trauma have been shown
    in several prospective studies to predict the
    likelihood of subsequent disorder

12
Identifying those at risk
  • If we are able to identify those at risk
  • Can early interventions prevent development of
    acute stress symptoms as well as later-onset of
    PTSD?
  • Questions of vulnerability and resilience have
    taken on a new urgency in attempting to
    determine when to respect natural recovery
    processes and when to provide formal intervention

13
Secondary Prevention
  • Formal intervention would be at level of
    secondary prevention - intervening in the
    aftermath of a traumatic event to forestall the
    development of PTSD
  • Until recently, the most popular early
    intervention for PTSD was psychological
    debriefing
  • Recent reviews of controlled studies have failed
    to confirm efficacy and there has been at least 1
    study that has reported long-term adverse effects

Mayou et al., Br J Psychiatry, 2000
14
Secondary Prevention
  • Treating acute stress disorder with CBT has been
    shown to have preventive value for subsequent
    PTSD
  • Secondary pharmacological prevention of PTSD has
    received far less attention
  • In the last few years there has been an
    intensification of effort to develop and test a
    variety of novel pharmacological interventions
    that may be suitable for adults and children
    during the acute trauma period

15
Model of PTSD Pathogenesis
16
Disrupting neuronal mechanisms that mediate
fear conditioning reconsolidation after
exposure to an acute trauma could
sabotage the development of PTSD
17
Pharmacological Inoculation
  • Based on animal research to date the most
    promising candidate for intervening early to
    block the potentiation of memory consolidation by
    stress hormones is propranolol
  • Propranolol when administered pre- or
    post-training in rats blocks post-synaptic
    B-adrenergic receptors in the amygdala and
    peripherally? central action responsible for
    blocking memory enhancement

18
Propranolol in MVA victims
Pitman et al., Biol Psychiatry,
2002
19
Propranolol in MVA
  • Based on these physiological responses during
    script-driven imagery
  • 0 of 8 propranolol, but 8 of 14 placebo, patients
    were physiologically classified as PTSD at 3
    months
  • Consistent with reduced conditioned fear
    responses in the propranolol group

20
Propranolol
  • In a 2nd controlled, non-blind, non-randomized
    study in 19 patients with HR gt90 BPM
  • 11 patients (MVA or physical assault) who
    received propranolol 30mg 3x/daily within 2-20
    hrs for 7 days, followed by 8-12 day taper, were
    compared with 8 patients who refused propranolol
  • The 2 groups did not differ on demographics,
    exposure characteristics, physical injury
    severity, or peritraumatic emotional responses
  • At 2 months, PTSD rates were higher in the
    control group vs. the group who received the
    medication
  • 80 of the time a patient who took propranolol
    had a score below that of patient who did not

Vaiva et al., Biol
Psychiatry, 2003
21
Hydrocortisone PTSD
  • More recently, Schelling colleagues (2004)
    examined efficacy of peri- post-operative
    exogenous hydrocortisone in preventing PTSD
    symptoms following cardiac surgery
  • 26 patients received 4 days of HCT
  • 22 comparison subjects received standard Rx
  • Patients who received HCT had significantly
    fewer PTSD symptoms

22
Imipramine Burns
  • Small pilot study 25 children adolescents
    randomized to 7-day course of double-blind
    imipramine (1mg/kg) or chloral hydrate
  • Severity of ASD measured at baseline rate of
    PTSD measured at 6 months
  • Rate of improvement in ASD symptoms was
    significantly higher with imipramine (83) than
    chloral hydrate (38)
  • Suggests a possible role for TCAs and other
    antidepressants in the prophylaxis of PTSD in
    pediatric patients

23
Benzodiazepines ???
  • 2 studies have not shown these agents to have
    value in PTSD prevention
  • Clonazepam (mean daily dose 2.7mg) or
    alprazolam (mean daily dose 2.5mg) administered
    within 1-week of trauma exposure to 13 victims
  • 13 matched but untreated victims control group
  • At 6-months, 69 of patients in BDZ group vs. 15
    in control group fulfilled criteria for a
    diagnosis of PTSD
  • NB 7 of 13 patients treated with BDZ none of
    the controls had MDE at 6 months

Gelpin et al., J Clin Psychiatry1996
Mellman et al., J Trauma Stress, 1998
24
Summary
  • Little empirical data on effective pharmacologic
    interventions in the immediate aftermath of
    extreme psychological trauma
  • Less than 10 prospective, controlled, preventive,
    pharmacotherapy trials published - best regarded
    as preliminary

25
Other Strategies
  • Studies in hot pursuit of other molecular
    mechanisms
  • Given the association of the serotonin
    transporter gene with stress vulnerability and
    amygdala activation, early use of SSRIs or SNRIs
    might also be useful
  • Other ideas (i) block the action of CRF with
    antagonist of CRF1 receptor, (ii) block activated
    fear circuits with a2d ligand e.g. pregabalin
    (iii) GABAergic agents

26
Other Strategies
  • Neurophysiological kindling model of PTSD - that
    anti-kindling agents (i.e. tiagabine), may have
    preventive value
  • Cortisol-induced neurotoxicity model of PTSD -
    drugs that block hippocampal damage (e.g. SSRIs,
    tianeptine) and ?anti-cortisol agents (e.g.
    mifepristone) may also be useful

27
Summary
  • Too early to tell which, if any, of these
    potential medication interventions will
    effectively inoculate against PTSD
  • Unanswered questions of timing, dose, and
    developmental, cultural, and other differences
    need to be systematically assessed
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