Title: Nicotine and psychiatric disorder
1Nicotine and psychiatric disorder
Robert West University College London
2Outline
- Tobacco/nicotine dependence as a psychiatric
disorder - Smoking patterns and psychiatric disorders
- Possible mechanisms linking smoking and
psychiatric disorders - Implications for diagnosis and treatment
3Tobacco/nicotine dependence as a psychiatric
disorder
4WHO and American Psychiatric Association
Definitions
- WHO (ICD-10)
- Tobacco dependence
- Tobacco withdrawal syndrome
- APA (DSM-IV)
- Nicotine dependence
- Nicotine withdrawal
- Use same criteria as for other substance use
disorders - Defining feature
- Impaired control over behaviour
5Main diagnostic criteria
- Failure of attempts to stop
- Cravings or urges
- Withdrawal syndrome
- Continued use despite knowledge of harmful
consequences
80 of smokers fulfil DSM criteria for dependence
6Cigarette smoking and tobacco/ nicotine dependence
- Cigarette smoking is most addictive form of
nicotine use - rapid nicotine delivery
- palatable
- convenient
- readily accessible
- few restrictions on use
- Other forms of tobacco use are probably less
addictive (West 2004) - Addiction to pure nicotine products is related to
speed of nicotine delivery - Nasal spray
- Transdermal patch
Moderate
Very low
7Smoking patterns and psychiatric diagnoses
8Smoking and schizophrenia
- Widely believed that smoking is particularly high
in schizophrenia - E.g. Complex psychopathological, biochemical,
and neuropharmacological interactions between
smoking and schizophrenia are revealed
McCloughen (2003) - But it is not specifically linked to this
disorder ....
9Smoking and psychiatric diagnoses in the
population
Meltzer 1995)
10Smoking and psychiatric diagnosis in in
institutions
- Very high smoking prevalence in all
institutionalised patient groups - Level is similar in the homeless
11Smoking and ADHD
- Clear link with ADHD in adolescents
- Children with ADHD more likely to smoke (Tercyak
2002) - Smokers with ADHD start smoking younger (Burke
2001)
12OPCS Psychiatric Morbidity Survey
13Smoking and deprivation
- Need to rule out deprivation as an explanation
- Strong link between nicotine dependence and
deprivation
From Jarvis et alDeprivation indexed by
occupation, educational level, housing
tenure, car ownership, unemployment, and living
in crowded accommodation)
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15Smoking and other addictive disorders
- Strong links with other substance use disorders
- 80 of adults with alcohol dependence smoke
cigarettes (see Enoch, 2003) - 80 of illicit drug users in treatment smoke
(Farrell, 2001)
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17Substance use and psychiatric disorder in the
general population
OPCS Psychiatric Morbidity Survey Meltzer et al
1995
18Focusing on depression
19Depression and smoking in smokers taking part in
stop smoking trial
- N950
- Mean age 44 years
- 61 female
- Cigs per day23
- Expired air CO26ppm
- Measured depression in postal questionnaire and
at pre-quit session (R0.38, plt.001) - 5-point rating scale (Not at all - Extremely)
20Correlates of depression
21Correlates of depression
Depression does not exist in isolation and
appears to be related more to functional aspects
of smoking that amount smoked.
22Depression and smoking in adolescents
- Smoking linked to depression in adolescents
(Covey 1992 Tyas 1998R Patten 1996 Escobedo
1996) - Attenuated but not removed by controlled for
major common risk factors (Berard 2002 Fergusson
1996) - Intention to smoke linked to depression in young
children (Coogan 1998)
23Depression as a predictor of smoking
- Depression predicts uptake (Escobedo 1998 Brown
1996 Rohde 1994) possibly interacting with peer
influence (Patton 1998) - Physical abuse predicts depression and smoking
(Kaplan 1998)
24Smoking as a predictor of depression
- Early onset smoking predicts depression and
substance use later (Hanna 1999 Hanna 2001) - Adolescent smoking predicts major depressive
episodes in later adolescence (Brown 1996) and
adulthood (Cho 1998)
25Stopping smoking and depression
- Acute studies show increase in depressed mood
which resolves by about 4 weeks, more so in those
with history of depression (Hughes 1994 Dalack
1995 Breslau 1992) - Numerous case reports of major depression
following smoking cessation (Glassman 1990 Bock
1996) - Clinical depression found in 14 of those who
stop smoking in trial but no more than those who
did not (Tsoh 2000)
26Stopping smoking and depression
- Major depressive episodes more likely in those
with history of depression (Covey 1990 Covey
1997), those more depressed at baseline (Borrelli
1996) and those with protracted withdrawal
symptoms (Covey 1997) - But current smokers are more depressed than never
or ex-smokers (e.g. Haukkala et al, 2000)
27Depression and stopping smoking
- Population studies Depressed smokers 40 less
likely to have stopped after 9 years (Anda 1990) - Baseline depression and stopping - mixed
findings - No relationship (Vazquez 1999 )
- Significant relationship (Kinnunen 1996)
- Increased depression during acute withdrawal
sometimes predicts early relapse (Burgess 2002
Swan 1996 West 1989)
28Depression treatment and smoking cessation
- Bupropion aids cessation and reduces depressed
mood (Cochrane review) - MAO inhibitors may aid cessation (Cochrane
review) - Works in patient with history of depression
(Hayford 1999) - Nortriptyline aids cessation (Prochazka 1998)
29Depression treatment and smoking cessation
- Nicotine gum may help particularly depressed
patients (Kinnunen 1996) - Fluoxetine appears not to aid cessation (Cochrane
review) and limited evidence for effect on
depressed mood during withdrawal (Dalack 1995) - Mood-focused cognitive behavioural therapy -
modest evidence for benefit over other treatments
in aiding cessation (Patten 1998)
30Mechanisms
31Possible biological mechanisms
- Smokers who smoke more for negative affect
control are more depressed (Lerman 1996) - Cigarette smoke appears to have MAO inhibiting
activity (Berlin 1995) - Smoking may increase brain 5HT and withdrawal may
reduce it (Wurtman 1995)
32Possible genetic mechanisms
- Analysis of twin data suggests link between major
depression and smoking reflecting common
underlying genetic vulnerability (Kendler 1993) - D1, DRD2 and D4 receptor genes may be implicated
in increased susceptibility to nicotine
dependence and to psychiatric conditions (Dagher
2001Lerman 1998 Noble 2003)
33Psychiatric disorder increasing vulnerability to
nicotine dependence
- Increased need for nicotine reward
- easy and reliable nicotine reward
- self-medication (e.g. sensory gating) by nicotine
- reduction in medication side-effects by nicotine
- need to fill time with smoking activity
34Evidence against self-medication hypothesis
- Smoking cessation does not precipitate relapse to
other disorders - depression (see earlier)
- uncontrolled alcohol use (see Sullivan 2002)
- Smoking cessation does not appear to lead to
worsening of psychotic symptoms (Dalack 1999)
35Nicotine use and vulnerability to psychiatric
disorder
- Chronic nicotine intake may increase stress
- reduced hippocampal 5-HT
- chronic increase in sympathetic tone
- Chronic nicotine intake may damage dopamine
pathways in striatum
36Summary of the facts
- About 80 of smokers suffer from the chronic,
life-threatening psychiatric disorder
tobacco/nicotine dependence - Link with other psychiatric disorders is strong
for all conditions, not just schizophrenia - The more severe the disorder the higher the
smoking prevalence - There appear to be causal links in both directions
37Implications
38Implications for treatment
- There is little need for concern that smoking
cessation will provoke relapse in patients with
history of psychiatric disorder - There is no good evidence that stopping smoking
worsens psychotic symptoms other symptoms may be
improved
39Implications for diagnosis
- One in five (22) of UK smokers have current
psychiatric disorder (Farrell et al, 2001) - Thus smoking may be a useful for screening
prevalent, hidden disorders, particularly - depression
- anxiety
- alcohol dependence
40Implications for treatment
- Smoking cessation may be a useful intervention to
improve minor psychiatric symptoms - Treating untreated minor psychiatric symptoms may
improve smoking cessation outcomes - Smoking cessation treatment in psychiatric
patients will need to be more intensive and
prolonged and in some cases need to address other
needs
41Latest news and views
- Fagerstrom Aubin Curr Med Res Opin. 2009
Feb25(2)511-8 - Traditional programmes for smoking cessation may
not always be suitable for psychiatric patients
due to their neuropsychological profile.
Preliminary evidence suggests that more flexible,
open-ended, combination approaches of
pharmacotherapy and counselling may be more
successful - Alessi et al J Appl Behav Anal. 2008
Winter41(4)617-22 - Prize contingency management reduced smoking
compared with standard care in a pilot study
42Latest news and views
- Solty et al Can J Psychiatry. 2009
Jan54(1)36-45 - Self-reported motivation to quit is high in
psychiatric inpatients - Kinnunen Int J Psychiatry Med. 200838(3)373-89
- NRT works in depressed and non-depressed smokers
- Covey et al Nicotine Tob Res. 2008
Dec10(12)1717-25 - Combined bupropion and nicotine patch treatment
appears to be helpful for smokers with
inattention but not smokers with
hyperactivity/inattention symptoms
43Latest new and views
- Zadonis et al Nicotine Tob Res. 2008
Dec10(12)1691-715 - NIMH report. Historically, "self-medication" and
"individual rights" have been concerns used to
rationalize allowing ongoing tobacco use and
limited smoking cessation efforts in many mental
health treatment settings. Although research has
shown that tobacco use can reduce or ameliorate
certain psychiatric symptoms, overreliance on the
self-medication hypothesis to explain the high
rates of tobacco use in psychiatric populations
may result in inadequate attention to other
potential explanations for this addictive
behavior among those with mental disorders.