Title: Anxiety Disorders
1Anxiety Disorders
Sarah Melton, PharmD,BCPP,CGP Director of
Addiction Outreach Associate Professor of
Pharmacy Practice Appalachian College of
Pharmacy Oakwood, VA
2Objectives
- Given a case example, evaluate whether the
patient meets DSM-IV-TR criteria for an anxiety
disorder generalized anxiety disorder (GAD),
panic disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder
(OCD), social anxiety disorder (SAD), and
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). - Interpret common rating scales in the evaluation
and management of anxiety disorders. - Distinguish differences in pharmacology,
kinetics, efficacy, dosing, adverse effects, and
drug interactions of benzodiazepines in the
management of anxiety disorders. - Compare the efficacy, dosing, and adverse effects
of the serotonergic antidepressants, and the role
of antipsychotics in the management of anxiety
disorders.
3Objectives
- Evaluate whether patient and professional
education is optimal to facilitate safe and
effective drug therapy for anxiety disorders.
(DII) - Using practice guidelines, develop a
pharmacotherapy plan, including dosing and
duration of therapy, and nonpharmacologic
treatments, for a patient with anxiety disorders. - Discuss the role of pharmacotherapy in the
management of anxiety disorders in special
populations (e.g., children, elderly patients and
pregnancy). - Resolve potential drug-related problems in
patients with anxiety disorders.
4Epidemiology of Anxiety Disorders
- As a group - most frequently occurring
psychiatric disorders - Over the past decade, prevalence has not
changed, but rate of treatment has increased. - Patients are frequent users of emergency medical
services, at high risk for suicide attempts, and
substance abuse. - Costs for anxiety disorders represent one-third
of total expenditures for mental illness. - In primary care, often underdiagnosed or
recognized years after onset.
- Median age of onset
- GAD 31 years
- SAD 13 years
- OCD 19 years
- PTSD 23 years
- PD 24 years
- Lifetime prevalence
- GAD 5.7
- SAD 12.1
- OCD 1.6
- PTSD 6.8
- PD 4.7
-
WFSBP Guidelines for the Pharmacological
Treatment of Anxiety, Obsessive Compulsive , and
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders- First Revision
(2008), Data from the National Comorbidity
Survey Replication(2005)
5Treatment Plan
- Patient preference
- Severity of illness
- Comorbidity
- Concomitant medical illness
- Complications like substance abuse or suicide
risk - History of previous treatments
- Cost issues
- Availability of treatments in given area
6Patient Education
- Mechanisms underlying psychic and somatic anxiety
should be explained. - Describe typical features of the disorder,
treatment options, adverse drug effects. - Explain advantages and disadvantages of the drug
- Delayed onset of effect
- Activation syndrome or initial jitteriness with
SSRIs/SNRIs
7Duration of Drug Treatment
- Anxiety disorders typically have a waxing and
waning course. - After treatment response, which often occurs much
later in PTSD and OCD, treatment should continue
for at least 12 months to reduce the risk of
relapse.
8Dosing
- In RCTs, SSRIs and SNRIs have a flat response
curve with the exception of OCD - 75 of patients respond to the initial (low) dose
- In OCD, the dose must usually be pushed to
maximally tolerated dosages - In elderly patients, treatment should be started
with half the recommended dose or less to
minimize adverse effects - Patients with panic disorder are very sensitive
to serotonergic stimulation and often discontinue
treatment because of initial jitteriness - Antidepressant doses should be increased to the
highest recommended level if the initial low or
medium dose fails
9Dosing
- Controlled data on maintenance treatment are
scarce - Continue the same dose as in the acute phase
- For improved compliance, administer medications
in a single dose if supported by half-life data - Benzodiazepine doses should be as low as
possible, but as high as necessary - In hepatic impairment, dose should be adjusted
10Monitoring Treatment Efficacy
- Use of symptom rating scales
- Panic and Agoraphobia Scale (PAS)
- Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAM-A)
- Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale (LSAS)
- Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS)
- Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS)
- Scales are time-consuming and require training
- Clinical Global Impression (CGI) or specific
self-report measures may suffice in busy settings
11Treatment Resistance
- Many patients do not fulfill response criteria
after initial treatment - Commonly used threshold for response is 50
improvement in total score of commonly used
rating scale - Review diagnosis, assess for adherence, maximally
tolerated dosages, sufficient trial period,
assess for comorbidities - Change the dose or switch to another medication?
- If no response after 4-6 weeks (8-12 weeks in OCD
or PTSD), then switch medication -
- If partial response, reassess in 4-6 weeks
- Issue of switching vs. augmentation is debated by
experts and not clearly defined in the literature
12Non-pharmacological Treatment
- Psychoeducation is essential
- Disease state, etiology, and treatment options
- Effect sizes with psychological therapies are as
high as the effect sizes with medications - Exposure therapy and response prevention
- Agoraphobia, social anxiety, OCD, PTSD
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy most evidence to
support in all disorders - Response is delayed, usually later than
medications - Prolonged courses are needed to maintain
treatment response - Some evidence to show that treatment gains are
maintained over time longer than medications - Expensive, not readily available in rural or
remote areas
13Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs)
- First-line drugs for all anxiety disorders
- Dose and education at initiation of therapy is
important - Restlessness, jitteriness, insomnia, headache in
the first few days/weeks of treatment may
jeopardize compliance - Lower starting doses reduces overstimulation
- Adverse effects include headache, fatigue,
dizziness, nausea, anorexia - Weight gain and sexual dysfunction are long-term
concerns - Discontinuation syndrome paroxetine
- Anxiolytic effect is delayed 2-4 weeks (6-8 weeks
in PTSD, OCD)
14Selective Serotonin Norepinephrine Reuptake
Inhibitors (SNRIs)
- Efficacy of venlafaxine and duloxetine in certain
anxiety disorders has been shown in controlled
studies - Early adverse effects such as nausea,
restlessness, insomnia and headache may limit
compliance - Sexual dysfunction long-term
- Modest, sustained increase in blood pressure may
be problematic - Significant discontinuation syndrome with
venlafaxine occurs, even with a missed dose - Antianxiety effects have latency of 2-4 weeks
15Tricyclic Antidepressants (TCAs)
- Efficacy in all anxiety disorders is well-proven,
except in SAD - Imipramine, clomipramine have most evidence
- Adverse effects initially increased anxiety,
anticholinergic, cardiovascular, sedation,
impaired cognition, decreased seizure threshold,
elevated LFTs (clomipramine) - Weight gain, sexual dysfunction are problematic
long-term - Discontinuation syndrome
- Avoid in elderly, patients with cardiovascular
disease, seizure disorders, and suicidal thoughts - Second-line agents because of adverse
effects/toxicity - Dosage should be titrated up slowly onset of
effect is 2-6 weeks, longer in OCD
16Monamine Oxidase Inhibitors (MAOIs)
- Efficacy of phenelzine established in panic, SAD
and PTSD - Last-line agent for treatment resistance used by
experienced psychiatrists - Risk of adverse effects
- Life threatening drug and food interactions
- Patient education on dietary restrictions and
drug interactions imperative - Give doses in the morning and mid-day to avoid
overstimulation and insomnia
17Benzodiazepines
- Anxiolysis begins in 30-60 minutes after oral or
parenteral administration - Safe and effective for short-term use
maintenance requires evaluation of risks vs.
benefits - Avoid in patients with history of substance or
alcohol abuse - Most commonly used in combination with SSRI/SNRI
during first few weeks of therapy - Guideline recommendations Prescribe on
scheduled, not prn basis - Not effective in depression
18Hydrozyzine
- Commonly used in community setting anxiolytic
effects that may be beneficial in treating GAD - There are controlled data supporting efficacy,
but up to 40 of patients report adverse effects - This agent was similar to buspirone in anxiolytic
effects in a short-term trial - Hydroxyzine is not associated with dependence
19Other Agents
- PREGABALIN
- Not FDA- approved for anxiety, but used commonly
in Europe - Effective in acute/long-term GAD and a few trials
of SAD - Typical doses of 300-600 mg/day
- Onset of activity was evident after 1 week
- Adverse effects dizziness, sedation, dry mouth,
psychomotor impairment - Pregabalin was not associated with clinically
significant withdrawal symptoms when tapered over
1 week
- ANTICONVULSANTS
- Not used in routine treatment of anxiety
disorders, but may some utility as adjunctive
agents in some disorders - Carbamazepine, valproate, lamotrigine, and
gabapentin have shown efficacy in preliminary
studies for PTSD
20Buspirone
- Advantages
- Non-sedating
- No abuse potential
- Disadvantages
- No antidepressant effect for comorbid conditions
- Initial therapeutic effect delayed by 1-2 weeks,
full effects occurring over several weeks - Ineffective in patients who previously responded
to benzodiazepines??
- Beneficial only in GAD
- Adverse Effects
- Nausea, headache, dizziness, jitteriness and
dysphoria (initial) - Dosing
- Initial 5 mg tid up to maximum 60 mg/day
21Other Agents
- ATYPICAL ANTIPSYCOTICS
- Quetiapine was effective as monotherapy for GAD
- Atypical antipsychotics have been used as
adjunctive agents for non-responsive cases of
anxiety associate with OCD and PTSD
- BETA-ADRENERGIC BLOCKERS
- ß - blockers reduce autonomic anxiety symptoms
such as palpitations, tremor, blushing - However, double-blind studies have not shown
efficacy in any disorder - Recommended for use in nongeneralized SAD given
before a performance situation
22Differentiating Anxiety Disorders
- Many anxiety disorders present similarly
- Key to differentiation is rationale behind fear
- Panic attacks occur in both social anxiety and
panic disorder - Fear of anxiety symptoms is characteristic of
panic disorder - Fear of embarrassment is from social interactions
typifies SAD - GAD is likely diagnosis if anxiety about social
situations are part of a pattern of multiple
worries - Anxiety may also be induced by medications or
medical conditions
23CASE 1
- A 70-year-old man presents to his physician
complaining of having trouble sleeping, being
nervous all the time, and feeling like he is
going to lose control. His wife died 2 years
ago and the symptoms have been getting worse
since that time. He is retired as an accountant,
but lately cannot even concentrate to pay his own
bills. He has seasonal allergies, COPD, angina,
and Type II diabetes. Medications include
albuterol/ipratropium inhaler, theophylline,
enalapril, aspirin, metformin, and loratatadine
with pseudoephedrine. He smokes 2 ppd (100 pack
years). He drinks 8-10 drinks/day that are
caffeinated and also drinks 2-3 beers nightly to
help him fall asleep and relieve his stress. - What factors should be considered in the
assessment and differential diagnosis of this
patients anxiety?
24Substance-Induced Anxiety
- CNS Stimulants
- CNS depressant withdrawal
- Psychotropic medications
- Cardiovascular medications
- Heavy metals and toxins
25Anxiety Secondary to Medical Conditions
- Endocrine
- Addisons disease
- Cushing disease
- Hyperthyroidism
- Hypoglycemia
- Pheochromocytoma
- Cardiovascular
- Angina, MI
- CHF, MVP
- Respiratory
- Asthma, COPD
- Hyperventilation, PE
- Metabolic
- Porphyria, Vitamin B12 deficiency
- Neurologic
- CNS neoplasms, chronic pain
- Encephalitis, PD, epilepsy
- Gastrointestinal
- Crohns Disease, PUD
- IBS, Ulcerative Colitis
- Inflammatory
- RA, SLE
- Other
- HIV, Malignancy
McClure EB, Pine DS. (2009). Clinical Features of
the Anxiety Disorders. In BJ Sadock, VA Sadock ,
P Ruiz (Eds.). Kaplan and Sadocks Comprehensive
Textbook of Psychiatry (9th ed, pp. 1844-1855).
Philadelphia, PA Lippincott, Williams and
Wilkins.
26CASE 1 (continued)
- Factors that need further investigation before a
diagnosis of an anxiety disorder can be made
include - Medical illness (COPD, angina)
- Possible depression, adjustment to stressors
- Medications/substances
- Pseudoepehdrine
- Theophylline
- Caffeine
- Nicotine
27CASE 2
- A 30-year-old woman presents to her PCP c/o of
daily headaches, muscle tension, diarrhea and
difficulty sleeping. She states that her husband
says she is a worry wart and she admits that
she has difficulty controlling her anxiety over
her financial situation, job security, and the
safety of her children. She has become irritable
because she always feels on the edge. The
symptoms started 7 months ago, following the
death of her sister but she recalls her mother
telling her that she worried too much, just like
her father during her adolescent years. - She is employed as an office manager, but has
missed several days of work in the past month
because of her anxiety, physical symptoms, and
inability to concentrate. - No significant past medical history and only
medications include a multivitamin. - PPH Major Depression 2 years ago treated with
fluoxetine 20 mg for 6 months. - She is married with 2 children (ages 3 and 6),
denies tobacco or alcohol use. Drinks 1 cup of
coffee in the morning and an occasional soda in
the afternoon.
28Problem Identification
- What symptoms does the patient exhibit that are
consistent with Generalized Anxiety Disorder? - What risk factors are present in her history?
- What are treatment options?
29Diagnostic Criteria for GAD
- The patient reports having excessive anxiety and
worry occurring more days than not for at least 6
months about a number of events of activities
(such as work or school performance). - The patient has difficulty in controlling worry.
- The anxiety and worry are associated with 3 or
more of the following 6 symptoms - Restlessness or feeling keyed up and on edge
- Easily fatigued
- Difficulty concentrating, or mind going blank
- Irritability
- Sleep disturbance (difficulty falling asleep or
staying asleep, or restless, unsatisfying sleep)
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders-IV-TR, 2000.
30CASE 2 (continued)
- Risk Factors for GAD present in case
- Gender (female)
- Genetic factors (father)
- Medication/substance induced (stimulant)
- Stressful event (death of sister)
- Treatment options
- Nonpharmacologic - Psychoeducation, CBT
- Pharmacologic (antidepressants, benzodiazepines,
buspirone, others)
31Pharmacological Treatment of GAD
- First-line
- Recommended daily doses
- Escitalopram 10-20mg Venlafaxine 75-225 mg
- Paroxetine 20-50 mg Duloxetine 60-120 mg
- Sertraline 50-150 mg
- Second-line
- Benzodiazepines when patient has no history of
dependency may combine with antidepressants for
first 2-4 weeks - Pregabalin 150-600 mg Imipramine 75-200 mg
- Others
- Hydroxyzine 37.5-75 mg effective in trials for
acute anxiety, but ADRs limit use - Buspirone 15- 60 mg indicated for GAD, but
efficacy results were inconsistent - Treatment resistance
- Augmentation of SSRI with atypical antipsychotic
(quetiapine, risperidone or olanzapine) - Quetiapine effective as monotherapy, but not FDA
approved for anxiety because of metabolic and
cardiac risks associated with chronic use
WFSBP Guidelines for the Pharmacological
Treatment of Anxiety, Obsessive Compulsive , and
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders- First Revision
(2008)
32CASE 3
- A 24-year old college student presents to the
student mental health facility for follow-up for
treatment of panic disorder with agoraphobia. He
presented 5 months ago complaining of attacks of
chest pain, SOB, tingling fingers, dizziness,
nausea. During the attacks, he felt like he was
outside his body and everything was crashing
in on him. He began staying in his apartment
nearly all the time and was on the verge of being
dismissed from college for not attending classes.
- He was started on paroxetine 5 mg daily and
alprazolam 0.5 mg three times daily. His current
doses are paroxetine 40 mg po daily and
alprazolam 1 mg in the morning, 1 mg at lunch,
and 2 mg at bedtime. -
- He was doing so well that he decided to
discontinue the alprazolam yesterday because his
mother told him she thought he was hooked on
it. Today, he feels quite anxious, his heart is
racing, and his hands are tremulous. He wonders
if he is getting ready to have a full-blown panic
attack. - What do you recommend at this point in his
therapy? -
33Diagnostic Criteria for Panic Disorder
- Presence of at least 2 unexpected panic attacks
characterized by at least 4 of the following
somatic or cognitive symptoms, which develop
abruptly and peak within 10 minutes - Cardiac, sweating, shaking, SOB or choking,
nausea, dizziness, depersonalization, fear of
loss of control, fear of dying, paresthesias,
chills or hot flashes - The attacks are followed by one of the following
for 1 month - Persistent concern about having another attack
- Worry about consequences of the attack
- Significant change in behavior because of the
attack - May occur with or without agoraphobia
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders-IV-TR, 2000.
34Panic Attack/Agoraphobia
- Panic Attack
- About 7 of the population will experience at
least one panic attack - Types
- Unexpected (uncued)
- Situationally bound (cued)
- Situationally predisposed
- Can occur in the context of another anxiety or
mental disorder
- Agoraphobia
- Anxiety about being in a situation where escape
is difficult or help is unavailable in the event
of a panic attack - Examples of feared situations open spaces,
trains, tunnels, bridges, crowded rooms - Situations are avoided or endured with
significant anxiety about having a panic attack
or symptoms - Can persist even after panic attacks abate
35Panic Disorder - Treatment
- Non-pharmacologic Treatment
- Avoid trigger substances
- Caffeine, OTC stimulants, nicotine, drugs of
abuse - CBT
- Correct avoidance behavior
- Train individual to identify and control signals
associated with panic attacks - Efficacy 80-90 short term
36Pharmacological Treatment of Panic Disorder
- First-line
- Recommended daily doses
- Citalopram 20-60 mg Paroxetine 20-60 mg
- Escitalopram 10-20 mg Sertraline 50-150 mg
- Fluoxetine 20-40 mg Venlafaxine 75-225 mg
- Fluvoxamine 100300 mg
- Second-line
- Imipramine 75-250 mg , clomipramine 75-250 mg
- Benzodiazepines when no history of dependency
may combine with antidepressants for first 2-4
weeks for more rapid response and to limit ADRs - Alprazolam 1.5-8 mg/day Diazepam 5-20 mg/day
- Clonazepam 1-4 mg/day Lorazepam 2-8 mg/day
- Treatment-resistance phenelzine
WFSBP Guidelines for the Pharmacological
Treatment of Anxiety, Obsessive Compulsive , and
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders- First Revision
(2008)
37Panic DisorderTherapeutic Use of Benzodiazepines
- Antipanic effect begins within the first week
- Effective in 55-75 of panic disorder patients
- Effective in patients needing rapid relief of
anticipatory anxiety - Breakthrough (interdose rebound) anxiety may
occur 3-5 hours after a dose of shorter acting
benzodiazepines such as alprazolam - Dependence/withdrawal are associated with
long-term use or high dose
38Benzodiazepines Pharmacokinetics
- Onset of Action
- High lipophilicity fastest absorption faster
onset but also euporic rush - Diazepam, clorazepate, alprazolam
- Lower lipophilicity longer onset, less euphoria
- Chlordiazepoxide, clonazepam, oxazepam
- Duration of Action (t1/2)
- Long diazepam, chlordiazepoxide, clonazepam
- Short alprazolam, lorazepam, oxazepam
- Metabolic Pathway
- Hepatic microsomal oxidation (Phase I metabolism)
- Impaired by aging, liver disease, or meds that
inhibit oxidative process - Prolonged half-life, accumulation
- Alprazolam, clonazepam, chlordiazepoxide,
clorazepate, diazepam - Glucuronide conjugation (Phase II metabolism)
- Lorazepam, oxazepam
39Benzodiazepines Drug Interactions
- Pharmacodynamic
- CNS depressants alcohol, barbiturates, opiates
- Pharmacokinetic
- Inhibitors cimetidine, nefazodone, fluoxetine,
fluvoxamine, erythromycin, ketoconazole, oral
contraceptives, protease inhibitors, grapefruit
juice, isoniazid - Inducers phenytoin, carbamazepine,
phenobarbital, rifampin
40Benzodiazepines Dependence and Abuse
- Physical dependence
- Within 3-4 months, can lead to down-regulation of
endogenous GABA production - Withdrawal symptoms common
- Rebound anxiety, insomnia, jitteriness, muscle
aches, depression, ataxia, blurred vision - Do not stop therapy abruptly TAPER
- Abuse
- High risk in patients with substance or alcohol
abuse history - Alprazolam, lorazepam, and diazepam
41Benzodiazepine Withdrawal
- Onset, duration and severity varies according to
dosage, duration of treatment, and half-life, and
speed of discontinuation - Short half-life, withdrawal begins in 1-2 days,
shorter duration, more intense - Long half-life, withdrawal begins in 5-10 days,
lasts a few weeks - Common symptoms anxiety, insomnia, irritability,
nausea, diaphoresis, systolic hypertension,
tachycardia, tremor - Possible consequences delirium, confusion,
psychosis, seizures
42CASE 3 (Continued)
- The patient has had excellent response to
pharmacotherapy however, he has only been
treated for 5 months. - Treatment guidelines recommend therapy for at
least 1 year after resolutions of symptoms before
considering discontinuation - Benzodiazepines are typically used in the first
2-4 weeks as acute therapy, so it is reasonable
to consider slowly tapering the alprazolam at
this point. - Abrupt discontinuation is not appropriate he now
has withdrawal symptoms that must be addressed,
as well as his concern about addiction.
43Benzodiazepine Discontinuation
- Typical tapering schedule for benzodiazepines
- 25 per week reduction in dosage until 50 of
dose then reduce by one eighth every 4-7 days - Therapy gt 8 weeks taper over 2-3 weeks
- Therapy gt 6 months taper over 4-8 weeks
- Therapy gt 1 year taper over 2-4 months
- For patients on high potency benzodiazepines for
monotherapy of panic disorder, a very gradual
discontinuation is recommended -
- Discontinue benzodiazepines slowly over 3-4
months to prevent relapse and emergence of
withdrawal symptoms - Alprazolam doses gt3 mg/d ? by 0.5 mg every 2
weeks until 3 mg, then ? by 0.25 mg every 2 weeks
until 1 mg, then ? by 0.125 mg every 2 weeks - Clonazepam ? by 0.125 mg every 2 weeks
- Diazepam ? by 2.5 mg every 2 weeks
- Lorazepam ? by 0.5 mg every 2 weeks
44Diagnostic Criteria for SAD
- A marked and persistent fear of one or more
social or performance situations involving
exposure to unfamiliar people or possible
scrutiny by others. The person fears that he or
she will act in a way (or show symptoms of
anxiety) that will be humiliating or embarrassing - Exposure to the feared social situation provokes
anxiety or even a panic attack - The person recognizes that the fear is excessive
or unreasonable - Feared social or performance situations are
avoided or endured with intense anxiety or
distress - The condition interferes significantly with the
person's normal routine, occupational (or
academic) functioning, or social activities or
relationships, or there is marked distress about
having the phobia - Specify the disorder as generalized if fears
include most situations
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders-IV-TR, 2000.
45Social Anxiety DisorderTreatment
- Early detection and treatment is important
- Because of the nature of the illness, patients
are reluctant to to seek treatment - Pharmacological and nonpharmacological therapy
both effective
46Social Anxiety DisorderNonpharmacologic Treatment
- CBT
- Change negative thoughts patterns
- Repeated exposure to feared situation
- Social skills training
- 12-16 weekly sessions, each 60-90 minutes
- Workbook with homework exercise
- Clinical improvement within 6-12 weeks
- Long term gains
47Pharmacological Treatment of SAD
- First-line
- Recommended doses
- Escitalopram 10-20 mg Fluoxetine 20-40 mg
- Fluvoxamine 100-300 mg Sertraline 50-150 mg
- Paroxetine 20-50 mg Venlfaxine 75-225 mg
- Second-line
- Imipramine 75-200 mg
- Clonazepam 1.5-8 mg/day, when patient has no
history of dependency may combine with
antidepressants for first 2-4 weeks - Treatment resistance
- Addition of buspirone to an SSRI effective in one
open study buspirone not effective as
monotherapy. - Phenelzine
WFSBP Guidelines for the Pharmacological
Treatment of Anxiety, Obsessive Compulsive , and
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders- First Revision
(2008)
48Case 4
- A 28-year old woman presents to the Anxiety
Disorders Clinic after being referred by her PCP.
The patient recently gave birth to a son 2
months ago. Within 2 weeks after delivery, she
started having intrusive thoughts of harming her
baby. Over and over again, she imagined herself
dropping the baby, cutting or burning him. She
checks the appliances in the house multiple times
to make sure they are cut off because she fears
starting a fire that will harm the baby. She
will not use the kitchen knives or scissors. - She spends 40 minutes every time she goes
out checking and re-checking the babys car seat,
so now she just stays at home. She reports some
relief during the day when she knocks on hard
objects in 3 sets of 5 knocks. She is so
concerned about hurting her baby that she has
started avoiding holding him except when nursing.
She says that half of her days are consumed with
her checking behavior. Past psychiatric history
is positive for depression when she was in
college that responded well to sertraline. YBOCS
score 32
49Diagnostic Criteria for OCD
- Obsessions
- Recurrent and persistent thoughts, impulses or
images that are intrusive and cause a great
amount of anxiety - These thoughts, impulses, or images are not
worries about daily life issues - Patient attempts to ignore or suppress the
thoughts, impulses, images, or to neutralize them
by applying special thoughts or actions - The thoughts, impulses, or images are recognized
as a product of the patients mind - Compulsions
- Repetitive behaviors that the person feels
compelled to perform in response to an
obsession, or according to rigid self-imposed
rules - The behaviors or mental acts are aimed at
preventing or reducing distress or preventing
some dreaded event or situation but are not
connected in a realistic or logical way with what
they are designed to neutralize or prevent - The person has recognized that the obsessions or
compulsions are excessive or unreasonable (this
does not apply to children).
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders-IV-TR, 2000.
50OCD Comorbidities
- Depression (75)
- Anxiety disorders
- Tic Disorders (20-30)
- 5-7 have full Tourettes syndrome
- PANDAS (pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric
disorders) - OCD spectrum disorders
- Somatoform disorders (body dysmorphic disorder)
- Eating disorders (anorexia, bulimia,
binge-eating) - Impulse control disorders (trichotillomania,
compulsive nail biting, kleptomania, compulsive
buying)
51OCD Non-Pharmacologic Treatment
- CBT
- Exposure therapy with response prevention
- High rate of discontinuation
- Effective in 66-75 of patients if continued
- Neurosurgery
- Intervention to hyperreactive portions of brain
- Effective in 40-90 of treatment resistant
patients - Deep brain stimulation
52Pharmacotherapy of OCD
- First-line
- Recommended doses/day
- Escitalopram 10-20 mg Fluoxetine 40-60 mg
- Fluvoxamine 100-300 mg Paroxetine 40-60 mg
- Sertraline 50-200 mg
- Second-line- typically reserved until after
failure with 2 SSRIs - Clomipramine 75-250 mg equally effective as
SSRIs but less well-tolerated - Treatment resistance
- Intravenous clomipramine (not FDA approved) was
more effective than oral clomipramine - SSRI antipsychotic (haloperiodol, quetiapine,
olanzapine, risperidone) more effective than SSRI
alone
WFSBP Guidelines for the Pharmacological
Treatment of Anxiety, Obsessive Compulsive , and
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders- First Revision
(2008)
53CASE 4 (continued)
- What is the most appropriate therapy for this
patient what do we know? - YBOCS 32 (extremely severe OCD)
- She is breastfeeding
- Previous response to sertraline for depression
- Treatment algorithm developed by the American
Psychiatric Association considers CBT or SSRI to
be first-line treatments
54Case 4 (continued)
- The patient declines CBT because of cost and time
commitment. - She prefers therapy with medication as she had
positive experience when her depression was
treated. - Sertraline 25 mg po every AM is prescribed with
decision to increase dose to 50 mg by the end of
the week. She will follow-up for assessment in
one week.
55Goals of Therapy in OCD
- Marked clinical improvement, recovery, and full
remission - Decrease symptom frequency and severity, improve
the patients functioning, and help the patient
improve QOL - Enhance the patients ability to cooperate with
care - Anticipate stressors likely to exacerbate OCD and
help the patient develop coping strategies - Minimize any adverse effects
- Educate the patient and family about OCD and its
treatment. - Reasonable treatment outcome targets include
- less than 1 hour per day spent obsessing and
performing compulsive behaviors no more than
mild OCD-related anxiety an ability to live with
uncertainty and little or no interference of OCD
with the tasks of ordinary living
56Assessment of Response in OCD
- Most patients will not experience substantial
improvement until 46 weeks after starting
medication, for some 1012 weeks. - Higher SSRI doses produce higher response rates
and greater magnitude of symptom relief - Doses can be titrated more rapidly in OCD (in
weekly increments to maximum dosage), rather than
waiting for treatment response for 1-2 months. - Example (Case 4), the patient would go from 50 mg
at the end of week 1 to 100 mg at the end of week
2, with subsequent increases of 50 mg/day at
weekly intervals up to 200 mg/day.
57Assessment of Response in OCD
- The Y-BOCS rating scale is helpful to document
treatment response over time - In clinical trials, OCD responders
- Y-BOCS scores decrease by at least 2535 from
baseline - Rated much improved or very much improved on the
Clinical Global ImpressionsImprovement scale
(CGI-I).
58OCD Duration of Therapy
- After response, patient should remain on
pharmacotherapy for at least 1-2 years - Medication should be tapered over an extended
period of time - Decrease dose by 25 every 2 months
- Life-long prophylaxis recommended after 2-4
severe relapses or 3-4 mild relapses
59Diagnostic Criteria for PTSD
- Criterion A stressor
- The person has been exposed to a traumatic event
in which both of the following have been present - The person has experienced, witnessed, or been
confronted with an event or events that involve
actual or threatened death or serious injury, or
a threat to the physical integrity of oneself or
others. - The person's response involved intense fear,
helplessness, or horror. Note in children, it
may be expressed instead by disorganized or
agitated behavior. - Criterion B intrusive recollection
- Criterion C avoidance/numbing
- Criterion D hyper-arousal
- Criterion E duration
- Duration of the disturbance (symptoms in B, C,
and D) is more than one month.
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders-IV-TR, 2000.
60Subtypes of PTSD
- Acute symptom duration of lt 3 months
- Chronic symptom duration of gt 3 months
- Delayed onset symptoms begin gt 6 months after
the traumatic event
61Acute Treatment After Traumatic Event
- Symptoms should diminish over the first few weeks
- Social support is critical
- 4-5 sessions of time-limited psychotherapy during
the first month reduces the rates of PTSD by at
least 50
62PTSD TreatmentPsychotherapy
- Education
- Nature of the condition
- Process of recovery
- Understanding that symptoms are a psychobiologic
response to overwhelming stress - Goals of Psychotherapy
- Reduce the level of distress associated with
memories of the event - Reduce the physiological reaction to memories
63Types of Psychotherapy
- Cognitive therapy
- Exposure therapy
- Imaginal or in vivo exposure
- Anxiety management
- Relaxation training
- Stress inoculation training
- Breathing retraining
- Assertiveness and positive thinking and
self-talk - Interpersonal or group therapy
- Play (children) and drama (adults) therapy
64Pharmacotherapy of PTSD
- First-line
- Recommended doses/day
- Fluoxetine 20-40 mg Paroxetine 20-40 mg
- Sertraline 50-100 mg Venlafaxine 75-300 mg
- Prazosin may be more effective in combat-related
PTSD - Second-line therapies
- TCAs amitriptyline, imipramine 75-200 mg
- Mirtazapine 30-60 mg
- Risperidone 0.5-6 mg
- Lamotrigine (study doses ranged from 50-500
mg/day) - Nefazodone (effective in small, controlled trial
in male combat veterans) - Treatment resistance
- Venlafaxine, prazosin, quetiapine venlafaxine,
gabapentin SSRI
WFSBP Guidelines for the Pharmacological
Treatment of Anxiety, Obsessive Compulsive , and
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders- First Revision
(2008)
65PTSD Treatment Augmenting Agents
Medications PTSD Symptoms
Antiadrenergics Hyperarousal, flashbacks and impulsivity monitor BP, PR Prazosin nightmares and sleep disruption
Anticonvulsants Startle response, nightmares
Antipsychotics Psychosis or flashbacks with hallucinations, dissociation
Cyproheptadine Nightmares
Lithium Irritability, mood swings
Acute administration of propranolol superior to
placebo in reducing subsequent PTSD symptoms and
physiological hyperactivity, but not the
emergence of PTSD. Benzodiazepines are not
recommended in patients with PTSD early
administration does not prevent emergence of PTSD
and may be associated with a less favorable
outcome.
Foa E. Effective treatments for PTSD, Chapter 6.
2nd edition, 2009. The Guilford Press, New York,
NY.
66Goals of Pharmacotherapy for PTSD
- Reduce core PTSD symptoms
- Reduce disability
- Improve QOL
- Improve resilience to stress
- Reduce co-morbidity
67Treatment of Anxiety Disorders Under Special
Conditions
- Pregnancy
- Risks of drug treatment must be weighed against
risk of withholding treatment - Majority of studies indicate that use of most
SSRIs and TCAs imposed no increased risk for
malformations - Avoid paroxetine due to risk of cardiac
malformations - Benzodiazepines are typically avoided in
pregnancy because of reports of congenital
malformations however, there is no consistent
evidence that benzodiazepines are hazardous - Literature suggests safety with diazepam and
chlordiazepoxide alprazolam should be avoided - Breast feeding paroxetine, sertraline,
nortriptyline are safer avoid benzodiazepines
and fluoxetine
68Treatment of Anxiety Disorders Under Special
Conditions
- Children and Adolescents
- Many experts feel drug therapy should be reserved
for patients who do not respond to psychological
therapy - SSRIs are first-line drug treatment
- Careful monitoring required for activation
syndrome and increased suicidal thoughts or
behaviors - Elderly
- Increased sensitivity for anticholinergic
properties - Increased risk of EPS, orthostasis, EKG changes
- Increased risk of paradoxical reactions to
benzodiazepines - Few trials evaluate anxiety in the elderly
- Venlafaxine efficacious in elderly with GAD
- Citalopram effective in patients older than 60
with anxiety disorders
69Anxiety Disorders