The Importance of Early and Effective Treatment Response in Schizophrenia
November 13, 2006 |
Joseph P. McEvoy, MD |
Associate professor of psychiatry at Duke University Medical Center, and deputy clinical director at John Umstead Hospital in Durham, North Carolina
Introduction
Dependable, consistent
control of symptoms over time is the necessary foundation upon which patients
can rebuild their lives after the onset of schizophrenia. Full-blown psychotic
exacerbations are all-consuming. We can hope that improved public awareness that
schizophrenia is a medical brain disease requiring prompt intervention will
result in expeditious treatment of first psychotic episodes. School teachers
and counselors, pediatricians and family practitioners, and others who deal
with young adults should be keenly aware of the risks of schizophrenia during
the young adult period, and of how much they can do to preserve the function of
the individuals who suffer its onset. By identifying and treating psychotic
exacerbations early, we can potentially limit the initial damage they cause,
and shorten the climb back to recovery. Maximizing the therapeutic benefits of
treatment and maintaining these benefits over time may help make it possible
for patients to pursue universal life goals (Figure 1). They may be able to
re-engage with cherished family and friends, rejoin community activities, and
seek the satisfaction of focused study and employment.1,2
The Early Years of Schizophrenia
There is a frightening potential for disease progression in
the early years of schizophrenia. In a comprehensive review of studies
addressing first-episode psychosis, Perkins and colleagues3
demonstrated that a longer duration of untreated psychosis prior to beginning
treatment with antipsychotic medications is correlated with more prominent
persistent psychopathology and poorer functional outcomes at follow-up (Figure
2). Therefore, there is urgency in identifying individuals developing
schizophrenia as early as possible, in schools, in the armed forces, in the
offices of primary care providers, and in other settings where they may be
recognized and brought to treatment.
Imaging studies
reported during the past 5 years have documented that progressive loss of brain
volume occurs over time in the early phases of schizophrenia, relative to
matched controls. This volume loss proceeds despite treatment, especially in
those patients who have a poor clinical outcome (Figure 3).4 For
obvious ethical reasons, these studies did not include untreated control
patients with schizophrenia who might have demonstrated even greater volume
loss than that seen in the treated patients, so we should not underestimate the
benefit sustained treatment provides.
In
this tumultuous early-illness period of anatomical and physiological brain
changes, there is high risk for psychotic exacerbations. In addition, young
individuals do not want to view themselves as sick or needing treatment. The
psychotic phenomena they experience have a subjective validity that does not
lead them to label these experiences as pathological. They may not seek
treatment, and may need to be convinced of its necessity. Failure to rapidly
begin treatment may or may not accelerate brain volume loss; it will most
likely lead to a fragmentation of patients' lives. They may be estranged from family
and friends by bizarre or dangerous behaviors. School enrollments or employment
may be terminated. Any progression toward recovery will be aborted, replaced by
a downward spiral of increasing impairment. Function may be lost, never to be
regained. Painful psychotic experiences may lead patients to attempt suicide or
to engage in activities completely alien to their previous character and
upbringing; these activities may result in incarceration.
Prompt Control of Psychotic Exacerbations
When psychotic exacerbations occur, we want urgent, prompt
control. It appears that patients also have some appreciation of early and
effective symptom control (Figure 4).5,6 Patients who respond to
treatment with early, substantial reductions in psychopathology are more likely
to continue treatment over time. Conversely, poor early response predicts later
nonadherence.
When
treating a psychotic exacerbation, how long should we continue an initially
prescribed antipsychotic that is not producing substantial symptom control
before switching? As recently as 2003, Expert Consensus Guidelines recommended
minimum trials of 3-5 weeks before switching.7 However, two
recent reviews8,9 showed that almost half of the total improvement
from an effective antipsychotic tends to take place in the first 2-4
weeks of treatment (Figure 5). Therefore, if a patient is not showing clear
improvement by the second week of treatment, switching to another antipsychotic
should be considered. Switching makes more sense than adding antipsychotics, certainly
as an early strategy. Increasing complexity of medication schedules, ie,
increasing numbers of drugs and increasing numbers of dosages per day, appears
to be associated with nonadherence and overall worsening outcomes.
Avoiding Relapse Into Psychotic Exacerbation
Even after we achieve a
good treatment response, we must remain vigilant. In recently reported
treatment studies involving patients experiencing a first psychotic episode and
patients with chronic schizophrenia,10 ~3 out of every 4 patients
discontinued their initial antipsychotic medication over 1-1.5 years of
follow-up. In the largest percentage of patients, this may be because they
viewed the medication as unhelpful, either due to a lack of insight into their
illness and need for treatment or because the medication was in fact providing
little benefit. Side effects tend to account for a smaller percentage of
discontinuations.
We must be in regular
and sympathetic contact with our patients and their family members or placement
supervisors. We must bring up with patients their doubts about the necessity
and value of medications, and identify any side effects they experience. Even
mild side effects may become difficult to bear when experienced day after day
after day without relief. Any appearance of insomnia, unexplained anxiety or
distress, or worsening of psychotic symptoms may portend imminent relapse, and
requires urgent attention.
There is little evidence
that "compliance therapies" that review the medical nature of schizophrenia,
the importance of treatment, and the wisdom of adherence offer benefit in
improving adherence or in preventing relapse. Such approaches are based on
explicit memory—the kind of memory that allows us to recall lecture
points, the content of textbooks, or the rules by which a game is
played—and patients with schizophrenia have severe impairments in
explicit memory. However, patients with schizophrenia have intact implicit
memory—the kind that allows us to get the hang of" a game by playing it.
This may explain why individual placement and support programs, wherein
patients begin a job with the support of an on-site job coach on the first day
of the program, have been far more successful than traditional vocational
rehabilitation programs in achieving employment for patients with
schizophrenia. The pleasing aspects of a game that make us want to continue
playing it include having teammates who are good to be with, the subjective
experience of skill development, and the occasional delight of scoring or
winning. It may be that our availability and friendliness as the patient's
teammate, the patient's getting into the routine of taking a medication that
simply makes him or her feel better, and the achievements that result in the
patient's life are what drive adherence, rather than any cleverness of our
arguments.
Summary
In summary, it appears
that there are benefits to be gained by identifying psychotic exacerbations
early and bringing effective treatment to bear quickly (Table).11 If
patients do not respond within the first 2 weeks to the initially prescribed
antipsychotic, consider switching antipsychotics until you find something that
works. When patients respond, our work is not finished. Optimize the response.
Try to reduce psychopathology to a minimum. Attend to side effects; think of
this task in terms of how you would feel if you had to take a medication every
day for the rest of your life. Repeatedly inquire about patients' judgments as
to their need for medication and the value of the medications they are presently
taking. Treat their viewpoints with respect, express your point of view on these issues with clarity and persistence, and make it clear that their feeling better is the goal for both of you.
Our patients are consumers. We must convince them that there
is value in taking their medications. Effective relief of symptoms, the
avoidance of distressing side effects, and your clear concern for their well
being and life goals will serve this purpose well.
Dr. McEvoy has received grants from AstraZeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Lilly, Janssen, and Pfizer; and has received honoraria from Bristol-Myers Squibb, Lilly, Janssen, and Pfizer.
This feature is supported by Eli Lilly and Company.
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