Wednesday, July 13, 2022

Disease-modifying or something else?

 


A paper written by S. Nassir Ghaemi, MD was posted this week and in it he discussed the concept of diseases modifying medications and whether any medication used for psychiatric purposes might be included in that category.  Dr. Ghaemi is a distinguished psychiatrist who has written on diverse topics.  He is a prominent psychiatric theorist and also has complied many of his ideas about psychiatry and psychopharmacology in the book Clinical Psychopharmacology (1).   

In the book he presents a brief discussion of disease modifying medications and how few there seem to be in psychiatry as well as what he considers to be obstacles to the discovery of these agents.  He does suggest in the book that lithium, clozapine, and possibly a few anticonvulsants may be considered disease-modifying rather than symptomatically effective or palliating medications. This recent paper presents his latest ideas on the subject.

In his paper he is much more specific.  His premise is that there are disease-modifying drugs and drugs that only treat symptoms and that nearly all psychiatric drugs fall into the latter category. He reviews his rationale for these classifications and emphasizes the lack of understanding of pathophysiology of mental illnesses as a main reason for this deficiency. His talking points are ideal newspaper headlines and will probably are easily assimilated by many who don’t know much about psychiatry or medicine.  This blog post is an elaboration of this story.

In order to build those arguments, let me start with a brief introduction to rheumatology.  My personal introduction to that field occurred in medical school when I had my first acute gout attack and had a medicine attending who was a rheumatologist and two senior medicine residents who aspired to and eventually became rheumatologists. I happened to be at the medical school with one of the top experts in the field Daniel J. McCarty. MD.   Rheumatology in general looks at inflammation in the narrowest sense in joints but more broadly in the body and in multiple organ systems. Rheumatologists are experts in all forms of arthritis but also systemic illnesses with joint manifestations like systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA).  The American College of Rheumatology lists the diagnostic criteria for 20 major groups of illnesses on their web site with additional criteria for subclassification.

Why should psychiatrists have an interest in rheumatology?  My initial interest was in the diseases themselves as well as the classification system. Like psychiatric categorial diagnoses, the rheumatology classification system is criterion based, based on expert consensus and ongoing scientific review, and the sensitivity of the criteria are adjusted according to what is clinically indicated. For example, a category could be adjusted to be more inclusive with more false positives – if it was important to identify early disease stages and prevent progression in the future.  The disease categories are important to psychiatrists because their overlap with psychiatric diagnoses.  For example, neuropsychiatric SLE (NPSLE) is defined as the usual symptoms of SLE with a central nervous system manifestation like seizures, psychosis, or cognitive problems.  It is in the differential diagnosis of patients with psychosis. In addition, there are currently active hypotheses about the role of inflammation in the pathophysiology of depression, psychosis, and neurocognitive disorders at a level that is far below the threshold for overt rheumatological disease.

The similar classification system brings up similar concerns in rheumatology relative to psychiatry. The issue of classification versus diagnosis for example. In a recent review of that issue the problem described in rheumatology by a group of experts is basically the same problem encountered in psychiatry:

Rheumatologists face unique challenges in discriminating between rheumatologic and non-rheumatologic disorders with similar manifestations, and in discriminating among rheumatologic disorders with shared features.  The majority of rheumatic diseases are multisystem disorders with poorly understood etiology; they tend to be heterogeneous in their presentation, course, and outcome, and do not have a single clinical, laboratory,pathological, or radiological feature that could serve as a “gold standard” in support of diagnosis and/or classification.” (3)

 Psychiatry or the equivalent term could be substituted for rheumatology, rheumatologic, or rheumatic in the above paragraph without skipping a beat. Before the current pandemic many rheumatology clinics were treating patients with symptoms that could not be clearly attributed to rheumatic disease.  In some cases, about 1/3 of patients were in that category (4).  The issue is complicated by the fact that non-rheumatic origins of some of these symptoms need to be recognized and addressed (5).  The difficulties associated with rheumatic diseases have led to “spectrum” descriptions of illness but as far I can tell no push for dimensional rather than categorical diagnoses. There has also been a concern about recognition in primary care settings with delayed referral to rheumatologists (6).

Disease complexity is difficult to address and rheumatologists like psychiatrists see a number of conditions that do not remit, are progressive and can be fatal and/or very disabling, and for which there are few good treatments. It is common in psychiatry to see patients with rheumatoid arthritis who are treated on a chronic basis with low dose prednisone – where the dose is adjusted according to disease activity and degrees of complications from the medication. In other words, the focus of treatment is symptomatic rather than curing or modifying the course of the disease.   

Unlike psychiatry, rheumatology had an early focus on disease modification and using the term “disease modifying” drugs.  The earliest reference to “disease-modifying” in PubMed that I could find was 1976 (7). 

 



 

But the connections to subsequent papers from that original paper seemed to stop in the 1980s.  That suggests to me that there was an evolution of the terms and the medications used as DMARDS.  Searching through modern medicine texts like UpToDate shows that most of the references to disease-modifying medications is focused on rheumatology diseases, multiple sclerosis and some other neurological illnesses, and a few rare conditions.  In some cases, the focus is on a complication is a single organ system or an intermediate phenotype of the main disease.

In a paper specifically written about the term in rheumatology, Buer (8) describes the concept of disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs or DMARDS beginning in the 1970s with the goal of preventing bone erosion from rheumatoid arthritis. Use of the term increased over the next two decades outlasting several competing terms.  The early purpose was to distinguish between medications that could slow or modify the progression of disease and those that provided symptomatic relief. 

Another potential reason that the disease-modifying was developed in areas of medicine where inflammation and immunological mechanisms where thought to play a part in disease pathology was the longstanding and widespread use of glucocorticoids (GC).  GC drugs like prednisone have been used for 60 years, are used by a substantial portion of the population and that use is growing (15).  The purported mechanisms of action have been clarified over time and are currently characterized as genomic and non-genomic (cytosolic GC receptor mediated and specific/nonspecific effects).  The effect occurs at the level of cytokines, cell membranes, and immune cells. The disease modifying effects of GC were first described in 1995 and are thought to be limited to bone loss in the early stages of rheumatoid arthritis.

Considering the characteristics of an ideal medicine that is curative or preventive and the definitions of a disease modifying drug there is a lot of room for interpretation.  Endocrinopathies come to mind – specifically deficiency states where replacement therapy of thyroxine, corticosteroids, growth hormone, or gonadal hormones corrects the deficiency state that is some cases is life-threatening.  Diabetes mellitus is another example.  Correcting insulin deficiency culminating in human insulins designed to provide more even coverage of glucose levels has resulted in a significantly altered life span for juvenile onset diabetes and for adults. There are also examples in cardiology both from the standpoint of longevity and secondary prevention of heart attacks, strokes, and renal failure. But most of the literature on disease modifying medications is focused on rheumatology and multiple sclerosis (US).

Using MS as an example, I compiled a table of all current FDA approved MS treatments, the year of approval, and what is known about the mechanism of action (MOA).  The MOA in each case is taken directly from the FDA approved package insert.  In the case of natalizumab, there were several paragraphs describing the purported mechanism of action so I included a link to the package insert. The important observation from this table is that in the case of all 18 FDA approved medications – the mechanism of action is unknown. That statement is made in various ways. For example, there may be a suggested hypothetical MOA but it is just that. In the case of MS disease-modifying drugs are based on an unproven hypothesis, rather than a known mechanism of action or theory. I have not constructed a table for rheumatology disease modifying drugs but I expect the same results based on the quotation from reference 3 above. Disease-modifying drugs do not appear to be specifically designed to address and underlying MOA – but are empirically determined based on hypotheses like every other drug.

 

FDA approved drugs for MS and Mechanism of Action


Drug

Type

MOA

Glatiramer (Copaxone)

Approved 1996

SC Injection

“The mechanism(s) by which glatiramer acetate exerts its effects in patients with MS are not fully understood. However, glatiramer acetate is thought to act by modifying immune processes that are believed to be responsible for the pathogenesis of MS.”

Interferon beta 1a (Avonex)

Approved 1996

IM injection

“The mechanism of action by which AVONEX exerts its effects in patients with multiple sclerosis is unknown.”

Interferon beta 1b (Betaseron)

Approved 1993

SC injection

“The mechanism of action of BETASERON (interferon beta-1b) in patients with multiple sclerosis is unknown”

Peginterferon beta 1a (Plegridy)

Approved 2014

SC injection

“The mechanism by which PLEGRIDY exerts its effects in patients with multiple sclerosis is unknown”

Dimethyl fumarate (Tecfidera)

Approved 2013

Oral tab

“The mechanism by which dimethyl fumarate (DMF) exerts its therapeutic effect in multiple sclerosis is unknown. DMF and the metabolite, monomethyl fumarate (MMF), have been shown to activate the Nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf2) pathway in vitro and in vivo in animals and humans. The Nrf2 pathway is involved in the cellular response to oxidative stress. MMF has been identified as a nicotinic acid receptor agonist in vitro.”

Fingolimod (Gilenya)

Approved 2010

Oral cap

“Fingolimod is metabolized by sphingosine kinase to the active metabolite, fingolimod-phosphate. Fingolimod-phosphate is a sphingosine 1-phosphate receptor modulator, and binds with high affinity to sphingosine 1-phosphate receptors 1, 3, 4, and 5. Fingolimod-phosphate blocks the capacity of lymphocytes to egress from lymph nodes, reducing the number of lymphocytes in peripheral blood. The mechanism by which fingolimod exerts therapeutic effects in multiple sclerosis is unknown, but may involve reduction of lymphocyte migration into the central nervous system.”

Teriflunomide (Aubagio)

Approved 2012

Oral tab

“Teriflunomide, an immunomodulatory agent with anti-inflammatory properties, inhibits dihydroorotate dehydrogenase, a mitochondrial enzyme involved in de novo pyrimidine synthesis. The exact mechanism by which teriflunomide exerts its therapeutic effect in multiple sclerosis is unknown but may involve a reduction in the number of activated lymphocytes in CNS.”

Alemtuzumab (Lemtrada)

Approved 2001

IV infusion

“The precise mechanism by which alemtuzumab exerts its therapeutic effects in multiple sclerosis is unknown but is presumed to involve binding to CD52, a cell surface antigen present on T and B lymphocytes, and on natural killer cells, monocytes, and macrophages. Following cell surface binding to T and B lymphocytes, alemtuzumab results in antibody-dependent cellular cytolysis and complement-mediated lysis.”

Mitoxantrone (Novantrone)

 

Approved 2000

IV Infusion

“Mitoxantrone, a DNA-reactive agent that intercalates into deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) through hydrogen bonding, causes crosslinks and strand breaks. Mitoxantrone also interferes with ribonucleic acid (RNA) and is a potent inhibitor of topoisomerase II, an enzyme responsible for uncoiling and repairing damaged DNA. It has a cytocidal effect Reference ID: 3105100 on both proliferating and nonproliferating cultured human cells, suggesting lack of cell cycle phase specificity. NOVANTRONEâ has been shown in vitro to inhibit B cell, T cell, and macrophage proliferation and impair antigen presentation, as well as the secretion of interferon gamma, TNFα, and IL-2”

Natalizumab (Tysabri)

Approved 2004

IV infusion

“The specific mechanism(s) by which TYSABRI exerts its effects in multiple sclerosis and Crohn’s disease have not been fully defined”  additional

Dalfampridine (Ampyra)

Approved 2010

Extended-release tab

“The mechanism by which dalfampridine exerts its therapeutic effect has not been fully elucidated. Dalfampridine is a broad spectrum potassium channel blocker. In animal studies, dalfampridine has been shown to increase conduction of action potentials in demyelinated axons through inhibition of potassium channels.”

Ofatumubab (Kesimpta)

Approved 2009

SC injection

“The precise mechanism by which ofatumumab exerts its therapeutic effects in multiple sclerosis is unknown, but is presumed to involve binding to CD20, a cell surface antigen present on pre-B and mature B lymphocytes. Following cell surface binding to B lymphocytes, ofatumumab results in antibody-dependent cellular cytolysis and complement-mediated lysis.”

Cladribine (Mavenclad)

Approved 1993

Oral tab

“The mechanism by which cladribine exerts its therapeutic effects in patients with multiple sclerosis has not been fully elucidated but is thought to involve cytotoxic effects on B and T lymphocytes through impairment of DNA synthesis, resulting in depletion of lymphocytes.”

Siponimob (Mayzent)

Approved 2019

Oral tab

“Siponimod is a sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) receptor modulator. Siponimod binds with high affinity to S1P receptors 1 and 5. Siponimod blocks the capacity of lymphocytes to egress from lymph nodes, reducing the number of lymphocytes in Reference ID: 4409346 12 peripheral blood. The mechanism by which siponimod exerts therapeutic effects in multiple sclerosis is unknown, but may involve reduction of lymphocyte migration into the central nervous system.”

Ocrelizumab (Ocrevus)

Approved 2017

IV infusion

“The precise mechanism by which ocrelizumab exerts its therapeutic effects in multiple sclerosis is unknown, but is presumed to involve binding to CD20, a cell surface antigen present on pre-B and mature B lymphocytes. Following cell surface binding to B lymphocytes, ocrelizumab results in antibody-dependent cellular cytolysis and complement-mediated lysis.”

Ponesimod (Ponvory)

Approved 2021

Oral tab

“Ponesimod is a sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) receptor 1 modulator that binds with high affinity to S1P receptor 1. Ponesimod blocks the capacity of lymphocytes to egress from lymph nodes, reducing the number of lymphocytes in peripheral blood. The mechanism by which ponesimod exerts therapeutic effects in multiple sclerosis is unknown, but may involve reduction of lymphocyte migration into the central nervous system.”

Diroximel fumarate (Vumerity)

Approved 2013

Oral delayed release capsule

“The mechanism by which diroximel fumarate exerts its therapeutic effect in multiple sclerosis is unknown. MMF, the active metabolite of diroximel fumarate, has been shown to activate the nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf2) pathway in vitro and in vivo in animals and humans. The Nrf2 pathway is involved in the cellular response to oxidative stress. MMF has been identified as a nicotinic acid receptor agonist in vitro.”

Ozanimod (Zeposia)

Approved 2020

Oral capsules

“Ozanimod is a sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) receptor modulator that binds with high affinity to S1P receptors 1 and 5. Ozanimod blocks the capacity of lymphocytes to egress from lymph nodes, reducing the number of lymphocytes in peripheral blood. The mechanism by which ozanimod exerts therapeutic effects in multiple sclerosis is unknown but may involve the reduction of lymphocyte migration into the central nervous system.”

 

Effect sizes for the above medications can be calculated from the package inserts.  The typical active drug/placebo comparisons include relapse frequency (per time interval), percentage of relapse-free patients, reduction in relapse rates, time to first or second relapse, progression free days, and numbers of new Gadolinium enhancing lesions on MRI scan. This data is also plotted on survival curves. The calculations will be made at some point and compared to similar data for lithium and selected DMARDs.

With that backdrop consider the main points in Dr. Ghaemi’s paper – that do go beyond the disease-modifying concept:                                                                                                                                                

     1.  Symptomatic versus disease modification:

As I hoped to capture in the preceding paragraphs – the issue of disease modification is a laudable goal but a complex one. Even chemotherapy treatments that are curative vary in effectiveness and can leave patients with complications from treatment that are disabling or even fatal. There can also be at higher risk for future cancers unrelated to the original treated cancer. Many symptomatic medications used on a maintenance basis decrease mortality risk and disability (hard outcomes) even though they are not disease-modifying. Anticonvulsant medications are a good example.  Where seizure risk in generalized tonic-clonic seizures can be decreased it significantly reduces the risk of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) (9).

      2.     Effect size:

The paper cites effect size as being problematic at two levels.  The first is the actual calculated effect size and the second in the end point – clinical metrics versus hard outcomes measures. The first issue has been explored in the literature at an exhaustive level. The unfortunate approach by many including a prominent epidemiologist who suggested antidepressants had no effect and then later was a coauthor of a paper showing an effect is a dichotomous one rather than an exploration of reality. The issue is the same with all polygenic heterogenous diseases.  There will be a group of responders, a group of partial responders, and a group of non-responders.  There is an associated overlay of placebo and nocebo responders. And depending on the trial there are varying levels of severity, heterogenous recruitment levels, and varying levels of support for research subjects confounding the trials.

The classification of effect sizes has also been problematic. Benchmarking of mild, moderate, and robust effects sizes have been suggested but are generally considered a weak approach.  The actual effects sizes can be calculated and discussed along with moderating factors. It is possible to include different effect size calculations in the same table by specifying the method used and the relevant parameters of the trial.   Effect sizes that are considered low can become significant over large populations.

      3.     Disease modification specific to psychiatry:

Lithium, clozapine, and some anticonvulsants are known to be disease-modifying drugs in psychiatry largely measured with the hard outcomes of time to relapse or number of relapses in a set period of time. These medications address some purported mechanisms at the hypothetical level since there is no widely accepted theory about how they work and there are many hypothetical mechanisms.  Considering the entire course of illnesses in psychiatry medications that are not technically disease-modifying can make a significant difference in hard outcomes. The best example that I can think of and Luther Bell (10) described a mortality rate of 75% in a cohort of 40 patients admitted to McClean Hospital in 1849. Today with the advents of advances in both medical treatment and electroconvulsive therapy the mortality in this group of patients is essentially zero. Does preventing death qualify a medication approach as disease-modifying?  If so, the modern medical treatment of catatonia (benzodiazepines, antipsychotics, mood stabilizers) qualify. Another example is the use of long acting injectable (LAI) antipsychotic medications.  These medications clearly reduce the rate of relapse in both schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.  Does that qualify them for disease modifying status even though the specific mechanism of action is unknown?  Clinical psychiatry has clearly made progress in terms of hard outcomes irrespective of where you draw the line on disease modification.

      4.     The DSM is biologically invalid:

Somewhat of a straw man – I don’t think there was ever a claim that it was. That said there has been rumored validity markers of psychiatric disorders that have apparently never been released by the DSM study groups and the most obvious marker of robust medication effect has never been used.  Further study of the RDoC and other proposed alternate systems of classification do not seem any more biologically valid at this point. At the minimum biological phenotyping may be useful and it currently exists to a limited degree (catatonia).  A lot of mileage has been made out of the fact that a focus on the biological aspects of psychiatric illness has not yielded any pertinent clinical information and that this somehow justifies increased psychosocial research. That minimizes the issue of complex heterogenous diseases and what it takes to understand them. Psychiatry compared with rheumatology is a good example – but on the other hand psychiatric disorders are more intimately linked to conscious states and those states can affect every level of interpretation of a drug response.  

      5.     Clinical trial design deficiencies

 There are many and I have already listed a few.  An additional deficiency is the general regulatory scheme that seems to focus on getting a minimal efficacy signal.  Pharmaceutical companies are incentivized to complete these trials as soon as possible.  Anyone who has worked as an investigator in a clinical trial knows that this is a frustrating process largely due to the inclusion and exclusion criteria. There are pressures to recruit the necessary patients as soon as possible.  Randomization is a hurdle.  What does it say when the number of people declining participation in the study greatly outnumbers the people who have been recruited?  Many of them decline because of randomization to possible placebo or an inability to be notified after the study about whether they received placebo or not. At the design level, the recruiting problem also can affect choices of comparator drugs and the doses of those drugs. More long-term studies require more funding and retaining patients in the study becomes an important task for researchers.  Intent-to-treat analysis based on considering all of the patients entering the protocol as the denominator in the study is another limitation in that it does not resemble clinical practice where getting to responder status as soon as possible independent of any particular drug is a priority.  

 The discontinuation design in maintenance studies of antidepressants were described as a problem in terms of falsifiability.  Most of them show an active drug effect and apparently psychiatric medications are the only class of drugs that the FDA allows to use this discontinuation paradigm. The practical issue in terms of clinical treatment is what happens when antidepressants are stopped.  Some early work in the pattern analysis of antidepressant response suggested that the placebo effect faded over time but the active drug effect did not.  Psychiatrists need to know what the treatment scenarios are with drug discontinuation.

 There has not be enough discussion of registry and observational studies. The advantages are that they use large data bases and can look at hard outcomes like relapse, hospitalization, suicide, and other types of mortality.  It fits the current FDA regulatory category of Real World Evidence (RWE) and Real World Data (RWD).  The main advantage is the population studied in the registry is not screened by inclusion and exclusion criteria or by a participatory agreement and therefore more accurately approximates a true clinical population (14).  The time interval for RCTs is typically limited by funding for a duration of years. Registry studies based on a database can be much longer in duration and the data is a standard administrative feature. Safeguards have been developed to reduce bias in registry studies and some groups consider them to be a good indication of how a medication works in real clinical settings. Although I have not seen it done, registry studies could potentially confirm some of the effect sizes when applied to much larger populations.

      6   Academics versus Industry versus Clinical Practice:

Closer collaboration between the pharmaceutical industry and may be useful, but there will always be significant conflict of interest issues.  The pharmaceutical industry is clearly looking for an efficacy signal they can use to get FDA approval and market a drug. The trade-off is that these are typically small studies with stringent inclusion criteria that can result in later drug withdrawal due to complications noted only with greater exposure in post-marketing surveillance. It is not clear to how this system will ever produce medications that are disease-modifying versus those that are used to treat symptoms.

 An even larger problem is that clinicians are typically an afterthought by the academics and pharmaceutical industry.  The job of every psychiatrist is to see people who are acutely symptomatic and diagnose and treat those people. Psychiatrists are currently under more constraints than they have ever been.  Managed care companies demand that people are discharged from hospitals barely treated while psychiatrists are concerned about adequate treatment of the symptoms that led to hospitalization.  There are very few – if any clinical trials that apply to this scenario.  In 22 years of acute inpatient care – my estimate would be that about 5% of the people I treated would not be excluded from a standard clinical trial.  That experience was reinforced by my experience as an investigator in clinical trials of antidepressants, anxiolytics, antipsychotics, and Alzheimer’s disease. From a clinician’s perspective, the main failure of drug development is continuing to ignore real-world patients for an idealized clinical trials process.

 Concluding this post – I hope that I have communicated alternate viewpoints that capture the broader clinical landscape. It is not intended as a refutation of Dr. Ghaemi’s viewpoint and I don't consider anything in his paper to be controversial.  What I am suggesting is that psychiatrists need to know all of the viewpoints on these topics and why they exist in order succeed in clinical settings. For example, they need to know how to use both symptom-modifying and disease-modifying medications and the limitations of that distinction. They need to know the limitations of any medication prescribed and how to rapidly determine when a medication needs to be discontinued and a new medication or mode of therapy initiated. They need to know about placebo and nocebo effects as well as the entire range of side effects, effects on comorbid medical illnesses, and drug interactions. And they need to know the relative merits of randomized clinical trials using intent-to-treat analysis and real-world observational and registry studies.  All of those knowledge is necessary to treat complex polygenic illnesses that probably have many underlying biological processes and that consideration is not limited to psychiatry.

That is the true state-of-the art in the field.  There is no royal road to the truth and the current road is never easy.  Many people go into psychiatry for that reason, they get to know this body of knowledge and the associated decision-making and they are very good at helping people with significant problems.

George Dawson, MD, DFAPA

 

 References:

1:  Ghaemi SN.  Clinical Psychopharmacology: Principles and Practice.  New York, Oxford University Press 2019.

2:  Ghaemi SN. Symptomatic versus disease-modifying effects of psychiatric drugs. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 2022 Jun 2. doi: 10.1111/acps.13459. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 35653111.

3:  Aggarwal R, Ringold S, Khanna D, Neogi T, Johnson SR, Miller A, Brunner HI, Ogawa R, Felson D, Ogdie A, Aletaha D, Feldman BM. Distinctions between diagnostic and classification criteria? Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2015 Jul;67(7):891-7. doi: 10.1002/acr.22583. PMID: 25776731; PMCID: PMC4482786.

4:  N. L. Maiden, N. P. Hurst, A. Lochhead, A. J. Carson, M. Sharpe, Medically unexplained symptoms in patients referred to a specialist rheumatology service: prevalence and associations, Rheumatology, Volume 42, Issue 1, January 2003, Pages 108–112, https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keg043

5:  Smythe HA. Explaining medically unexplained symptoms: widespread pain. The Journal of Rheumatology. 2009 Apr 1;36(4):679-83.

6:  Gran JT, Nordvåg BY. Referrals from general practice to an outpatient rheumatology clinic: disease spectrum and analysis of referral letters. Clinical rheumatology. 2000 Nov;19(6):450-4.

7:  Gumpel JM. Cyclophosphamide, gold and penicillamine--disease-modifying drugs in rheumatoid arthritis--tailored dosage and ultimate success. Rheumatol Rehabil. 1976 Aug;15(3):217-20. doi: 10.1093/rheumatology/15.3.217. PMID: 968355

8:  Buer JK. A history of the term "DMARD". Inflammopharmacology. 2015 Aug;23(4):163-71. doi: 10.1007/s10787-015-0232-5. Epub 2015 May 23. PMID: 26002695; PMCID: PMC4508364

9:  Pensel MC, Nass RD, Taubøll E, Aurlien D, Surges R. Prevention of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: current status and future perspectives. Expert Rev Neurother. 2020 May;20(5):497-508. doi: 10.1080/14737175.2020.1754195. Epub 2020 Apr 26. PMID: 32270723.

10:  Leucht S, Helfer B, Gartlehner G, Davis JM. How effective are common medications: a perspective based on meta-analyses of major drugs. BMC Med. 2015 Oct 2;13:253. doi: 10.1186/s12916-015-0494-1. PMID: 26431961; PMCID: PMC4592565.

11:  Bell, L. 1849. On a form of disease resembling some advanced stage of mania and fever. Am. J. Insanity 6, 97–127.  

12:  Fava M.  Rational use of antidepressants. Psychother Psychosom 2014;83:197–204. doi: 10.1159/000362803

13:  Cosci F, Fava GA. Prescribing Pharmacotherapy for Major Depressive Disorder: How Does a Clinician Decide?. Biomedicine hub. 2021;6(3):118-21.

14:  Taipale H, Tiihonen J. Registry-based studies: What they can tell us, and what they cannot. Eur Neuropsychopharmacol. 2021 Apr;45:35-37. doi: 10.1016/j.euroneuro.2021.03.005. Epub 2021 Mar 25. PMID: 33774390.

15: Frew AJ.  Glucocorticoids. In:  Clinical immunology: principles and practice, 5th edition. Rich RR, Shearer WT, Schroeder HW, Frew AJ, Weyland CM, editors. Amsterdam: Elsevier; 2019. p 1165-1175


Supplementary:  This post is another work in progress. I hope to calculate effects sizes of the above medications for MS, another table for rheumatic conditions (RA or SLE) and compare them to effect sizes for lithium, clozapine, valproate, and carbamazepine.  I am interested in the longest RCTS and registry studies that examine these problems.  If you have favorite studies please post the references here or email them to me. 


Image credit:  My wife took this photo of the Bong Bridge between Duluth, MN and Superior, WI. It is an expansive structure and hope I communicated that concept in the above writing.

Saturday, July 2, 2022

Normal People

 




Connell and Marianne are two high school students in Ireland. They fall in love in high school and this series follows them into Trinity College and several path crossings over the next several years. That is the basic plot of Normal People a 12-episode series on Hulu television.  When it first came out it was accompanied by a lot of hype about the intensity of their relationship.  I decided to give it a while and consider it at a later date.  But then I realized I was watching one of the costars Daisy Edgar-Jones in two different series – War of the Worlds and Under the Banner of Heaven.  At that point I decided to start Normal People.  Connell is played by Paul Mescal.

I hope to give my impressions of why this is such a good story without getting into a play-by-play of the plot, but I am sure there will be inevitable spoilers. A summary of each episode is available on Wikipedia.  I also don’t plan to belabor any points about psychiatric diagnosis or treatment because unless a film is explicitly about psychiatry that kind of analysis does not strike me as being very realistic.

The series begins introducing us to the lives of Marianne and Connell in high school and their home lives. We learn that Marianne’s family is fairly wealthy and that Connell’s mother works for them as a housekeeper.  Marianne’s mother is a barrister.  Her older brother Alan also lives at home. There is tension due to a distant relation with her mother and an openly hostile relationship with her brother who is overtly abusive. In two scenes Alan physically assaults Marianne.  At school, Marianne is irritable and sarcastic. She argues with teachers and criticizes them in front the class to the point that she is disciplined. When her peers react with criticism, she is critical of them and does not hesitate to point out that none of them are equal to her academically.  She is very bright, and is aware of the fact that Connell is her only real academic competition.  She isolated without an obvious peer group.  

Connell is successful athletically as well as academically.  He has a peer group that is supportive of his athletics, but intrusive and critical of his private life.  As he and Marianne have some initial awkward exchanges it becomes obvious that they are attracted to one another. Marianne initiates the sexual aspect of their relationship – even though she has no prior experience. She agrees to tell nobody about their relationship at Connell’s request, because of his concern that it would be awkward with his peer group. Throughout this period of time, Marianne observes his activity at school where he is popular but gives no indication that they have a relationship.  The first break in their relationship occurs when Connell fails to ask her to a large social event and asks a girl who is more acceptable to his peer group.

One of the key early points in the film that distinguished this drama from a more typical young adult love story was Connell’s mother confronting him about the way he was treating Marianne. She expressed extreme disappointment that he was having a sexual relationship with her and hiding their general relationship from his peers at school. He protested and asked her if she should not take his side and her reply was not one that I have seen in any previous movies – there were some things in life that you should feel badly about and this was one of them. Eventually – the discord in the relationship amplified by his peer group – some speculate that they are having a relationship.   After their first break up, they will have 2, 3, 4 and even 5 more times to makes things right.  During some of those times, they date other people and we see them trying to relate to those new partners and realize that it is not close to what they had with one another.  That often led to conflicts with the new partners when they directly observed Marianne and Connell interacting in social settings and their continued attraction and concern for one another was obvious.

Marianne and Connell’s personalities are similar in many ways.  Both seem to be prone to anxiety and depression and Connell seems to be more aware of this. He openly talks with her about having severe panic attacks just walking down the street in Dublin and how that might affect his decision to travel to New York for an MFA program in creative writing. After the death of one of his friends from suicide he has an episode of severe depression and is supported by Marianne via telecommunication while she is studying in Sweden.  There are many situations where the couple’s tendency toward self-criticism and self-loathing is clear. For Marianne that includes either acquiescing or explicit requests to be treated badly by her partners. In one critical scene she requests that Connell do the same and we learn it is something that he cannot do.

This series highlights the importance of emotion and does a good job of portraying high levels of emotional intensity early in the relationship with some moderation over time. There are scenes where the emotion is overwhelming and the causes are not explicit.  Throughout many of their breakups – an emotional event occurred but the specific cause was never addressed or addressed in a much later episode.  These emotional events also occurred with other people and the viewer gets potential explanatory bits of information along the way.  As an example, over time we learn that Marianne’s father who is deceased had a history of being abusive toward his family. We see how she is treated by an emotionally distant mother and her abusive resentful brother. Over a Christmas holiday an open rift with her family occurs and she moves in with Connell’s family. She is with them when she encounters her mother walking toward them in town. Her mother glares at her but walks by without speaking.  As they drive away Marianne asks Connell’s mother about what the people in town think of her mother and the reply is ”she is a bit odd.”  More than enough information there to speculate about how Marianne might have been impacted by the family environment.

One of the dimensions that comes up in a film like this is the intersubjective state with the audience that is created by the actors.  The themes in this film are so realistic and compelling that it would be a rare person who does not experience associations to what has happened in their life.  How can you find an ideal partner at many levels and never seem to develop a lasting relationship?  How do you recognize aspects of your own experience and personality that consistently get in the way? How do you give yourself enough credit in life and realize that you will make it?  Can you realistically assess what happened in your family of origin and how it might affect you in the present day? And at an even more basic level – have I had relationships like this in my life? Do I wish things had gone differently? Would my life have been different if that relationship had succeeded?  That is just a short list of questions that could occur while watching this series.  

I imagine that any review of this series discusses the nudity and implied sexual activity.  Viewers should expect much more nudity than is seen on typical American network television or in most movies. It is one of the warnings. I have seen the series referred to as “pornographic” in some social media sites. That really diminishes the importance of this drama.  It is easy to lose the importance of a complicated relationship in the context of sexual activity and this story is definitely about much more than sex.  The sexual activity is critical in developing the story of these individuals and their relationship as a couple.

These are just a few areas that came up in Normal People and also explain the title. Both Marianne and Connell consider themselves to be defective in several ways. They also realize that their love for one another has allowed them to accomplish more through mutual support than they might have accomplished on their own. Despite many scenes of tension, anxiety, depression, and anger most observers will realize that they are just a couple of normal people with real life problems and a lot of those problems come down to how they negotiate this relationship that on one hand is passionate. loving, and supportive and on the other is complicated by life circumstances and frequent misunderstandings. I was pulling for them for all 12 episodes. I won’t tell you how it ends – but I was pleased with the ending. I know there is a lot of fan support for a season 2 – but I have also read that the author and screenwriter said that the original intent was to just produce one season.

The best single sentence characterization about this series is that it is about a young couple who function much better together than they do apart – but they have not figured out how to stay together.  This was a compelling story – and I looked forward to every episode.  

 

George Dawson, MD, DFAPA

    


Thursday, June 30, 2022

Chemical Imbalance Theory – Again and Again

 


I had this letter published today with my co-author Ron Pies, MD. It is basically a rebuttal to a more elaborate article (linked at the top of the letter) on chemical imbalance theory. I encourage any interested reader to look at that argument and then read our brief essay on why none of it supports a chemical imbalance theory.  Both Dr. Pies and I have written about this in the past – me on this blog and Dr. Pies in other literature (5-8). Several other authors have also discussed related issues (1-4, 9).  I think the refutation is fairly straightforward so this blog will be about the process. Why does this along with many other inaccurate portrayals of psychiatry continue to come up in the literature?  What follows is a few very clear answers but I fully realize that theses and explanations are rarely adequate to counter rhetoric.

1:  Repeating inaccurate claims is a standard strategy these days – it actually has been for decades.  The clearest modern example if the Big Lie of the last Presidential election.  Even a comprehensive presentation of the real evidence by the January 6th Congressional Panel is not enough to shake the belief of election deniers.  In fact – election denial has become the latest cottage industry delivering hundreds of local lectures across the country.  Chemical imbalance theory has a similar life of its own and a group of proselytizers.  If the political comparison is too harsh – consider the advertising approaches. Any number of products that make health claims are sold every day based on repeating the same messages.  For years alcohol carried the message that it was a heart healthy product that increased HDL cholesterol and reduced the risk of heart attacks. Now we know that those studies were biased because they included alcohol users in recovery in the control group.  Dietary supplements are a $62 billion dollar industry despite questionable value and some concerns about toxicity in healthy populations with no clear nutritional deficiencies. All of these examples illustrate the power of repetitive messaging.

2:  It appeals to anecdotal experience – a common response is “well I heard somebody say it”, “I saw it posted on a web site”, or “my psychiatrist said it to me.”  Anecdotal experiences exist and obviously we cannot examine the intent of every statement. The reality for psychiatrists is that in psychopharmacology and biological psychiatry lectures, in textbooks, and in the published literature there is no reference to “chemical imbalance theory”.   In fact after reviewing the literature I concluded that comprehensive theories really don’t exist in psychiatry. On the other hand, over the past 40 years there have been over a hundred hypotheses about the causes of depression.

3:  There are clear biases against psychiatry as a field – when reading authors whether in professional journals, periodical, or books it is always useful to consider what else they have written. Is the book or paper a one-sided harsh criticism?  Does their previous work seem to make similar statements about the field?  It is already known that psychiatry gets much more than the expected levels of criticism in the press.  Is that criticism warranted? In many areas of this blog, I have pointed out that it is not warranted and, in many cases - it is grossly inaccurate.

4:  There have been no accurate histories of the intellectual development of the field.  To be sure there are specialized biographies of prominent historical figures and some of their influences but no clear timeline of how developments build on previous thought. I recently read that now that one of these historical figures has “scholars” rather than clinicians describing his work – we could expect much more, but I am not seeing it. To me – people who train and teach in the field are still the primary keepers of the working intellectual development of the field and everything that is relevant.

 Given all of these factors what can readers of our published letter do with that information?  If you are a psychiatrist or a physician – think carefully about your use of terms.  If you have used the term “chemical imbalance theory” or just “chemical imbalance” as a metaphor or something else – please reconsider. I think it is more useful to patients to let them know that depression or other clinical entities cannot be reduced to a single chemical event and I would invite you to use a statement from Nicholas Giarman – a noted neuropharmacologist:

“…nosologically it might be fair to compare the depressive syndrome with the anemias. Certainly, no self-respecting hematologist would subscribe to a unitary biochemical explanation for all of the anemias.”

 Nicholas J Giarman (1920-1968)  – The Biochemical Basis of Neuropharmacology – Fourth Edition 1982. p. 212

 

An explanation of heterogeneity and brain function would be ideal, but given time constraints and variable expectations of patients – an illustration of biological complexity is superior to a hopelessly inadequate metaphor. The same is true for literature that is handed out to patients. In that case, quoting the typical disclaimers in FDA approved package inserts as well as a brief summary of the research evidence for specific patients is a more optimal approach.

That is the real take home message.  

 

George Dawson, MD, DFAPA   

 

Supplementary 1:  What about advice to patients?  If you are considering taking an antidepressant or any other medication as a patient that usually means you are having a significant problem that you expect help with. The literature critical of psychiatry often suggests that this decision is casually made but that is not my experience either as a patient or a prescribing physician. Consider what is written about the mechanism of action of antidepressants. Chemical Imbalance Theory often implies that there has been dishonesty in presenting how a medication works and by extrapolation that psychiatrists don’t know much about anything. In fact, there are probably very few medications that you take where the mechanism of action is known with any high degree of certainty.  Aspirin was used for 70 years before its mechanism of action was determined (10).   Acetaminophen was first used clinically in 1887 and a preliminary report suggesting several potential mechanisms of action became available in 2009 (11).   Most decisions to take medications are not made based on knowing a mechanism of action. The overemphasis on mechanism of action of antidepressants is most likely based on pharmaceutical company advertising in the 1980s and 1990s.  At that time, the manufacturers of newer antidepressants emphasized that they were novel agents that probably worked through different mechanisms than the older medications and had a more favorable side effect profile.

As a patient you are entitled to as much detail on mechanism of action as you want and I hope that you will be able to get it directly from your physician or from other sources. I have treated basic scientists for depression and bipolar disorder and was able to give them adequate information – so it is definitely out there. But at a practical level – every person with a significant problem wants relief from that problem and no additional problems. The clinical discussion needs to be focused on whether the medication is working and the side effects are either non-existent or tolerable.  Further – informed consent means that you should have adequate information to make a decision about taking a medication.  That includes the likelihood of severe adverse drug events as well as more common side effects. Another common discussion in the media these days is withdrawal from antidepressant medications. A prescribing physician should be able to discuss that side effects in detail as well as rare events and a plan to address them.

 Credits:

1:  My co-author Ron Pies, MD read this post and made valuable suggestions for modifications.  It is difficult to indicate but he is a co-author of this post.

2:  Eduardo A. Colon, MD took the photograph used at the top of this post.


References:

1:  Morehead D. It’s Time for Us To Stop Waffling About Psychiatry. Psychiatric Times.  Dec 2, 2021  https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/its-time-for-us-to-stop-waffling-about-psychiatry

2:  Morehead D.  It’s Time for Us to Realize We Are All on the Same Side.  Psychiatric Times. Jan 18, 2022  https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/its-time-for-us-to-realize-we-are-all-on-the-same-side

3:  Morehead D.  The History of Psychiatry—A History of Failure? Psychiatric Times. April 19, 2022  https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/the-history-of-psychiatry-a-history-of-failure

4:  Morehead D.  Is There a Cure for Ignorance? The Shocking Truth About Psychiatric Treatment.  Psychiatric Times. June 27, 2022  https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/is-there-a-cure-for-ignorance-the-shocking-truth-about-psychiatric-treatment

5:  Pies RW.  Debunking the Two Chemical Imbalance Myths, Again.  Psychiatric Times. August 1, 2019  https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/debunking-two-chemical-imbalance-myths-again

6:  Pies RW. Nuances, narratives, and the “chemical imbalance” debate. Psychiatric Times. April 1, 2014.  https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/nuances-narratives-and-chemical-imbalance-debate

7:  Pies RW.   Psychiatry’s New Brain-Mind and the Legend of the “Chemical Imbalance”.  Psychiatric Times.  July 11, 2011 https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/psychiatrys-new-brain-mind-and-legend-chemical-imbalance

8:  Pies RW.  Doctor, Is My Mood Disorder Due to a Chemical Imbalance? Psychiatric Times.  August 12, 2011  https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/doctor-my-mood-disorder-due-chemical-imbalance

9:  Ruffalo, M. L., & Pies, R. W. (2018, August 19). The reality of mental illness: Responding to the criticisms of antipsychiatry. Psychology Today. https://psychologytoday.com/us/blog/freud-fluoxetine/201808/the-reality-mental-illness…

10:  Montinari MR, Minelli S, De Caterina R. The first 3500 years of aspirin history from its roots - A concise summary. Vascul Pharmacol. 2019 Feb;113:1-8. doi: 10.1016/j.vph.2018.10.008. Epub 2018 Nov 2. PMID: 30391545.

11:  Smith HS. Potential analgesic mechanisms of acetaminophen. Pain Physician. 2009 Jan-Feb;12(1):269-80. PMID: 19165309.