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John Tsuang, M.D., M.S. Associate Clinical Professor Department of Psychiatry, University of California Los Angeles Director of Dual Diagnostic Treatment Program Harbor - UCLA Medical Center Johntsuang@yahoo.com
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Outline n Prevalence n Psychiatric symptoms and abstinence n Diagnosis of dual diagnosis patients n Pharmacological Treatment
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Prevalence of dual diagnosis patients
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Prevalence of Dual Diagnosis Epidemiological Catchment Area (ECA) Study N= 20291 n lifetime prevalence rates for alcohol, drug, and mental disorders 32.7% n lifetime prevalence rates for any non-substance abuse mental disorders22.5% n Alcohol disorders13.5% n Other drug disorders6.1% *Regier, AJ Psych 1990
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Mental Disorder Patients: n Life prevalence of additive disorders 29%(OR = 2.7) n Alcohol disorders 22%(OR = 2.3) n Other drug disorders 15%(OR = 4.5) n 45%-70% abuse alcohol or drugs
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Affective Disorders (8.3%) Substance Abuse Disorders 32% (OR =2.6) Alcohol 22% Drug 19%
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Subtypes of Affective Disorders Bipolar I Disorder Substance Abuse Disorders 61% (OR = 7.9) Alcohol 46% Drug 40% Unipolar major depression Substance Abuse Disorders 27% (OR = 1.7) Alcohol 16% Drug 18%
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Anxiety Disorder (14.6%) Substance Abuse Disorders 23.7% (OR = 1.7) Alcohol 18% Drug 12%
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Subtypes of Anxiety Disorders Panic Disorder (10.6%) Substance Abuse Disorders 35.8% (OR = 2.9) Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder(2.5%) Substance Abuse Disorders 32.8% (OR = 2.5) Phobia (12.6%) Substance Abuse Disorders 22.9% (OR = 1.6)
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Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders (1.5%) Substance Abuse Disorders 47% (OR = 4.6) Alcohol 33.7% Drug 27.5%
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Antisocial Personality Disorder (2.6%) - Substance Abuse Disorders 83.6% Alcohol 74% Drug 42%
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Borderline Personality Disorder (0.2%-1.8%) n Second only to mood disorders, ASPD n 25-67% of BPD receiving treatment have substance use disorders n 57% when not used substance abuse as a criteria Miller, 1994, Dulit, 1990, Dimeff, Principles of Addiction Medicine, 3 rd Ed, Chase, 2003Miller, 1994, Dulit, 1990, Dimeff, Principles of Addiction Medicine, 3 rd Ed, Chase, 2003
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Alcohol Disorders (%M ental Disorders= 36.6%) OR Anxiety Disorder19%1.0 ASPD14%21.0 Affective Disorders13%1.9 Schizophrenia4%3.3
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Drug Disorders (% mental disorders= 53%) OR Anxiety Disorders28%2.5 Affective Disorders26%4.7 ASPD18%13.4 Schizophrenia7%6.2
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Relationship between Psychiatric Symptoms and Abstinence
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Remission of Depressive Symptoms with Abstinence Weeks 40% 20% 30% 10% 0% 124163 Abstinence Brown S, Schuckit M. J Stud Alcohol. 1988;49:412-417. % Patients with Moderate Depression N=177, no pre-existing mood syndrome
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Hamilton depression scores during 4 weeks of hospitalization Brown S, Schuckit M. J Stud Alcohol. 1988;49:412-417.
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Anxiety scores during 4 weeks of hospitalization Brown S, Irwin, M. Schuckit M. J Stud Alcohol. 1991;52:55-61.
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Diagnostic Issues n n A PERIOD OF ABSTINENCE (JAIL/ PRISON, HOSPITAL) n n SUSTAINED PSYCHIATIRC SYMPTOMS DURING ABSTINENCE (AMOUNT OF TIME REQUIRED??) n n ONSET OF PSYCHIATRIC SYMPTOMS VERSUS SUBSTANCE ABUSE PROBLEMS (PRIMARY VS. SECONDARY) n n FAMILY HISTORY OF PSYCHITRIC ILLNESSES n n CROSS SECTIONAL VERSUS LONGITUDINAL DIAGNOSIS
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Psychotic symptoms and abstinence n 165 chronic psychotic patients with cocaine abuse or dependence n 6 weeks of abstinence needed for diagnosis of schizophrenia n 81% could not make a definitive diagnosis u 78% insufficient abstinence, 24% poor memory u After 18 months, 75% still diagnostic uncertain F Shaner, Psych Ser, 1996
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Diagnosis of Dual Diagnosis Patients
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Heterogeneous Population of Dual Diagnosis Patients n Addiction Only n Mildly-Moderately Severe n Highly Severe n Diagnostic Uncertainty Mee-Lee, David (2001) ASAM PPC-2R. ASAMMee-Lee, David (2001) ASAM PPC-2R. ASAM Tsuang, J, Shaner, 1997Tsuang, J, Shaner, 1997
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Addiction Only Patients n Patients with substance abuse or dependence problems n No axis I and/or II psychiatric diagnosis or mental health issues n Need addiction service only
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Mildly to Moderately Severe n Sub threshold diagnosis (traits of Axis I or II psychiatric disorders) n Diagnosis of Axis I or II, stable on treatment u Anxiety or mood disorders- stable u Bipolar mood disorder- resolving u Need primary substance abuse treatment, available psychiatric treatment capability
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Highly Severe n Axis I or II psychiatric diagnosis-unstable u Schizophrenia spectrum disorders u Severe mood disorders with psychosis u Severe anxiety disorders u Severe personality disorders n Needs concurrent psychiatric and substance abuse treatment
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Diagnosis Uncertainty n n Time n n Additional information n n Newer, effective and safe medications n n Treat unclear diagnosis?
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Integrated Treatment Program Treatment approach - Combine mental health/Substance abuse treatment -Outpatient/inpatient - Comprehensiveness - Medication management - Outreach - Social support Drake, Psych Ser 2001, Tsuang, Psych Ser 1999, Ho, AJP 1999 Drake, Psych Ser 2001, Tsuang, Psych Ser 1999, Ho, AJP 1999
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Pharmacological Treatment of Dual Diagnosis Patients
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Pharmacological Treatment of Affective Disorders n Tertiary/Secondary Amines (Serotonin/NE)- Amitriptline, Desipramine n Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors (Serotonin/ NE/Dopamine)- Phenelzine, tranlcypromine n Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (Serotonin)- Fluoxetine, Paroxetine, Sertraline, Fluvoxamine, Citalopram (Celexa)
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Pharmacological Treatment of Affective Disorders n NE-Dopamine Reuptake Inhibitors - Bupropion n Nontricylic Serotonin-NE Reuptake Inhibitors-Venlafaxine n Serotonin Antagonist& Reuptake Inhibitors- Nefazodone, Trazodone n NE-Serotonin Antagonist-Mirtazapine (Remeron)
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Treatment of Depression and Alcohol Addiction n TCSs (Imipramine, desipramine) n SSRIs (fluoxetine, sertraline, nefazodone) u McGrath, 1996, Mason, 1996, Gorelick 1989, Cornelius, 1997, Pettaniti, 2000, Boy-Byrne, 2000)
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Treatment of Depression and Opioid Addiction n TCAs (doxepin, amitriptyline, desipramine, imipramine) for methadone patients u Brady, 2003 ASAM
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Treatment of Depression and Cocaine Addiction n TCAs (desiprmaine) n NE-Dopamine Reuptake Inhibitors - Bupropion n Nontricylic Serotonin-NE Reuptake Inhibitors-Venlafaxine u Rao, 1995, Weiss, 1989, Kosten, 1989
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Pharmacological Treatment of Bipolar Patients n Lithium Carbonate n Valproic acid (Depakote) n Chlorpromazine n Olanzapine (Zyprexa) n Risperidone (Risperidal) n Quetiapine (Seroquel) n Lamotrigine (Lamictal) n Carbamazepine (tegretol) n Gabapentin (neurontin) n Oxcarbazepine (trileptal) n Tiagabine (gabitril) n Topirmate (topamax) Tarascon PP 2002
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Treatments of Substance Abuse and Bipolar Disorder n Lithium n Valproate (Depakote) n Carbamazepine (Tegretol) u Brady, 2003 ASAM, Tohen, 1990, Bowden, 1995, O’Connell, 1991, Brady, 1995
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Pharmacological Treatment of Anxiety Disorders n Benzodiazepines- Chlordiazepoxide, Clonazepam, Diazepam, Lorazepam n Anticholingeric/Antihistaminergic- Diphenhydramine, Hydroxyzine n Barbiturates n Others-Buspirone, Chloralhydrate, Zolpidem (Ambien), Zaleplon (Sonata)
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Treatment of substance abuse and anxiety disorders n Antidepressants (SSRIs, Trazadone, TCAs) n Anticonvulsants n Antihypertensives n Atypical antipsychotic medications n Buspirone n Bendiazepines (contraindicated) F Nitenson, ASAM 2003
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Pharmacological Treatment of Schizophrenia n Dopamine Antagonists Haloperidol, Fluphenazine n Serotonin/Dopamine Receptor Antagonists Clozaril, Risperidone, Olanzapine, Quetiapine, ziprasidone, aripiprazole n Depo
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Treatment of Substance Abuse and Psychotic Symptoms n Newer Atypical Agents u Reduce negative symptoms u Reduce cognitive deficits u Reduce severity of detoxification u May improve abstinence u Cravings for substances of abuse u Not a magic bullet!! F Ziedonis, ASAM 2003, Buckley, 1998, Smelson, 1997, Farren, 2000, Tsuang, 2001, Tsuang, 2004
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Treatment Recommendations n A period of abstinence is optimal (wait after detoxification) n Duration to wait (??) n If symptoms mild, diagnosis unclear, can wait n If symptoms severe, no remission during abstinence, early treatment justified
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Avoid These Agents for Treatment of Substance Dependence n MAOI n Opiates n Barbiturates n Stimulants n Short Acting BZDs n Tricyclics (metabolism, cardiac conduction)
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Pharmacological Strategies for Treatment of Substance Use Disorders n Initiate and Facilitate Abstinence n Treat Withdrawal Symptoms (acute/protracted) n Relapse Prevention u Treat Associated Psychiatric Syndromes u Decrease Craving u Aversive Agents
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Current Pharmacological Agents for Treatment of Stimulant Dependence n Dopaminergic Agents (Agonist, partial agonist, antagonist)-Bromocriptine, Levodopa, Amantadine n Serotonergic Agents-Sertraline, Fluoxetine, Desipramine n Others- Carbamazepine, Bupropion, Selogiline, Modafinil (Provigil), Disulfiram
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Current Pharmacological Agents for Treatment of Alcohol Dependence n BZD, Anti-Seizure Medications, Anti- Hypertensive Medications for Withdrawal n Disulfiram/Calcium Carbamide n Naltrexone (ReVia) n Acamprosate (Amino Acid Derivative)- Mimics GABAa Receptor/Amino Acid derivative n Ondansetron-SHT3 antagonist
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Current Pharmacological Agents for Treatment of Opiate Dependence n Clonidine for Withdrawal n BZDs for Withdrawal n Naltrexone for Withdrawal and Maintenance n Methadone for Maintenance n LAAM for Maintenance n Buprenorphine for Withdrawal and Maintenance
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