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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. * For Best Viewing: Open in Slide Show Mode Click on icon or From the View menu, select the Slide Show option * To help you as you prepare a talk, we have included the relevant text from ITC in the notes pages of each slide
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. Terms of Use The In the Clinic ® slide sets are owned and copyrighted by the American College of Physicians (ACP). All text, graphics, trademarks, and other intellectual property incorporated into the slide sets remain the sole and exclusive property of ACP. The slide sets may be used only by the person who downloads or purchases them and only for the purpose of presenting them during not-for- profit educational activities. Users may incorporate the entire slide set or selected individual slides into their own teaching presentations but may not alter the content of the slides in any way or remove the ACP copyright notice. Users may make print copies for use as hand-outs for the audience the user is personally addressing but may not otherwise reproduce or distribute the slides by any means or media, including but not limited to sending them as e-mail attachments, posting them on Internet or Intranet sites, publishing them in meeting proceedings, or making them available for sale or distribution in any unauthorized form, without the express written permission of the ACP. Unauthorized use of the In the Clinic slide sets constitutes copyright infringement.
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. in the clinic Generalized Anxiety Disorder
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. Which patients are at elevated risk for generalized anxiety disorder? Women (GAD twice as common in women vs. men) Comorbid psychiatric disorders Obesity History of substance abuse History of trauma Family history of GAD
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. Are preventive measures useful for patients at elevated risk? Adults No evidence on effectiveness but may benefit Children CBT + parent education can prevent GAD In those with withdrawn behavior / early anxiety signs
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. Should clinicians screen patients for GAD if they are at increased risk? If so, how? Yes: GAD is underdiagnosed and undertreated Screening tools “Are you bothered by nerves?”: 100% sensitive, 59% specific 2-item GAD-2: 86% sensitive, 83% specific GAD-7 and PRIME-MD: anxiety + symptom severity 4-item PHQ: anxiety + depression If screen is positive Assess whether patient meets diagnostic criteria
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Screening… Screen adults who are at increased risk Screening tools have similar sensitivity and specificity OK to use a tool with as few as 1 or 2 questions
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. What symptoms should prompt clinicians to consider a diagnosis of GAD? Excess anxiety & worry about everyday issues Distressed / impaired social, occupational, other functioning Not attributable to substance or another medical condition Not better explained by another mental disorder Plus ≥3 of these symptoms on more days than not (≥6 mos): Restlessness Being easily fatigued Difficulty concentrating Irritability Muscle tension Sleep disturbance
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. What physical examination findings indicate possible GAD? Restlessness, irritability, or fatigue Medically unexplained symptoms Chest pain Rapid heart rate Exam may uncover underlying / co-occurring medical conditions requiring further evaluation
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. What laboratory tests should clinicians use? None needed for diagnosis Routine lab testing has low yield Consider tests to exclude medical conditions Thyroid function (thyroid disease) Hemoglobin measurement (anemia) Urine drug screen (substance use) Catecholamine levels (pheochromocytoma)
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. What other diagnoses should clinicians consider? Cardiopulmonary disorders Asthma, COPD, CHF Endocrine disease Thyroid disorders, diabetes, hypoglycemia Mood disorders Major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder Other anxiety disorders Simple or social phobia, panic, OCD, PTSD, acute stress Misuse of substances Alcohol, benzodiazepines, caffeine, nicotine, stimulants
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Diagnosis… A thorough history is the key to diagnosis Assess each patient for co-morbid mental illness No lab testing unless underlying medical disorders suspected Consult mental health specialist if diagnosis is uncertain
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. What nondrug therapies should clinicians recommend for GAD? Cognitive behavioral therapy Short-term psychodynamic psychotherapy Worry exposure or exposure therapy Relaxation training Self-help and self-examination therapy
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. How should clinicians choose and dose drug therapy? Use drug therapy when nondrug therapy is… Unavailable Ineffective Or patient is uninterested in it First-line: Second-generation antidepressants (SSRIs) Second-line: azapironesIn, benzodiazepines Third-line: atypical antipsychotics, antihistimine, anticonvulsant
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. How should clinicians monitor patients? Until stable: in person or by phone every 2 - 4 weeks During maintenance therapy: every 3 - 4 months Use PRIME-MD or GAD-7 to monitor symptom severity Ask consistently about… Medication adherence Treatment side effects Suicide risk Continue pharmacotherapy 6 - 12 months after response 20% - 40% relapse in 6 - 12 months after discontinuation Severe chronic anxiety may require long-term medication
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. When should patients be hospitalized? When actively suicidal Assess suicide risk at each follow-up encounter “Over the last 2 weeks, how often have you been bothered by thoughts that you’d be better off dead or of hurting yourself in some way?” When symptoms are intractable For grave disability To address co-occurring illness GAD can complicate treatment of co-occurring disorders and adversely affect prognosis
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. When should clinicians consult a psychologist, psychiatrist, or other specialist? No improvement after 12 - 16 weeks of CBT No response after 6 weeks to 1 st - or 2 nd -line drug Rx Inability to tolerate drug Rx Suicidal thoughts expressed Co-morbid substance, mood, anxiety disorders present Before prescribing 3 rd -line drugs
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© Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2013 Ann Int Med. 159 (9): ITC5-1. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Treatment… Primary care physicians play an important role in management CBT is treatment of choice for most adults If nondrug therapy is unavailable, ineffective, or if patient uninterested in it: try second-generation antidepressants Assess suicide risk in all GAD patients Refer complex GAD patients to mental health specialists
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