| Literature DB >> 23950745 |
Frederike Schirmbeck1, Mathias Zink.
Abstract
A large subgroup of around 25% of schizophrenia patients suffers from obsessive-compulsive symptoms (OCS) and about 12% fulfill the diagnostic criteria of an obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). The additional occurrence of OCS is associated with high subjective burden of disease, additional neurocognitive impairment, poorer social and vocational functioning, greater service utilization and high levels of anxiety and depression. Comorbid patients can be assigned to heterogeneous subgroups. One hypothesis assumes that second generation antipsychotics (SGAs), most importantly clozapine, might aggravate or even induce second-onset OCS. Several arguments support this assumption, most importantly the observed chronological order of first psychotic manifestation, start of treatment with clozapine and onset of OCS. In addition, correlations between OCS-severity and dose and serum levels and duration of clozapine treatment hint toward a dose-dependent side effect. It has been hypothesized that genetic risk-factors dispose patients with schizophrenia to develop OCS. One study in a South Korean sample reported associations with polymorphisms in the gene SLC1A1 (solute carrier family 1A1) and SGA-induced OCS. However, this finding could not be replicated in European patients. Preliminary results also suggest an involvement of polymorphisms in the BDNF gene (brain-derived neurotrophic factor) and an interaction between markers of SLC1A1 and the gene DLGAP3 (disc large associated protein 3) as well as GRIN2B (N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor subunit 2B). Further research of well-defined samples, in particular studies investigating possible interactions of genetic risk-constellations and pharmacodynamic properties, are needed to clarify the assumed development of SGA-induced OCS. Results might improve pathogenic concepts and facilitate the definition of at risk populations, early detection and monitoring of OCS as well as multimodal therapeutic interventions.Entities:
Keywords: SLC1A1; antipsychotic agents; clozapine; comorbidity; compulsion; genetics; obsession; schizophrenia
Year: 2013 PMID: 23950745 PMCID: PMC3738863 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2013.00099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Prevalence estimations of OCS and OCD within different samples of patients. (A) Mean prevalence rates in ARMS studies. (B) Mean prevalence rates in first-episode psychotic patients. (C) Mean prevalence rates in patients suffering from chronic schizophrenia.
Figure 2OCS might manifest at different time points during the course of schizophrenia illness. In addition, the clinical course is highly variable. Blue symbols indicate the onset and severity of OCS, red ones are related to psychotic symptoms. (A) Pre-existing and persistent OCS. (B) Intermittent OCS during ARMS or later in the clinical course. (C) OCS-onset during ARMS and persistent course, strongly associated to the psychotic symptoms (schizo-obsessive concept). (D) Fluctuating course of OCS. (E) Second-onset OCS during antipsychotic treatment.
Identification of obsessive-compulsive symptoms in schizophrenia.
| Insight-criterion | Patients suffering from OCD typically fulfill three symptom characteristics: they attribute the obsessions, impulsive symptoms and compulsions to their own thinking, declare with insight their unreasonableness and show some degree of resistance against them. In particular the first two properties allow a differentiation from hallucinations and delusions. Ruminations or stereotypic ego-dystonic cognitions with direct relation to the contents to psychotic thinking should not be diagnosed as obsessions. |
| OCS not solely related to the psychotic content | Cleaning or checking behavior should be diagnosed as compulsions only if it is accompanied by typical obsessions and not, if the patient currently suffers from delusions of contamination, intoxication or infection. |
| Re-evaluation of OCS after remission of psychotic symptoms | If first manifestation of OCS occurs simultaneously with the first psychotic exacerbation, the final decision on a valid comorbid condition should be postponed until the remission of psychotic symptoms. |
| Differentiation from catatonic symptoms | Repetitive behavior or stereotypic actions should carefully be discriminated from catatonic symptoms most importantly in patients with so-called “manieristic catatonia.” |
| Obsessions presented as pseudohallucinations | A subgroups of OCS patients, who experience their obsessions as extremely aversive and burdening may try to distance themselves by using expressions such as “voices” or “foreign thought content”, but in most cases these phenomena can be characterized as pseudohallucinations. |
| SGA-induced OCS | Patients without a previous history of OCS might develop these phenomena during antipsychotic treatment. This constellation hints toward the unfavorable effect of second-onset OCS induced by SGAs. |
Clinical aspects that have to be considered when differentiating between psychotic symptoms (delusions, hallucinations) and OCS.
Arguments supporting SGA-induction of OCS.
| Epidemiology | The prevalence rates of OCS in schizophrenia increased after market approval of clozapine (Schirmbeck and Zink, |
| The comorbidity rates in later disease stages are higher than at first manifestation of schizophrenia (see Figure | |
| Schizophrenia patients with comorbid OCS are most frequently found to be treated with clozapine. Vice versa high OCS prevalence in patients treated with clozapine (Poyurovsky et al., | |
| Pharmacology | The type of antipsychotic treatment is associated with the risk for OCS: Marked difference between samples treated with first generation antipsychotics or mainly dopaminergic SGAs (such as aripiprazole or amisulpride) compared to clozapine (Ertugrul et al., |
| OCS manifest as a unfavorable drug effect | |
| The severity of OCS is positively correlated with duration, dosage and serum levels of clozapine treatment (Lin et al., | |
| The OCS severity is found stable over time in patients under stable clozapine treatment (Schirmbeck et al., | |
| The severity of OCS improves after reduction of clozapine dosage to minimally sufficient levels (due to augmentation or combination) (Rocha and Hara, |
Summary of epidemiological and pharmacological arguments supporting the assumption that OCS can be induced or at least markedly aggravated by SGA-treatment as an unfavorable side effect (Schirmbeck et al., .
Figure 3In this sample of 44 comorbid patients the survival-curve shows the events “start of SGA treatment” and “first onset of OCS” on an individual basis related to the first manifestation of psychosis. The longitudinal course of OCS shows a high degree of variability and is not depicted here. The graphs shows that in all but 7 cases OCS developed subsequently to psychosis and the vast majority of patients reported OCS onset after treatment-start with SGAs (Schirmbeck et al., 2012a).
Therapeutic approaches.
| Early recognition and monitoring | Definition of at-risk-constellations. |
| Monitoring of subclinical levels of OCS or beginning cognitive impairment using sensitive sets of neurocognitive tests (Schirmbeck et al., | |
| Polypharmacy | Augmentation with antidepressants: Clomipramine, fluvoxamine and other SSRIs. [Level of evidence: RCTs, CS, CR] (Berman et al., |
| Caveat: Additive (anticholinergic) side effects and pharmacokinetic interactions | |
| Augmentation with mood stabilizers (lamotrigine, valproic acid) aiming at a reduction of SGA-dosage to minimally sufficient levels [Level of evidence: CS, CR] (Zink et al., | |
| Combination of pro-obsessive SGAs with neutral or anti-obsessive SGAs (amisulpride, aripiprazole) in order to reduce the clozapine-dosage to minimally sufficient levels [Level of evidence: RCT, CS, CR]. | |
| (Connor et al., | |
| Psychotherapy | Cognitive behavioral therapy involving exposure and response prevention [Level of evidence: CS, CR] (Schirmbeck and Zink, |
Summary of therapeutic approaches for schizophrenia patients with comorbid OCS or OCD. The current level of empirical evidence is indicated in square brackets.
case report
case series
randomized controlled trial.