| Literature DB >> 26556409 |
Abstract
Insight into the biological pathomechanism of a clinical syndrome facilitates the development of effective interventions. This paper applies this perspective to the important clinical problem of obsessive-compulsive symptoms (OCS) occurring during the lifetime diagnosis of schizophrenia. Up to 25% of schizophrenia patients suffer from OCS and about 12% fulfil the diagnostic criteria of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). This is accompanied by marked subjective burden of disease, high levels of anxiety, depression and suicidality, increased neurocognitive impairment, less favourable levels of social and vocational functioning, and greater service utilization. Comorbid patients can be assigned to heterogeneous subgroups. It is assumed that second generation antipsychotics (SGAs), most importantly clozapine, might aggravate or even induce second-onset OCS. Several epidemiological and pharmacological arguments support this assumption. Specific genetic risk factors seem to dispose patients with schizophrenia to develop OCS and risk-conferring polymorphisms has been defined in SLC1A1, BDNF, DLGAP3, and GRIN2B and in interactions between these individual genes. Further research is needed with detailed characterization of large samples. In particular interactions between genetic risk constellations, pharmacological and psychosocial factors should be analysed. Results will further define homogeneous subgroups, which are in need for differential causative interventions. In clinical practise, schizophrenia patients should be carefully monitored for OCS, starting with at-risk mental states of psychosis and longitudinal follow-ups, hopefully leading to the development of multimodal therapeutic interventions.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 26556409 PMCID: PMC4590963 DOI: 10.1155/2014/317980
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Med ISSN: 2314-758X
Figure 1Estimations on prevalence of OCS and OCD according to different samples of patients. (1) Mean prevalence rates in at-risk mental state studies (ARMS). (2) Mean prevalence rates in first episode psychotic patients. (3) Mean prevalence rates in schizophrenia patients.
Figure 2Schematic diagram on onset and course of OCS related to stages of schizophrenia. Bright-gray symbols indicate the onset and severity of OCS, dark-gray symbols are related to the at-risk mental state of psychosis (ARMS), the upcoming first episode of schizophrenia or its chronic course. (1) Preexisting and persistent OCS. (2) Intermittent OCS during ARMS or later in the clinical course. (3) OCS onset during ARMS and persistent course, strongly associated with the psychotic symptoms (schizo-obsessive concept). (4) Fluctuating course of OCS. (5) Second-onset OCS during antipsychotic treatment.
SGAs induce or aggravate OCS.
| Clinical observations and epidemiological arguments | |
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| (I) | The prevalence rates of OCS in schizophrenia increased after market approval of SGAs such as clozapine. |
| (II) | The comorbidity rates in later stages of schizophrenia are higher than during the ARMS or at first manifestation of psychosis. |
| (III) | In parallel to antipsychotic treatment OCS manifest |
| (IV) | High prevalence rates of OCS are observed during CLZ treatment. |
| (V) | Schizophrenia patients with SGA-induced OCS markedly contribute to the entire sample of comorbid patients. |
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| Evidence derived from pharmacological considerations | |
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| (I) | Pharmacodynamic properties modulate the risk for OCS: marked difference between samples treated with first generation antipsychotics or mainly dopaminergic SGAs (such as aripiprazole or amisulpride) compared to CLZ. |
| (II) | OCS manifest as an unfavourable drug effect |
| (III) | Indicators of a dose-effect relation: the severity of OCS is positively correlated with duration, dosage, and serum levels of CLZ treatment. |
| (IV) | OCS severity persists over time in patients under stable CLZ treatment. |
| (V) | The severity of OCS improves after reduction of CLZ dosage to minimally sufficient levels (due to augmentation or combination). |
Summary of epidemiological and pharmacological arguments supporting the induction or at least marked aggravation of OCS by SGA treatment as an unfavourable side effect. CLZ: clozapine, OCS: obsessive-compulsive symptoms, and SGA: second generation antipsychotic agents.
Therapeutic interventions addressing OCS in schizophrenia.
| Early recognition and monitoring | |
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| (I) | Definition of at-risk constellations |
| (II) | Detection of subclinical levels of OCS or beginning cognitive impairment using sensitive sets of neurocognitive tests |
| (III) | Monitoring of apparent OCS |
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| Add-on of psychotropic agents: polypharmacy | |
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| (I) | Augmentation with antidepressants: clomipramine, fluvoxamine, and other SSRIs [level of evidence: RCTs, CS, CR] |
| (II) | Augmentation with mood stabilizers (lamotrigine, valproic acid) aiming at a reduction of SGA-dosage to minimally sufficient levels [level of evidence: CS, CR] |
| (III) | Combination of proobsessive SGAs with neutral or antiobsessive SGAs (amisulpride, aripiprazole) in order to reduce the clozapine dosage to minimally sufficient levels [level of evidence: RCT, CS, CR] |
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| Psychotherapy | |
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| Cognitive behavioural therapy including exposure and response prevention [level of evidence: CS, CR] | |
Summary of therapeutic approaches for schizophrenia patients with comorbid OCS or OCD. The current level of empirical evidence is indicated in square brackets. CR: case report, CS: case series, and RCT: randomized controlled trial.