| Literature DB >> 28357191 |
Camila L Arnaudo1, Barbara Andraka-Christou2, Kacy Allgood3.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This review seeks to investigate three questions: What is the prevalence of comorbid psychiatric diagnoses among pregnant women with opioid use disorder (OUD)? How do comorbid psychiatric illnesses impact pregnant women with OUD? And how do comorbid psychiatric illnesses affect the ability of pregnant women with OUD to adhere to and complete OUD treatment? RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Addiction; Comorbidity; Dual diagnosis; Opioid; Pregnant; Psychiatric disorder; Substance use disorder
Year: 2017 PMID: 28357191 PMCID: PMC5350195 DOI: 10.1007/s40429-017-0132-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Addict Rep
Prevalence of Comorbid Psychiatric Disorders
| Authors (publication year) (nation where study took place) | Comorbidity prevalence | Mood disorder prevalence | Anxiety disorder prevalence | Depression prevalence | Anxiety prevalence | PTSD prevalence | Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Martin CE, Longinaker N, Terplan M (2015) (USA) | 14% in 1992; 31% in 2012 | Very large N | Institutionally reported data to US government (unclear screening method) | |||||
| Ordean A, Kahan M, Graves L, Abrahams R, Boyajian T (2013) (Canada) | 45% | 20% | 3 study sites | Retrospective chart review (unclear screening method) | ||||
| Patel P, Abdel-Latif ME, Hazelton B, Wodak A, Chen J, Emsley F, Feller JM, Lui K, Oei JL, (2013) (Australia) | 45% | Retrospective chart review (unclear screening method) | ||||||
| Steer RA, Schut J, (1980) (USA) | Comparable between pregnant and nonpregnant opioid using women | Cohort study; used validated screening tool | One study site | |||||
| Tuten M, Svikis DS, Keyser-Marcus L, O’Grady KE, Jones HE (2012) (USA) | 58% in last 30 days | 42% in last 30 days | 46% in last 30 days; 55% lifetime adjusted | 31% last 30 days; 38% lifetime adjusted | One study site; unclear screening method | |||
| Holbrook A, Kaltenbach K (2012) (US) | 30% (at treatment entry); 44% (postpartum) | Longitudinal study (used validated screening tool at time 2) | Unclear screening method at time 1; one study site | |||||
| Burns K, Melamed J, Burns W, Chasnoff I, Hatcher R (1985) (USA) | 50% (60% among older women, 25% among young women, and 8% among teenagers) | Used validated screening tool | Small N ( | |||||
| Oei JL, Abdel-Latif ME Craig F, Kee A, Austin MP, Lui K (2009) (Australia) | 45% | Most common dual diagnosis | Retrospective chart review (unclear screening method) | |||||
| Greig E, Ash A, Douiri A (2012) (England) | 25% | 9% at treatment entry; 4.5% postpartum | No use of validated screening tool; one study site; small N ( | |||||
| Terplan M, Smith EJ, Glavin SH (2010) (USA) | 21% | Institutionally reported data to US government (unclear screening method) | ||||||
| Chisolm MS, Tuten M, Brigham EC, Strain EC, Jones HE (2009) (USA) | 53% | 36% | 36% | 3% | Used validated screening tool | One study site | ||
| Benningfield MM Arria AM, Kaltenbach K, Heil SH, Stine SM, Coyle MG, Fischer G, Jones HE, Martin PR (2010) (USA) | 65% | 49% | 40% | 32% | 40% | 16% | Large N; multisite study; used validate screening tool (MINI) | Secondary analysis of MOTHER study; excluded patients with psychosis |
| Moylan PL, Jones HE, Haug NA, Kissin WB, Svikis DS (2001) (USA) | 32% had cooccurring Axis I disorder; 22% had cooccurring axis 2 disorder | 19% (having PTSD doubled chance of axis I or II disorder) | Used validated screening tool | One study site | ||||
| Eggleston AM, Calhoun PS, Svikis DS, Tuten M, Chisolm MS, Jones HE (2009) (USA) | 41% had cooccurring Axis 1 disorder (excluding PTSD) | 38% | 26% (having PTSD increased likelihood of panic disorder or social anxiety disorder) | Used validated screening tool | One study site | |||
| Benningfield MM, Dietrich MS, Jones HE, Kaltenbach K, Heil SH, Stine SM, Coyle MG, Arria AM, O’Grady KE, Fischer G, Martin PR (2012) (USA) | 62% (32% had both MDD and anxiety) | 19% | Large N; multisite study; used validated screening tool (MINI) | Secondary analysis of MOTHER study; excluded patients with psychosis | ||||
| Fitzsimons HE, Tuten M, Vaidya V, Jones HE (2007) (US) | 72% | 27% | 36% | Used validated screening tool | One study site | |||
| Tuten M, Heil SH, O’Grady KE, Fitzsimons H, Chisolm MS, Jones HE (2009) (USA) | 56% (44% with mood disorder also had anxiety disorder) | Used validated screening tool (in original study) | Secondary analysis of Fitzsimons et al. 2007 study |
Reported rates are at treatment entry, unless otherwise stated. If study used medical records, the authors do not know when screening occurred
Impact of cooccurring psychiatric disorders
| Author (year of publication) | Title | Method | Question | Results | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fitzsimons HE, Tuten M, Vaidya V, Jones HE (2007) | Mood disorders affect drug treatment success of drug-dependent pregnant women | Cohort; ( | What is the impact of cooccurring Axis I disorders on drug treatment outcomes of drug-dependent pregnant women? | Mood Disorder (MD) and Anxiety Disorder (AD) groups had higher incidence of psychosocial impairment and suicidal ideation; AD spent more time in treatment than MD or No Diagnosis (ND) group; MD group had more positive urine screens than AD and ND groups; confirms previous findings that MD poorly affects treatment outcomes; new finding that Ad did not negatively affect tx; ASI scores similar in AD, MD and ND groups over 5 domains, MD and AD groups had higher scores on psychiatric and family/social hx composite scores. | Recall bias; portion of participants left prior to data collection, may limit generalizability; no tracking of psych symptoms, only initial assessment; symptom overlap with 44% of MD having anxiety and 35% of AD group having depression; |
| Benningfield MM, Dietrich MS, Jones HE, Kaltenbach K, Heil SH, Stine SM, Coyle MG, Arria AM, O’Grady KE, Fischer G, Martin PR (2012) | Opioid dependence during pregnancy: relationships of anxiety and depression symptoms to treatment outcomes. | Secondary Analysis of an RCT ( | What is the relationship of anxiety and depression with treatment outcome in opioid-dependent pregnant women? What are their psychotropic medications? | In terms of treatment attrition AD(47%) > AD + MD (25%) = ND (18.2%) > MD (10.5%) No difference were observed with ongoing illicit drug use or pre-term delivery; ASI psychological composite score was higher for AD, MD, and AD + MD, than ND group; no significant association found between ASI score and discontinuation of tx; a trend was found toward more urines with illicit substances and the MD + AD group, but it was not statistically significant; no statistically significant association between psychiatric symptoms and pre-term delivery | Only brief screening tool for psych symptoms; so no confirmative psych diagnosis; only initial screening; threshold for anxiety and depression symptoms lower that what is needed for formal dx; no longitudinal measure; psychosocial treatments were not standardized; secondary analysis makes statistical power limited, results should be considered exploratory; psychiatric tx not necessary provided by study staff |
| Haller DL, Miles DR, Dawson KS (2002) | Psychopathology influences treatment retention among drug-dependent women. | Cohort ( | What is the relationship between psychiatric morbidity (including personality disorders) and treatment drug out in a group of pregnant drug dependent women? | Study controlled for structural barriers that impede program participation; Group of patients with most severe psychopathology had highest dropout rate, even though they did not have most severe substance use disorder diagnosis. Group with significant substance dependence and predominant borderline personality disorder had the highest retention rate compared with group with little psychopathology and group with more severe psychopathology. | Use self-report tools to evaluate symptoms and diagnoses; did not use SCID “gold standard” to get DSM diagnoses; Only 9% of patients abusing opiates, most 87% abusing cocaine; only 9% opioids |
| Eggleston AM, Calhoun PS, Svikis DS, Tuten M, Chisolm MS, Jones HE (2009) | Suicidality, aggression, and other treatment considerations among pregnant, substance-dependent women with posttraumatic stress disorder. | Cross-sectional ( | What is the relationship between PTSD and SUD and does it confer greater risk and severity than what is seen with SUD and other Axis I disorders? | Three study groups evaluated (SUD-PTSD, SUD-PSY and SUD-only) showed equivalent substance use severity, however the SUD-PTSD group had higher odds of reporting suicidality, aggression, and psychosocial impairment (more problematic relationships, more illegal behavior, more homelessness) than both the SUD-PSY and SUD-only groups. SUD-PTSD groups had high rate of other Axis I diagnoses, similar to that in the SUD-PSY group. Rates and numbers of substances used did not differ | Majority of patients had opioid use disorder, 11% had cocaine use disorder and not opioid; small sample size; psychotic illness was excluded; homogeneous sample in terms of substance use severity |
| Moylan PL, Jones HE, Haug NA, Kissin WB, Svikis DS (2001) | Clinical and psychosocial characteristics of substance-dependent pregnant women with and without PTSD. | Cross-sectional ( | How does the psychiatric and psychosocial functioning of opiate or cocaine dependent pregnant women with and without a diagnosis of PTSD differ? | Women with a diagnosis of PTSD had higher rates of Axis I and Axis II diagnosis than opiate or cocaine dependent women without PTSD. Women with PTSD had higher levels of emotional, physical and sexual abuse, higher rates of suicide attempts, higher ASI impairment on family/social and psychiatric domains. Severity of substance use disorder and group attendance did not differ in women with and without PTSD. | Low rate of PTSD in sample population (19%), which is low compared to other samples with addictions, authors suggest due to assessment being made early in treatment when patients less likely to disclose trauma; only 1 measure used to assess PTSD; Not all women opioid addicted; some cocaine only; 56% were on methadone maintenance |
| Benningfield MM Arria AM, Kaltenbach K, Heil SH, Stine SM, Coyle MG, Fischer G, Jones HE, Martin PR (2010) | Cooccurring psychiatric symptoms are associated with increased psychological, social, and medical impairment in opioid dependent pregnant women. | Secondary analysis of an RCT ( | What is the relationship of psychiatric symptoms to severity of drug use and drug related problems among pregnant women with opioid use disorder? | Majority of sample (50.3%) screened positive for cooccurring psychiatric illnesses, these patients had increased psychiatric and social impairment as measured by ASI; the impaired domains on ASI varied by cooccurring diagnosis; the drug domain was more impaired in subjects diagnosed with MDD and Dysthymia but not other illnesses; the sample showed a low prevalence for PTSD of only 16% and high prevalence of hypomania of 39% | MINI screener used to establish symptoms and diagnosis with no SCID, so the meaning of rates of illness are not well established; only symptoms at intake were measured and no longitudinal assessment of how these progressed during pregnancy; Axis II disorders not evaluated |
| Chisolm MS, Tuten M, Brigham EC, Strain EC, Jones HE (2009) | Relationship between cigarette use and mood/anxiety disorders among pregnant methadone-maintained patients. | Cross-Sectional ( | What is the association between cigarette smoking during pregnancy and psychiatric illness in a population of pregnant substance-dependent patients? | Study finds high rate of smoking (88%) in their sample and smoking (yes/no) was correlated with current symptoms of anxiety or depression, but amount of smoking (# of cigarettes) did not correlate with presence psychiatric illness; the rate of use of nonopioid substance use did not differ between women who smoked and those who did not | Cross-sectional nature of the data precludes mechanisms from being assessed; self-report of smoking used with no biologic confirmations; assessment of psychiatric illness only performed at treatment entry; sample size is small and unequal group size impact power to detect differences |