Schizophrenia
Treatment Concerns Over New Implants and Injections
Powerful new implants and injections could soon revolutionize the
treatment of schizophrenia
and address the perennial concern of doctors and families that patients who
stop taking their medicines may relapse into
psychotic
behavior. The new techniques could deliver medicine for weeks or even
months at a time.
PROPONENTS SAY SUCH treatments, now in varying stages of development, could
eliminate problems with patient compliance if they become widely prescribed.
The new techniques are collectively known as long-acting
medicines because they involve injections that last for long periods and
implants that release drugs slowly. The treatments will not cure schizophrenia,
but doctors say they can help patients control their illness, with its
delusional or disordered
thinking and hallucinations, because they wont have to remember to
take their medicine nearly as often.
Some advocates for the mentally ill are worried that new approaches could
lead to coercive treatment. Proponents say the new technologies can increase
patient choice while lowering the risk of side effects.
Because its a mental illness, there is much more fear of
coercion, said John M. Kane, chairman of psychiatry at Zucker Hillside
Hospital in Glen Oaks, N.Y. But I think that may not take into
consideration the nature of these diseases and how devastating they can be and
how critical it is to prevent relapses and rehospitalization.
The antipsychotic
medicines currently approved in injectable form in the United States come
from an older class of drugs that cause severe side effects in many patients.
Newer medicines called atypical antipsychotics have largely replaced the earlier
drugs, but have not yet been made available in long-acting form.
Now, Janssen Pharmaceutica Products L.P., the maker of
risperidone, the
countrys most frequently prescribed atypical antipsychotic, is applying
to the Food and Drug Administration to market an injectable version. Janssen
said injectable risperidone has been approved in the United Kingdom, Germany,
Austria, New Zealand, Mexico, the Netherlands and Switzerland.
Steven Siegel, a psychiatrist at the University of Pennsylvania, recently
unveiled a device the size of a quarter that could be implanted in patients
with schizophrenia. Siegel hopes the implants, which have yet to be tested in
humans, could one day deliver antipsychotic medicine for a year at a time.
TREND CONTINUES
It is difficult to predict when long-acting antipsychotics with the latest
drugs might reach the market but the trend toward these products is
unmistakably on the horizon.
In schizophrenia, we know that by the end of two years, 75 percent of
people are not taking
their medicine, said Samuel Keith, chairman of psychiatry at the
University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, and a former chief of schizophrenia
research at the National Institute of Mental Health.
Keith said everyone finds taking medicine difficult people given a
course of antibiotics often find they have a couple of unused pills by the last
day. With schizophrenia, this forgetfulness can be compounded by the delusional
and disordered thinking that are hallmarks of the illness.
There is a part of logic that says, If I dont take a
medication, that proves I dont have the illness, said Keith,
who has helped test the injectable form of risperidone for Janssen.
So someone with schizophrenia will say, Im not going to
take my medicine, and the next morning they dont feel different, so
they dont take it that day, either. For a couple of months, you can get
away with it, but ultimately you will relapse.
Relapses can be terrifying and involve patients hearing voices, seeing
hallucinations and being unable to distinguish illusion from reality. Doctors
say each relapse takes something from patients, leaving them with a longer,
harder climb back to normalcy.
Kane said that hospitalizations,
suicidal or aggressive
behavior, homelessness and lost jobs can follow. Within a year, about 60
to 75 percent [of patients] will relapse without medication, he said in
an interview.
PSYCHIATRISTS INPUT
A major reason psychiatrists like long-acting medicines is that they
facilitate monitoring patients, since the implants would be put in place by a
surgeon and injections would be administered by a nurse or another
professional.
If someone is on oral medicines, they could stop taking their
medicines, and no one would know, said Kane, who also helped to test the
injectable form of risperidone.
If a patient did not show up for an injection, however, Kane said doctors
would have a couple of weeks, during which the previous shot was still potent,
to make arrangements to bring in the patient for the follow-up injection.
The prospect of such techniques is raising concerns among some patients that
the new treatments will be used coercively, effectively replacing the locked
wards of mental institutions with what one advocate called a chemical
straitjacket.
As states consider shifting laws that allow the forcible hospitalization of
some psychotic patients to laws that force outpatient treatment, these
advocates worry that injectable medicines may get used against the wishes of
large numbers of patients.
We hate the word compliance, because it makes it sound
like we have to be good little boys and girls, said Nancy Lee Head, who
has schizophrenia and runs support group programs in Washington for the
National Alliance for the Mentally Ill and the DC Mental Health Consumers
League.
Patients with schizophrenia, she said, want to be in charge of their
treatment, just as patients with physical ailments manage their heart
conditions or cancers. Compliance is complying with what someone else has
decided. If we are managing the illness, we are in charge.
Head questioned the need to have doctors administer the injections to keep
tabs on patients. She cited her own management of diabetes: After she went on
oral risperidone, she gained 45 pounds and had to start diabetes medicines
one of the side effects of atypical antipsychotics is weight gain. Head
pointed out that diabetics are given the responsibility of injecting
themselves, even though not taking medicine could have serious consequences.
Head said she was open to simplifying her medical regimen with injections
she was once on 64 pills a day. Having had relapses, she knows the
terrifying feeling of being cut off from reality: She once asked her doctor,
Is my hand real? and sometimes has felt so deadened by her illness
that she has cut her hand just to feel something.
FORCED TREATMENT CONCERNS
But Head is deeply uneasy about forced treatment. Although doctors may think
forcing patients to take medicine is a form of compassion, Head said coercive
treatment only added to her feelings of paranoia and helplessness.
Joseph A. Rogers, executive director of the Mental Health Association of
Southeastern Pennsylvania, himself a patient with bipolar disorder, said he was
not opposed to new treatments. However, he said he is concerned that
pharmaceutical company marketing and doctors talk about compliance would
obscure the reality that the mental health system feels broken to many people
with serious illnesses.
Patients on a biweekly injection regimen, for instance, might not have
enough contact with doctors to discuss side effects, he said. Were
making it easier for states and local governments to find a cost-effective way
to control people instead of treating people.
If patients are not given the right to refuse these medicines, we
could be creating a chemical straitjacket, he added.
Doctors such as Keith and Kane said they hoped the medicines would be given
to patients with full informed consent. In fact, having patients decide to take
an injection while they were healthy and capable of making a good decision
ensured they would not deal with decisions about pills while experiencing
mental distress.
Both doctors and patients agree that one of the greatest benefits of
long-acting medicines is reduced side effects. Pills produce chemical peaks and
troughs in the body, as the level of medicine fluctuates around the optimal
level. The peaks tend to produce side effects.
Injections and implants, on the other hand, can deliver a steadier stream of
medicine, smoothing out the peaks and troughs. Keith said the 4-milligram
injectable form of risperidone, for instance, could deliver as much potency as
a 25-milligram tablet, with the side-effect profile of only a 1-milligram
tablet.
Ultimately, the effectiveness of the new techniques may depend less on the
science and technology of the implants and injections, and more on realigning
attitudes toward the treatment of schizophrenia.
Implantable drugs may do an end run around compliance issues in the
short term, but theyll do nothing to empower consumers to take part in
their recovery, said Robert Bernstein, executive director of the Bazelon
Center for Mental Health Law, an advocacy group.
Depending on how doctors and patients work together, he said,
Injectable psychotropics may be seen as an instrument of control, or as a
more convenient way of taking medicine that consumers are already on.
In Europe, Keith said 30 percent to 50 percent of patients with
schizophrenia receive long-acting antipsychotic injections: It tends to
go to the best patients, because its the best treatment available.
By contrast, barely 5 percent of American patients have tried the injectable
version of the older drugs, and they have mostly been desperate patients.
Siegel, the Penn psychiatrist, traced the roots of patients concerns
about coercion to the period in psychiatry when people with schizophrenia were
seen as social problems to be controlled, instead of patients with a medical
ailment who needed help.
There is still a segment of the population that has a profound
mistrust of psychiatry, he said. We need people to understand we
are not trying to do things to them, but things for them.
Source: By Shankar Vedantam, The Washington Post, Nov. 16, 2002
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