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Dual Diagnosis

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Title: Dual Diagnosis


1
Dual Diagnosis
  • And the key clinical issues
  • Dr Enrico Cementon
  • Dependence Day
  • Dual Diagnosis and Substance Use
  • 21 July, 2007

2
Dual Diagnosis
  • Co-occurrence of mental health substance use
    disorder
  • Narrowed definition in MH literature of serious
    mental illness substance use disorder

3
Mental illness Substance use
  • Comorbidity common
  • Complicate treatment of each other
  • People with MI experience more severe
    consequences of drug use than general population
  • Substance use as common cause of treatment failure

4
Dual diagnosis cohorts
Tier 3 Hi MH with or without SUD
5
Epidemiologic Catchment Area
  • Lifetime prevalence rates
  • ? disorder any subs use disorder any alcohol Dx
    any drug Dx
  • general pop 16.7 13.5 6.1
  • schizophrenia 47 33.7 27.5
  • any affective dis 32 21.8 19.4
  • bipolar dis 56.1 43.6 33.6
  • major depression 27.2 16.5 18
  • dysthymic dis 31.4 20.9 18.9
  • Regier et al (1990)

6
National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing
  • Australia 1997
  • 12-month prevalence study of 10 000 over 18
    y.o.s
  • ICD-10 diagnoses

7
NSMHWBAlcohol-use disorders
  • 6.5 of total 3 abuse, 3.5 dependence
  • 9.4 of men
  • 3.7 of women
  • 10.6 of 18-34 y.o.s
  • (Teeson et al 2000)

8
NSMHWBAlcohol-use disorders
  • Comorbidity
  • 48 of women
  • 34 of men also anxiety, affective or drug-use
    disorder
  • 39 also physical disorder
  • Treatment-seeking 28 esp. GP (Teeson et
    al 2000)

9
NSMHWBOther drug-use disorders
  • 2.2 of total 0.2 abuse, 2 dependence
  • 1.3 of women
  • 3.2 of men
  • 4.9 of 18-34 y.o.s
  • Cannabis-use 1.7 Sedative-use 0.4
  • Stimulant-use 0.3 Opioid-use 0.2
    (Teeson et al 2000)

10
NSMHWBOther drug-use disorders
  • Comorbidity
  • 65 of women
  • 64 of men also other mental disorder (esp.
    anxiety for women, other drug for men)
  • 42 also physical disorder
    (Teeson et al 2000)

11
Demographic Clinical Predictors of Substance
Abuse in Serious Mental Illness
  • Variable Correlate with substance abuse
  • Gender Male
  • Age Young
  • Education Low
  • Premorbid socio-sexual adjustment Good
  • Age first admission Early
  • Treatment compliance Poor
  • Relapse rate High
  • Symptom severity Higher suicidality
  • (Mueser et al 1995)

12
2004 National Drug Strategy Household Survey
  • Australian Institute of Health Welfare
  • Eighth since 1985
  • Lifetime 12 month consumption patterns of all
    drugs as well as attitudes
  • 30 000 Australians 12 years and older
  • Tobacco
  • daily smoking to 17.4 (previously 19.5)

13
2004 NDSHS recent drug use
14
2004 NDSHS drugs ever used
15
Historical background
  • Overnight administrative separation of Mental
    Health Services Drug Treatment Services
  • We can tolerate, but can the patient?

16
Problems with separate systems
  • NOT welcome anywhere people who have both a
    serious psychiatric disorder and problematic drug
    or alcohol use
  • McDermott Pyett (1993)
  • Services differing treatment philosophies
    cultures

17
How MH and AOD services differ
  • MHS
  • Serious mental illness only
  • Assertive case management
  • Involuntary treatment
  • Emphasis on abstinence
  • AOD
  • High prevalence disorders mostly
  • Personal responsibility
  • Voluntary
  • Harm reduction philosophy

18
Implications of comorbidity
  • Homelessness
  • Violence
  • Imprisonment
  • Early mortality
  • e.g. McEvoy (2000)
  • Poorer prognosis
  • Poor Rx compliance
  • Repeated hospitalisation
  • Problems with rehabilitation
  • Suicide e.g. Drake et al (1996)

19
Assessment
  • Raises awareness
  • Brief intervention in itself
  • Provide education
  • Consider future reassessments
  • serial screening

20
Assessment diagnosis
  • Complex relationships anxiety, mood psychotic
    symptoms substance use
  • intoxication-induced or withdrawal-related?
  • or independent?
  • or self-medication?

21
Assessment diagnosis
  • Symptoms during abstinence?
  • duration of abstinence controversial
  • eg. depressed alcoholic men 42 vs.
    6 (Brown Shuckit 1988)
  • Family history of psychiatric disorder?
  • Earlier onset?
  • Past treatment history

(Myrick Brady 2003)
22
Relationship Between Substance Use Depression
  • Depression ? Drug Use
  • Self Medication of Depression, Insomnia, Anergy
  • Drug Use ? Depression
  • Protracted Withdrawal Syndrome
  • Polysubstance Use Common
  • Intoxication, Withdrawal, Chronic Use
  • Drug Using Lifestyle
  • Adaptation to Drug Free Lifestyle
  • The Two Interact
  • E.g. ? risk of suicide

23
Diagnosing Depression In The Substance Abuser
  • Depressive Symptoms
  • Lowered Mood
  • Anhedonia
  • Depressive Cognitions
  • What Happens in Periods of Sobriety?
  • Mood Prior To Onset of Drug Use
  • Family History
  • Response to Past Treatments

24
Consider Substance Abuse In Depressed Patient
When
  • Always
  • Treatment Refractory
  • Poor Compliance With Treatment
  • Significant Anxiety Symptoms
  • Significant Somatic Symptoms

25
Substance Use Causing Depression
  • Intoxication
  • Alcohol
  • Withdrawal
  • Benzodiazepines, Psychostimulants, Cannabis
  • Chronic Use
  • Alcohol, Benzodiazepines, Cannabis
  • Protracted Withdrawal - Any Substance

26
Effects of Giving up Substance Using Lifestyle
  • Grief Reaction
  • Loss of Usual Coping Mechanism
  • Loss of Best Friend (bottle or drug)
  • Loss of Area of Competence
  • Loss of Meaning in Life
  • Loss of Excitement
  • Loss of Substance Using Friends
  • Inadequate Coping Skills become Obvious
  • Confrontation with Effects of Drug Use
  • Physical, Psychological, Social

27
Treatment
28
Special challenges in treatment of dual diagnosis
  • ? clinical severity
  • Comorbid disorders ? chronicity
  • 1disorder more severe or adverse life
    situations?
  • ? exposure to environmental risks
  • ? set of pharmacoRx options
  • Abuse potential
  • Risk of interactions
  • Rx less effective
  • Kessler (2004)

29
Best practice guidelines
  • Treatment Improvement Protocol (TIP) Series by
    Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (1995 and
    2005 USA)
  • Best Practice Concurrent Mental Health
    Substance Use Disorders by Centre for Addiction
    Mental Health (2002 Canada) (see
    www.cds-sca.com)
  • The Assessment Management of People with
    Co-existing Substance Use Mental Health
    Disorders by National Centre for Treatment
    Development (1999 New Zealand)

30
Best practice guidelines
31
Models of comorbidity treatment
  • 1. Integrated
  • 2. Sequential
  • 3. Parallel

32
1. Integrated treatment
  • Mental health treatments and substance abuse
    treatments are brought together
  • same clinicians/support workers, or team of
    clinicians/support workers
  • same program
  • to ensure a consistent explanation of
    illness/problems and a coherent prescription for
    treatment rather than a contradictory set of
    messages from different providers

33
2. Sequential treatment
  • One treatment (either mental health or substance
    abuse) followed by the other treatment
  • first deal with one set of problems and then the
    other
  • for comorbid anxiety/mood-substance use disorders
  • eg. 1 alcoholism ? 2 depression

34
3. Parallel treatment
  • concurrent treatment of both the psychiatric
    disorder(s) and substance use disorder(s) by two
    separate agencies, BUT
  • different goals eg. abstinence vs. harm min
  • different methods eg. confrontation vs.
    client-centredness assertive case management vs.
    personal responsibility
  • exclusion of particular groups of comorbidity
  • disputes over prime clinical responsibility

35
Traditional management approach in MHS
  • Under detection of AOD use disorder
  • Excess initial focus on establishing 1º - 2º
    diagnosis ? sequential treatment
  • frequently unsuccessful in this population
  • misdiagnosis of psychotic disorder
  • inappropriate treatment
  • to fro between mental health and DA services,
    eventual loss to follow-up

36
Dual Focus Approach
  • 1. Severity of presenting symptoms
  • Medical
  • Psychiatric
  • Substance use
  • 2. Crisis intervention management
  • 3. Stabilisation
  • 4. Diagnosis over long-term contact
  • 5. Longitudinal, multiple contact treatment
    TIP Series ( 1995)

37
Integrated treatment
  • Components
  • inpatient care for stabilisation, assessment
    referral/linkage only
  • case management based on stage of treatment
  • close monitoring
  • substance abuse Rx
  • education, harm minimisation, motivational
    interviewing, self-help groups
  • rehabilitation, housing
  • pharmacotherapy

Drake Mueser 2000
38
Treatment phases in dual diagnosis
  • Engagement
  • Persuasion
  • Active treatment
  • Relapse prevention
  • Osher Kofoed (1989)

39
Treatment phases
  • Persuasion
  • Difficulties
  • Social reasons for use
  • Lack of usual social pressures
  • Tendency to attribute use to mental illness
  • Cognitive difficulties e.g. FTD, depressive
    cognitions, cognitive impairment, negative
    symptoms/avolition
  • Impulse control problems
  • Motivational Interviewing
  • ? Encourage CHANGE
  • Role of hospitalisation

40
Pharmacological treatment of dual diagnosis
patients
  • Stabilisation of acute medical conditions
  • Detoxification
  • ? withdrawal Sx
  • Prevent serious complications
  • DTs, seizures, exacerbation of psychosis, death
  • Concurrent psychiatric Rx

41
Pharmacological treatment of dual diagnosis
patients
  • Clear treatment goals
  • Mutually agreed
  • Consider
  • Drugs used
  • Presenting symptoms
  • Severity of withdrawal
  • Accompanying medical conditions
  • Patients stage of change motivation

42
Research/Treatment outcomes
43
Comorbid Depression Alcoholism
  • Dx substance use disorder almost always excluded
    from antidepressant trials
  • Modest effect of antidepressant (TCA, SSRI) on
    depression, but probably no effect on alcohol
    intake
  • Usually concurrent counselling
    Thase et al (2001)

44
Comorbid Depression Substance dependence
  • Meta-analysis of 14 RCTs of antidepressant Rx in
    depression substance dependence
  • 5 TCA, 7 SSRI, 2 other
  • Pooled effect size 0.38 (antidepressant response
    52.1 vs. 38.1 placebo)
  • Dx depression gt1/52 abstinence predicted stronger
    AD response
  • Pooled effect size on substance use 0.25
  • (Nunes Levin 2004)

45
Comorbid schizophrenia substance dependence
  • Most evidence for Clozapine
  • Case series for other atypical APs
  • Olanzapine
  • Risperidone
  • Quetiapine cravings management

Le Fauve et al (2004)
46
Other issues in PharmacoRx
  • Interactions
  • Pharmacokinetic Pharmacodynamic
  • Risks
  • OD, sedation
  • Avoid benzodiazepines
  • Consider Rx specific to DA field
  • Anticraving Acamprosate, Naltrexone
  • Substitutions Methadone, Buprenorphine
  • Disulfiram renaissance

47
Harm Reduction orAbstinence?
  • HR often more acceptable or realistic
  • Compatible approaches on a continuum
  • Trial controlled less harmful use strategies
  • Raise awareness of harms interactions with
    psychiatric symptoms
  • Uncontrolled use ? abstinence option
  • Attempt abstinence in
  • Acute psychosis, aggression, suicidality

48
Psychosocial interventions
  • Psychoeducation
  • Self-monitoring e.g. drug use diary
  • Motivational interviewing
  • Family interventions
  • Lifestyle
  • Relapse prevention, CBT

49
Conclusions
  • Dual diagnosis problems are common
  • Maintain high index of suspicion as comorbidity
    is the expectation rather than the exception
  • Earliest intervention
  • Integrated treatment
  • Current best practice
  • Special challenges
  • E.g. Dual-focus approach, long term perspective
  • Developing evidence base

50
My experiences
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