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Gender Issues In Schizophrenia

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Title: Gender Issues In Schizophrenia


1
Gender Issues In Schizophrenia
  • Dr. Ahmed Shoka
  • Consultant Psychiatrist

2
Introduction
  • Gender issues have long been of interest to both
    schizophrenia researchers and clinicians given
    the differences in the neurobiology,
    epidemiology, treatment responses and social
    context of the illness in women and men.
  • Antipsychotic prescription guidelines do not
    differ between male and female patients,yet human
    studies have shown that the pharmaco- dynamics of
    drugs differ between the two sexes

3
Introduction
  • Women bodies,on average ,contain 25 more adipose
    tissue than those of men and most antipsychotics
    are lipophilic
  • Are optimal maintenance regimens of
    antipsychotics the same for women and men?
  • To minimise the resulting side effects,should
    there be longer intervals between doses in women
    than men?

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5
Some Gender Differences
  • Rates of side effects to most drugs are reported
    to be higher in women than men.
  • Women undergo menstrual cycles, and many take
    contraceptive pills .What is known about
    interactions between hormones and
    antipsychotics?. Should dose regimens in women be
    altered during menstrual cycle, pregnancy,
    postpartum period and the menopause.

6
Another Important Factor
  • Women in treatment for schizophrenia,more so than
    men,take a variety of adjunct drugs in addition
    to antipsychotics. In other words,there are more
    opportunities for drug interaction, culminating
    in the possibility of lowered or raised
    antipsychotic serum levels.
  • Antipsychotics are frequently prescribed for
    untoward behaviour(e.g.,aggression), reported
    higher prescribed doses in men may be due to this
    and not to response factors.

7
Sex Differences That Affect Drug Response In
Schizophrenia
  • Diagnosis is delayed in women
  • Deficit symptoms are more prevalent in men
  • Therapeutic alliance is stronger in women
  • Men smoke more and use more substances of abuse
  • Women have more comorbid problems (mood
    problems,sleep disturbances,pain conditions,
    allergies.endocrine disturbances,eating
    disorders).They require more concomitant
    medications.

8
Making The diagnosis in Women and Men
  • Diagnosis of schizophrenia is usually made
    between ages of 15 and 25.During those 10 years,
    schizophrenia is diagnosed in 12 men to every 10
    women.This may be because the onset of
    schizophrenia is delayed in women.
  • Greater exposure to birth injuries in males.
  • Neuroprotective effect of female hormones.
  • Less laterlisation of the female brain.
  • Greater exposure of males to head trauma.

9
OR
  • It may be that men come to medical attention
    earlier than women because of the nature of their
    behaviour when they are psychotic.

10
OR
  • It may be that women with schizophrenia are
    initially misdiagnosed.

11
OR
  • A schizophrenic illness initially diagnosed as
    depression or a bipolar disorder (i.e.,in women)
    means that antidepressants and mood stabilisers
    have preceded treatment with antipsychotics. Such
    prior treatment canprimeneural networks and
    result in an unanticipated response later

12
Course Of Schizophrenia in Women And Men
  • Women experience less severe symptoms, fewer
    hospitalistions, shorter admissions, more
    post-hospitalisation employment, less trouble
    with the law and more intimate relationship than
    men.
  • Response to antipsychotic drug treatment is more
    robust in women than men.
  • Schizophrenia mortality from unnatural factors (
    suicide, accident, homicide) is significantly
    higher in men than in women.

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14
Schizophrenia In Men
  • Symptoms appear years before they do in women
    (ages 15-20 compared to ages 20-25 for women).
  • Men have more subtle neurological abnormalities.
  • They have more deficit symptoms such as the lack
    of will and directed energy.
  • They have difficulty planning, completing things
    or making decisions.

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16
Why Schizophrenia Hits Men Harder?
  • Recent imaging studies in a Johns Hopkins lab
    suggest that the way schizophrenia shapes the
    brains of men and women may underline these
    gender differences.
  • Godfrey Pearlson focused on a part of the
    cerebral cortex called the inferior parietal
    lobule (IPL).
  • IPL is a sort of neural crossroads where pathways
    from many different brain structures converge.
    Each brain hemisphere contains an IPL.

17
To Follow
  • Left IPL is involved in visual perception and
    spatial relationships.
  • Right IPL governs persons understanding of where
    each body part is in relation to another.
  • Men have a larger IPL than women and their left
    IPL is larger than their right in contrast to
    women.
  • Schizophrenic men have a reversed asymmetry in
    the IPL, compared to healthy men.

18
To Follow
  • The overall size of the IPL of schizophrenic men
    is 16 smaller than in healthy men.
  • Women with schizophrenia do not show significant
    difference in IPL size.
  • There is probably something in the whole circuit
    of which the IPL is the part that gets miswired
    in schizophrenia.

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20
Antipsychotic Treatment Response And Serum Levels
In Men And Women
  • Genetics, age,height,weigh,lean-fat ratio, diet,
    exercise, cocurrent disease, smoking and alcohol
    ,and the administration of cocomitant drugs all
    contribute to antipsychotic drug response as does
    end-organ sensitivity.
  • Men and women show differences in all these
    variables , either as a result of the action of
    sex-specific hormones or of divergent gender
    roles.
  • Women have higher antipsychotic plasma levels
    than men after receiving the same dose of drug

21
The Oestrogen Factor
  • Oestrogens effects are often cited as a possible
    biological modulator influencing the time of
    onset, course, and response to treatment in women
    with schizophrenia.
  • The decline in oestrogen levels that occurs at
    menopause has been suggested as a factor
    contributing to late-onset schizophrenia in women
    and higher neuroleptic doses in psychotic women
    in their forties than in younger women.

22
Menstrual Cycle
  • It has been postulated that hormonal fluctuations
    within phases of the menstrual cycle may
    influence pharmacokinetics and pharmaco-dynamics
    of drugs.Menstrual cycle changes do occur in
    renal,cardiovascular,haematological and immune
    sysytems and could also theoretically affect
    protein binding and the volume of distribution of
    a particular compound.
  • Disrupted menstrual cycles and amenorrhoea
    associated with schizophrenia are noted before
    the introduction of neuroleptics.

23
Menstrual Cycle
  • As antipsychotic drugs can also cause abnormal
    menses and amenorrhoea, it is sometimes unclear
    whether the disturbance is due to the disease
    ,the drugs, or both.
  • It is possible that women with schizophrenia ,
    given their brain disease, will be especially
    vulnerable to drug-induced dysregulation of their
    hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis.
  • All traditional antipsychotic drugs via their
    prolactin-elevating properties may induce
    reproductive and sexual side effects.

24
Fertility and Schizophrenia
  • The fertility of men and women with schizophrenia
    has been found to be reduced compared to their
    unaffected siblings with males showing greater
    reduction in reproductive fitness than females.
  • Causes include illness itself, drugs used to
    treat it, societal factors such as
    institutionalisation and stigmatisation of people
    with severe mental illness.

25
The Evidence
  • In a prospective drug-naïve population,
    antipsychotic response was shown to be superior
    in women and in chronically ill population,men
    were found to require twice as high a dose as
    women for effective maintenance. But studies
    comparing men and women are few.

26
The Evidence
  • One study found no effect of menstrual cycle on
    cytochrome enzymes 2D6,3A or 1A2 suggesting that
    antipsychotic levels should be impervious to
    menstrual phase.

27
Drug Interactions
  • Women are more likely than men to be taking
    antidepressants,mood stabilisers,analgesics, and
    contraceptives or hormone replacements, and these
    agents can interact with antipsychotics
    especially those processed mainly by the CYP2D6
    enzyme sybsystem.
  • Long-term administration of St.Johns wort
    resulted in a significant and selective induction
    of CYP3A activity in the intestinal wall-i.e., it
    potentially reduced the efficacy of ziprasidone
    and quetiapine.

28
Drug Interactions
  • SSRIs were significantly associated with 4-6 fold
    higher concentrations of risperidone.
  • Oral contraceptives inhibit the enzyme CYP1A2
  • Ziprasidone,co-administered with ethinyl
    estradiol and levonorgestrel ,did not lead to a
    loss of contraceptive efficacy nor increase the
    risk of adverse events
  • Smoking induces CYP1A2, the main metabolising
    enzyme for olanzapine. This enzyme seems to be
    less active in women than men.

29
Volume Of Distribution
  • The volume of distribution of lipophilic drugs ,
    such as antipsychotics, is greater in women than
    men blood volume is smaller, but lipid
    compartments are larger.In women , the proportion
    of adipose tissue ranges from 33-48 in contrast
    with 18-36 in men, this prolongs the half-life
    of antipsychotics in the body,leading to
    accumulation over time, a phenomenon that becomes
    important when administering depot
    injections.After a steady state is achieved,dose
    intervals for women should be longer than for men

30
Treatment Side Effects
  • The incidence and severity of antipsychotic side
    effects are heavily dependent on a serum level.
  • Acute dystonia, long thought to be more prevalent
    among men, has been shown, in a
    first-episode,fixed-dose,10 week studyto occur
    at equivalent doses, more often in women.
  • TD still frequently cited as most common in
    elderly women, has been shown by a cohort study
    to be more risk factor for elderly men, although
    its severity may be relatively greater in women
    in their later years.

31
Treatment Side Effects
  • Antipsychotic side effects may hold different
    significance for men and women.On the whole , men
    are most disturbed by the effects that interfere
    with performance, especially sexual.
  • Women are more distressed by effects that detract
    from their appearance like obesity.
  • The results of several trials confirm that women
    are more susceptible to drug-induced
    hyperprolactiaemia than men.

32
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33
Pregnancy And Schizophrenia
  • Denial of pregnancy is associated with a
    diagnosis of chronic schizophrenia.
  • Despite clinicians perception that women with
    schizophrenia improve during pregnancy, for many
    of these women pregnancy is a very stressful time
    with worsening of mental status especially in
    younger women with unwanted pregnancies.
  • A woman with delusions or psychotic denial is
    less likely to detect signs of labour and
    impending delivery.

34
Prescribing IN Pregnancy
  • Consider non drug options
  • Avoid drugs if possible during weeks 6-10
  • Use antipsychotics about which most is known
    during pregnancy
  • Keep doses low before delivery
  • Increase dose postpartum
  • Have patient take medications just before
    infants longest sleep of the day
  • Consult with paediatrician

35
Concerns During Pregnancy
  • Altered pharmacokinetics across the 3 trimesters
  • Fear of teratogenesis
  • Need to safeguard the smooth progress of labour
    and delivery
  • Need to prevent withdrawal effects in the neonate
  • Concerns about subtle effects on the infants
    neurudevelopment

36
FDA Use-In-Pregnancy Ratings
  • Category A Controlled studies show no risk to
    the foetus.
  • Category B No evidence of risk in humans
    either animal findings show risk, but human
    findings do not.
  • Category C Risk cannot be ruled out human
    studies are lacking. Potential benefits outweigh
    risks.
  • Category D Positive evidence of risk, data show
    risk to the foetus. Nevertheless, potential
    benefit may outweigh tisks.
  • Category X Contraindicated in pregnancy studies
    in humans or animals or postmarketing reports
    have shown foetal risk that clearly outweigh any
    possible benefit.

37
The Evidence
  • A recent study of over 2000 births to mothers
    diagnosed with schizophrenia found significantly
    increased risks for stillbirth, infant death,
    preterm delivery, low birth weight and small size
    for gestational age.
  • Another study of over 2000 children of women with
    schizophrenia found that these infants had an
    increased risk of postneonatal death largely
    explained by an increase in sudden infant death
    syndrome.
  • Olanzapine appears relatively safe.

38
Lactation
  • A drug that is safe for use during pregnancy may
    not be safe for the nursing infant.
  • Exposure to antipsychotics in breast milk
    markedly differs from exposure to antipsychotics
    by the foetus during pregnancy.
  • For any drug in breast milk, infants should be
    exposed to less than 10 of the dose per weight
    that would be prescribed to them directly.
  • The literature suggests that infant serum
    concentrations of antipsychotics are largely
    unpredictable.

39
Antipsychotics In Postpartum Period
  • Prolactin-sparing antipsychotic may be useful,
    e.g., olanzapine and quetiapine.
  • Clozapine use is restricted because of the
    haematological risk.
  • The risk of relapse of schizophrenia during this
    time is also significant like the mood disorders.

40
Conclusion
  • While schizophrenia is not a womans disease,
    women with schizophrenia may benefit from
    gender-focused management including strategies
    such as education and counseling about
    contraception and sexuality, support for
    parenting and integrated medical and psychiatric
    care specific to the stage of the reproductive
    cycle.

41
Conclusion
  • Sex differences in response to and side effects
    from medication and the modifying effects of
    hormones are evolving areas of study that may
    advance care for both men and women with
    schizophrenia.
  • The role of prolactin-sparing antipsychotics in
    treatment needs to be better understood.

42
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43
  • Thank you

44
Introduction
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45
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49
Real Life
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50
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51
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