双相情感障碍的合理多药治疗。

Epilepsy research. Supplement Pub Date : 1996-01-01
R M Post, T A Ketter, P J Pazzaglia, K Denicoff, M S George, A Callahan, G Leverich, M Frye
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引用次数: 0

摘要

双相情感疾病是一种不容易用单一药物治疗的综合征。大约50%的患者对锂的反应不足,大多数患者需要补充抗抑郁药、抗躁狂药、抗精神病药或催眠药物。这些传统的辅助药物有潜在的问题。抗抑郁药可能诱发躁狂症(其发生率大约是安慰剂的两倍)或导致周期加速。抗精神病药可能与更深刻或更长时间的抑郁期有关,并明显增加迟发性运动障碍的风险,双相情感障碍患者尤其容易出现这种情况。此外,已知有一些亚组患者对锂反应不良。这些患者包括快速循环、躁狂症、共病药物或酒精滥用、抑郁-躁狂-健康间隔模式(D-M-I与M-D-I模式相反)和一级亲属中没有双相情感障碍家族史的患者。越来越多的人认识到,抗惊厥药卡马西平和丙戊酸盐在双相情感障碍的急性和长期治疗中是锂的有效替代品或辅助剂。理想情况下,人们会想要评估对锂无反应的患者在使用锂和抗惊厥药物联合治疗之前是否对单独的抗惊厥药物有反应。然而,从临床角度来看,通常使用抗惊厥药物辅助锂来评估这种组合的疗效并建立情绪稳定更为方便。当不停用锂时,锂停药期间发病率的增加也不会发生,也不会影响新药的评价。我们建议最初使用锂的急性辅助药物与抗惊厥药物卡马西平或丙戊酸钠(而不是神经抑制剂)一起使用,以便在个体急性发作时评估其疗效,并在长期预防中有可能产生积极反应。具有抗惊厥特性的催眠苯二氮卓类药物,如氯硝西泮或劳拉西泮,常用于帮助逐步加重的双相情感障碍患者诱导睡眠,也可能是有用的辅助药物。单用卡马西平或丙戊酸钠反应不足的患者可能对联合抗惊厥药有反应。以类似的方式,一个人也可以使用几种情绪稳定药物(锂和抗痉挛药,如卡马西平或丙戊酸)来治疗抑郁症的突破,然后增加这种组合(如果必要的话)与儿茶酚胺活性抗抑郁药,如安非他酮或血清素选择性再摄取抑制剂(SSRI),如氟西汀,帕罗西汀,舍曲林或必要时单胺氧化酶抑制剂(MAOI)。一旦患者对联合用药产生反应,就很难确定最后添加的药物是帮助患者达到缓解的关键因素,还是只使用这种药物就可能出现缓解。对于那些经过多年的连续试验后才最终稳定在复杂的多药方案下的患者,保守的方法是有价值的;在这种情况下,随着治疗方案中某一种药物的逐渐减少,疾病再次恶化的潜在风险。因此,实施合理的多药治疗时,应仔细描述病史(通常使用生命图方法),并对副作用进行有针对性的治疗结果滴定,对对单一治疗没有充分反应的个体患者进行顺序临床试验。通过这种方式,希望药物之间的药效学差异可以最大化,药代动力学和副作用可以最小化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rational polypharmacy in the bipolar affective disorders.

Bipolar affective illness represents a syndrome not readily treated by single agents. Approximately 50% of patients are inadequately responsive to lithium and the majority of patients require supplemental antidepressants, antimanic, antipsychotic or hypnotic medications. These traditional adjunctive medications are associated with potential problems. Antidepressants may precipitate mania (at a rate about double that of placebo) or cause cycle acceleration. Neuroleptics may be associated with either more profound or longer depressive phases, and clearly increase the risk of tardive dyskinesia, to which bipolar patients appear particularly predisposed. Moreover, there are subgroups of patients who are known to be poorly responsive to lithium. These include patients with rapid cycling, dysphoric mania, co-morbid drug or alcohol abuse, a pattern of depression-mania-well interval (D-M-I as opposed to the M-D-I pattern), and patients without a family history of bipolar illness in first-degree relatives. There is increasing recognition that the anticonvulsants carbamazepine and valproate are effective alternatives or adjuncts to lithium in the acute and long-term treatment of bipolar illness. Ideally, one would want to assess whether patients who were unresponsive to lithium were responsive to an anticonvulsant alone prior to utilizing lithium in addition to anticonvulsant combination therapy. However, from the clinical perspective, it is often more expedient to use an anticonvulsant adjunctively to lithium to assess the efficacy of this combination and establish mood stabilization. When lithium is not discontinued, the increased morbidity during lithium withdrawal also would not occur and would not confound the evaluation of the new agent. We suggest the initial use of acute adjuncts to lithium with the anticonvulsants carbamazepine or valproate (instead of neuroleptics) so that their efficacy can be assessed in the individual's acute episode, with the likelihood of a positive response in longer-term prophylaxis. Hypnotic benzodiazepines with anticonvulsant properties, such as clonazepam or lorazepam, are often used to help to induce sleep in escalating bipolar patients, and may be useful adjuncts as well. Patients who were inadequately responsive to either carbamazepine or valproate alone may be responsive to the anticonvulsant combination. In a similar fashion, one can also utilize several mood-stabilizing drugs (lithium and an anticonvulsant such as carbamazepine or valproate) in the treatment of depressive breakthroughs, and then augment this combination (if necessary) with a catecholamine-active antidepressant such as bupropion or a serotonin-selective reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) such as fluoxetine, paroxetine, sertraline or if necessary a monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI). Once the patient has responded to a combination of drugs, it becomes problematic to decide whether the last agent added was the crucial ingredient in helping the patient achieve remission or that remission might have occurred with this agent alone. A conservative approach would have merit in patients who are finally stabilized on complex polypharmacy regimens only after many years of sequential trials; in this instance, the potential risk of re-exacerbating the illness with a taper of one of the drugs in the regimen. Rational polypharmacy should thus be implemented with careful delineation of the prior course of illness (typically using life chart methodology) and targeted treatment outcomes titrated against side effects, using sequential clinical trials in individual patients who have not adequately responded to monotherapy. In this fashion, it is hoped that pharmacodynamic differences among agents can be maximized and pharmacokinetic and side effects minimized.

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