Title: Psychiatric Comorbidity in SUDs
1Psychiatric Comorbidity in SUDs
- The occurrence of psychiatric illness in an
individual with a SUD - In most settings, refers to occurrence of a
diagnosable psychiatric disorder - Comorbidity of SUDs and diagnosed psychiatric
disorders is substantial - SUD individuals with comorbid psychiatric illness
are referred to as Dual Diagnosis
2 Psychiatric Comorbidity in
NativeHawaiian Pacific Islanders Compared to
Other Populations Measurement Clinical Issues
- George Fein Ph.D.
- President and Senior Scientist,
- Neurobehavioral Research, Inc
- Victoria Di Sclafani Ph.D.
- John A. Burns School of Medicine,
- University of Hawaii at Manoa
3Myths Regarding Psychiatric Comorbidity and SUDs
Myth 1 It is very difficult for dual diagnosis
individuals to achieve abstinence. Myth 2 It
is very difficult for an abstinent individual to
maintain abstinence with a current psychiatric
diagnosis, especially if psychiatric medication
management is needed.
4Psychiatric Comorbidity
- We will present illustrative data from three
studies of alcoholics - 1. Long-Term (avg gt 6 yrs) Abstinent Alcoholics
- 2. Treatment Naïve Actively Drinking Alcohol
- Dependent Sample
- 3. Older Long-Term (avg gt 14 yrs) Abstinent
Alcoholics - Each group vs. its own age and gender
comparable controls.
5Psychiatric DiagnosisLifetime and Current
- Long-term Abstinent Alcoholics
- minimum 6 months, average 6.3 years abstinence
- alcohol dependent sample 34-58 years old (n52)
- Age and gender comparable controls (n48)
6LTAA vs Controls
Lifetime psychiatric diagnoses do not militate
against achieving long-term abstinence in fact,
lifetime psychiatric diagnoses are the norm.
7LTAA vs Controls
Current psychiatric diagnoses (even those treated
with medication) do not militate against
maintaining long-term abstinence.
8Treatment Naïve Alcoholics vs Controls
Treatment Naïve Alcoholics do not evidence more
Lifetime diagnoses than Controls.
9Treatment Naïve Alcoholics vs Controls
There is no difference between Treatment Naïve
Alcoholics and Controls in current psychiatric
diagnoses.
10Older LTAA vs Controls
Older Long-Term Abstinent Alcoholics tend to have
somewhat more psychiatric morbidity than
Controls but less than seen in Middle-Aged
Alcoholics.
11Older LTAA vs Controls
Virtually no current psychiatric morbidity is
found in Older Abstinent Alcoholics.
12Tentative Conclusions
- Middle-aged LTAA have major psychiatric
morbidity. - Older LTAA have minimally more psychiatric
morbidity than controls. - Treatment naïve alcoholics have comparable
psychiatric morbidity to controls.
13Sub-Diagnostic Psychiatric Comorbidity
- Most studies ignore psychiatric symptoms that do
not meet criteria for a diagnosis. - Subthreshold psychiatric disorder data (i.e., Sx
LT the diagnostic threshold) are not presented,
implying that Dx completely addresses the
presence severity of psychiatric morbidity. - Dx results in great loss of sensitivity,
examining only tail of Sx distribution, leaving
the bulk of the Sx distribution unexplored.
14 Sub-Diagnostic Psychiatric
Comorbidity
- Currency of symptoms is usually not assessed
- unless diagnosis is met.
- Thus, diagnostic thinking is reflected even in
- the psychological measures we use.
15 Mood Disorder Symptom Counts LTAA
16Mood Disorder Symptom Counts OAA
17Mood Disorder Symptom Counts TxN
18Anxiety Disorder Symptom Counts LTAA
19 Anxiety Disorder Symptom Counts OAA
20Anxiety Disorder Symptom Counts TxN
21 Externalizing Disorder Symptom Counts
LTAA
22 Externalizing Disorder Symptom Counts
OAA
23 Externalizing Disorder Symptom Counts TxN
24Sub-Diagnostic Psychiatric Comorbidity
- Psychological measures of attitudes, beliefs,
reactions and thoughts also reflect psychiatric
illness (e.g., depressive thinking, poor
self-esteem, etc.) - Such measures and scales are usually not part of
an assessment of psychiatric comorbidity, but
often represent the psychological substrate for
illness (e.g., socialized thinking is
antithetical to antisocial behaviors).
25Mood Psychological Measures LTAA
26Mood Psychological Measures OAA
27Mood Psychological Measures TxN
28 Anxiety Psychological Measures LTAA
29Anxiety Psychological Measures OAA
30 Anxiety Psychological Measures TxN
31 Externalizing Psychological Measures LTAA
32 Externalizing Psychological Measures OAA
33 Externalizing Psychological Measures
TxN
34Conclusions
- Sub-diagnostic psychopathology carries the bulk
of the difference between LTAA and NAC in
psychiatric illness. - Continuous measures of psychiatric illness yield
a more accurate picture of psychiatric
comorbidity than the limited view that is
provided by using only symptomatology that meets
criteria for a diagnosis.
35 NRI Current Procedures c-Dis Follow Up
Questions
- In the last 12 months, have you had symptom?
- How old were you the first time you EVER had
symptom? - When you first felt/experienced this symptom,
was it in the context of seeking/using/withdrawing
from alcohol/drugs? - What percent of the time that you had symptom
was it in association with seeking/using/withdrawi
ng from drugs or alcohol?
36(No Transcript)
37- Older Abstinent Alcoholics (OAA)
- 49 men, 40 women
- age 60-85 years (mean 67.5 years)
- abstinent 6 mos 44 yrs (mean 14.8 yrs)
- Older Non-Alcoholic Controls (ONC)
- 24 men, 29 women
- age 60-85 years (mean 69.3 yrs)
38Diagnoses
- 51.7 of OAA vs. 30.2 of ONC had a lifetime
psychiatric Dx (?2 5.40, p lt .02). - 44.9 of OAA vs. 28.3 of ONC had a lifetime mood
Dx (?2 3.21, p .07). - No differences in anxiety and externalizing
diagnoses ps gt 0.30 - Essentially NO current Diagnoses.
- 4.5 of OAA and 3.8 of ONC
39Symptoms and Psych Measures
- Total Psychiatric Sx 77 ? in OAA
- 50 ? Anxiety Sx in OAA vs. ONC
- 50 ? Mood Sx in OAA vs. ONC
- 250 ? Externalizing Sx in OAA vs. ONC
- Psychological Measures
- OAA vs. ONC ? ASI, no diff STAI- T or S
- OAA vs. ONC ? MMPI-Hy, no diff MMPI-D
- OAA vs. ONC ? MMPI pD, ? CPI Soc Scale
40Conclusions
- Psychiatric disorder is more prevalent in OAA
than ONC. - Psychiatric comorbidity is less in OAA compared
with ONC compared to MAA vs. MNC. - Largest effects in externalizing domain.
- Differences from middle-age study
- Cohort effects
- Selective survivorship
- Selection bias for participating is greater in
older samples
41Sensation Seeking Scales
Scale Abstinent Alcoholics Abstinent Alcoholics Controls Controls Effect Size () Effect Size () Effect Size ()
Scale Male (n28) Female (n24) Male (n25) Female (n23) Group Sex Group x Sex
Disinhibition 4.36 1.393 3.04 1.756 3.68 1.574 3.13 1.180 1.0 9.2 1.7
Boredom Susceptibility 4.32 2.212 2.50 1.414 4.24 2.026 3.26 1.657 0.8 12.6 1.3
Thrill/ Adventure Seeking 7.39 2.470 5.46 2.570 6.12 2.774 5.22 2.907 2.0 6.8 1.0
Experience Seeking 5.04 1.527 5.00 1.103 4.76 1.640 5.30 1.396 0.0 0.8 1.0
Measures are reported as mean standard
deviation. Effect is significant p 0.05,
p 0.01, p 0.001.
42Conclusions
- The propensity towards sensation seeking
normalizes with long-term abstinence. - The measures are sensitive enough to detect
gender differences within LTAA and NC. - We see increased sensation seeking in treatment
naïve actively drinking alcoholics (after
removing items associated with substance use).
43Cognitive Function
- Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure (copy, immediate,
and 20 minute delayed), Trail Making Test A and
B, Symbol Digit Modalities Test, American version
of the Nelson Adult Reading Test, Short Category
Test, Controlled Oral Word Association Test,
Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test, Block Design
Stroop Color and Word Test - MicroCog (MC) Assessment of Cognitive Functioning
- Global Clinical Impairment Score (GCIS)
- 1 for each domain scoring 5-15th ile
- 2 for each domain scoring lt 5th ile
- Summed across 9 domains
44Cognitive Profiles
45Conclusions
- Very long-term abstinence resolves most
neuro-cognitive deficits associated with
alcoholism, except for the suggestion of
lingering deficits in spatial processing.
46Cognitive Function in Older Long-Term Abstinent
Alcoholics
- 91 older (gt60 years of age) abstinent alcoholics
in 3 subgroups - OAA1 abstinence before age 50 (n39)
- OAA2 abstinence achieved 50-60 (n 26)
- OAA3 abstinence after 60 (n26)
- 39 older controls
47Results
- EAA were comparabe to controls, except those
abstinent before 50 were worse than controls on
auditory working memory - EAA had larger craniums than controls
- effect was strongest for those who drank the
longest and had shortest abstinence - Such individuals also performed better cognitively
48Conclusions
- Older alcoholics who drank late into life, but
with than six months abstinence can exhibit
normal cognitive functioning. - Selective survivorship and selection bias likely
play a part in these findings. - Cognitively healthier alcoholics, with more brain
reserve capacity, may be more likely to live into
their 60s 80s with relatively intact
cognition, and to volunteer for studies such as
ours. - Our results do not imply that all elderly
alcoholics with long-term abstinence will attain
normal cognition
49Decision-Making
- Iowa Gambling Task (IGT)
- Task performance
- Voxel-based morphometry
- Balloon Analogue Risk Task
- Preliminary error-related negativity (ERN) data
from treatment-naïve drinking alcoholics
50IGT
51ROI Restricted VBM Shows Amygdala Volume
Reductions
- The views on the right (B.) show the region
of interest (ROI) to which the analysis was
restricted the amygdala (blue) and the
ventromedial prefrontal cortex (magenta). The
views on the left (A.) show the SPM2 areas of
significantly reduced gray matter (orange SPM2
family wise error corrected plt 0.05), and the
spatial uncertainty of that area (green).
52Conclusions
- Alcoholics can achieve long-term abstinence in
spite of persistent deficits in decision- making. - These deficits are associated with reduced gray
matter in regions implicated in similar
impairments in neurological samples. - May result from long-term alcohol dependence, or
may reflect a pre-existing factor that
predisposes one to severe alcoholism.
53ERNs during the BART
- Brain activity during risk-assessment tasks can
provide insights into the mechanisms underlying
impaired behavior on these tasks. - The feedback error-related negativity (F-ERN) is
hypothesized to reflect the valence attached to
the negative consequences of behavior.
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55F-ERN during BART Task
56Results Conclusions
- Within treatment-naïve alcoholics, smaller F-ERN
amplitudes were associated with a greater FHD of
alcohol problems (r -0.567, p 0.007). - Results suggest a possible link between the
genetic vulnerability toward developing
alcoholism and the brains response to the
negative consequences of behavior.
57Region of Interest Analysis
- Most studies measure cortical gray matter volumes
using masks from a common space, ignoring the
variations in cortical folding between subjects. - Our approach accounts for these variations.
- Middle-aged long-term abstinent alcoholics
- 48 NAC, 52 LTAA, 34.4 59.8 years old
58Volume Reductions in LTAA
Parietal ? 6.9, p 0.014 Lateral Parietal ?
7.4, p 0.006
Frontal ? 2.77, NS Primary Sensory ? 9.3, p
0.009
Occipital ? 6.2, p 0.015 Visual Assn ?
7.3, p 0.007 Ant Occipital ? 3.3, p 0.007
Limbic ? 0.9, NS Ant Cingulate ? 4.7, p
0.015
Temporal ? 1.9, NS
59Conclusions
- Reduced visual association and lateral parietal
gray matter is consistent with reduced spatial
processing scores in LTAA. - Absence of reduced temporal lobe gray matter
(which has been linked to alcohol-related damage)
suggests recovery with abstinence, consistent
with intact memory function in this sample.