it’s only a blog…

Posted on Wednesday 22 May 2013

The DSM-5 Task Force and its antics have dominated and embarrassed psychiatry for several years now, and like the swirling winds in Oklahoma, left a swath of destruction in its wake that will be long remembered. It has certainly been the noisiest DSM Revision effort in history, but is substantively of almost no consequence. While APA President Dr. Jeffery Lieberman calls it a "gold standard," it’s hard to see that it’s very different from the DSM-IV of 1994. The messiness of the Depression and Anxiety categories is, if anything, messier. There are some silly additions like renaming Dr. Biederman’s Bipolar Child as Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder, the invention of Somatic Symptom Disorder, and other made up place holders that won’t lead to any deeper understanding of human experience or biology. So I guess the only "gold" involved that I can see is the $25 M they left along the way.

Looking over the meeting schedule and the daily bulletins, if you subtract all the DSM-5 goings-on, there wasn’t much left. A new CEO I’ve never heard of with a lot of administrative background. A lot of politically correctness – LGBT disaster studies, bullying, gun control, minorities, prevention – things that matter but not much in the way of scientific teeth. There were lots of "advances in…" and "overview of…" and less "neurobiology of…" than usual. Drs. Alan Schatzberg and John Rush were there with an update on iSPOT [without Dr. Nemeroff]. Dr. Nemeroff had only one session on aging, whoops – replaced by the incoming APA President, Dr. Paul Summergrad [right].

There was not much about this meeting that caught my attention one way or another other than following the DSM-5 launch, and even going over the schedule of sessions and symposia, it all seemed pretty bland. Maybe I’m just getting old and hard to engage, but maybe not. Maybe there just wasn’t a lot there. It felt like a wake. On the other hand, all week long I’ve had an odd non-evidenced-based feeling – one that surprised me. The feeling is, "It’s over" – something of a relief feeling. I’m going to have to cogitate on what "It" really means. First shot is that "It" is the strangle-hold that a particular group of highly placed industry-affiliated psychiatrists have had on the specialty for several decades that has finally begun to play itself out. You can all name the ones I’m talking about. Their names fill the posts of this blog [but not the APA program].

My intuition, real or imagined, doesn’t change what a debacle the DSM-5 has been or negate the RDoC fantasy-land discussions. It doesn’t mean that Dr. Trivedi isn’t trying to introduce some new SSRI-like antidepressant. But somehow, it feels like the junk-scientists are headed for the margins where they belong and psychiatry is about to be in a position for some rational reappraisal, if there’s anyone still around that can bring it off. Unless Dr. Lieberman meets the Buddha on the road, he’s not the one to do it. But for whatever it’s worth, I’m allowed to report on my "It’s over" feeling. After all, it’s only a blog…
Mickey @ 10:08 pm
Filed under: OPINION
off-the-cuff…

Posted on Tuesday 21 May 2013

In rural America, we do a lot of driving. The churches along the two lane roads have marquees that post quips like "Would you rather be Grumbly Hateful or Humbly Grateful" [I expect there are books and web sites filled with such things]. Yesterday’s gem was "When looking for faults, use a mirror, not a telescope." When I got home and read the article below, that marquee came immediately to mind:
DSM-5: Caught between Mental Illness Stigma and Anti-Psychiatry Prejudice
Scientific American: Mind
By Jeffrey A. Lieberman
American Psychiatric Association President
May 20, 2013

Like many psychiatrists, I have been amazed by the debates surrounding the DSM-5, the first major revision of the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders in nearly twenty years, which was just released. Never before has a thick medical text of diagnostic nomenclature been the subject of so much attention. Although I was heartened to see more and more people discussing the real-world issues and challenges — for patients, families, clinicians and caregivers – within mental health care, for which the book offers an up-to-the-minute diagnostic GPS, I was also alarmed at the harsh criticism of the field of psychiatry and the APA. Consequently, I believe that as you read and watch this increased coverage, it’s important to understand the difference between thoughtful, legitimate debate, and the inevitable outcry from a small group of critics – made louder by social media and support from dubious sources — who have relentlessly sought to undermine the credibility of psychiatric medicine and question the validity of mental illness.

DSM-5 has ignited a broad dialogue on mental illness and opened up a conversation about the state of psychiatry and mental healthcare in this country. Critiques have ranged in focus from the inclusion of specific disorders in DSM-5, to the concern over a lack of biological measures which define them. Some have even questioned the entire diagnostic system, urging us to look with an eye focused on the impact to patients. These are the kinds of debate that I hope will continue long after DSM-5’s shiny cover becomes worn and wrinkled. Such meaningful discourse only fuels our ability to produce a manual that best serves those touched by mental illness…

The "I have been amazed…" from Dr. Lieberman is his standard fare, either a literary device or the reflection of someone who is perplexed that others don’t think his thoughts. Just one example from last year’s pipeline summit about the drug companies pulling out of CNS drug development:
    “There are huge unmet clinical needs in mental disorders and addiction,” said Jeffrey Lieberman, M.D., incoming president-elect of APA and chair of psychiatry at Columbia University, who moderated the morning session. “There should be tremendous interest in this area, but there is not.”
Other than his feigned [or worse, genuine] amazement, he comports himself well in these opening remarks. He at least acknowledges that there are some things to complain about with the DSM-5. That’s better than Drs. Kupfer, Regier, and Scully have been able to muster over the recent years. He should’ve stopped there.
But there’s another type of critique that does not contribute to this goal. These are the groups who are actually proud to identify themselves as “anti-psychiatry.” These are real people who don’t want to improve mental healthcare, unlike the dozens of psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers and patient advocates who have labored for years to revise the DSM, rigorously and responsibly. Instead, they are against the diagnosis and treatment of mental illnesses — which improves, and in some cases saves, millions of lives every year — and “against” the very idea of psychiatry, and its practices of psychotherapy and psychopharmacology. They are, to my mind, misguided and misleading ideologues and self-promoters who are spreading scientific anarchy…
And then he’s off and running. I’ll leave what follows for your own reading. But here in his opening gambit before he even begins his rant, he goes all ad hominem by simplifying and attacking his designated enemies. There are indeed such people scattered among the critics that he’s about to lambast. But he appears to be oblivious to the fact that what makes that small group of "ideologues and self-promoters" he’s going after "misguided and misleading" is that they are doing exactly the same thing that he, Jeffrey Lieberman MD President of the American Psychiatric Association, is doing in this very piece he’s writing. They are depersonifying their targets, seeing them as filled with only evil destructive motives, and portraying themselves as the heroic others engaged in a holy quest for "truth, justice, and the American way." In the words of the roadside sign, "All telescope and no mirror."

I don’t like it when people use the word psychiatrist as an epithet either. It kind of hurts. It’s easier to shrug off when it’s an obvious attack, but harder when it’s closer to the mark. Like many of psychiatry’s critics, I don’t like being disrespectfully labeled and simplified any more than they do. I find myself on the wrong end of many labels at times: psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, southerner, white guy, man, liberal, democrat, etc. And I admit I can do it too – simplify critics and spit. It’s a human thing, that old Talion Law [an eye for an eye] that’s built into all of us. But Dr. Lieberman is in no position to use the valuable space afforded him in the Scientific American for such trivia. Here’s an off-the-cuff alternative:
    "While some of the criticism has come from small groups who would criticize anything we might do, that’s to be expected. More troubling is the criticism from our colleagues in psychiatry, other mental health specialties, and particularly patients. They worry about inappropriate labeling; about influences from industry and other conflicts of interest in recommending medication treatment, minimizing side effects and maximizing drug efficacy; about psychiatrists not spending enough time with patients to understand the context of their lives; about being overly enthusiastic about the exciting but distant frontiers of neuroscience; about over-diagnosing and over-medicating; and more." The traditional role of psychiatrists is listening, and I’ve heard those messages. In my coming year as President, I intend to lay the groundwork for seriously looking into each of these complaints and can assure you that they will be thoroughly and fairly studied. While many of those criticisms can be traced to outside forces, that’s no excuse for psychiatry to avoid taking a long genuine look in the mirror. And I intend for us to do just that."
Not bad for a first shot from an old guy…
Mickey @ 2:18 pm
Filed under: OPINION
an hour and ten minutes worth hearing…

Posted on Tuesday 21 May 2013


[Lieberman, Frances, Horowitz]


[Greenberg]

Mickey @ 12:20 am
Filed under: OPINION
simply put…

Posted on Tuesday 21 May 2013

DSM-5: A Manual Run Amok
It’s time for psychiatry to drop its field guide and try to learn about mental ills
Wall Street Journal
By PAUL MCHUGH
May 17, 2013

… With its third edition [DSM-III], the manual [which had existed since 1952] underwent a transformation. Its editors focused on codifying symptoms that seemed to distinguish one mental disorder from another. If psychiatrists would use these criteria consistently, they suggested, then perhaps researchers would be able to explain and differentiate disorders in terms of psychobiology. This prescription for diagnostic peacemaking radically changed the psychiatric scene. No longer was it an unruly market of claims, counterclaims and "orientations." Psychiatric practices became centered on using the manual to identify disorders, much as a naturalist uses a field guide to identify birds or trees. The treatments derived from these diagnoses had no particular theory behind them. They were efforts, mostly pharmacological and rule-of-thumb, to provide relief from symptoms. Psychiatric thinking about patients and their disorders withered.

Today the public complains that psychiatrists seem ready to call every state of mental distress an illness. They see that any restless boy can receive a diagnosis of attention deficit disorder, that troubled veterans—whether exposed to combat or not—are routinely said to suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, and that enormous numbers of discouraged, demoralized people are labeled victims of depression and have medications pressed upon them. The public is not far wrong. A recent nationwide diagnostic census based on DSM claimed that the majority of Americans have or have had a mental disorder. As a result, an appalling number of young adults in schools and colleges are on one form or another of psychiatric medication.

The problem, though, is not only that psychiatrists have gone too far in naming mental states — they surely have — but that they have gone on too long with their field-guide checklists. They seem unable to do better. DSM-5 will be more of the same — a way to "know of" disorders without "knowing about" them, to draw a distinction made by William James. With its new manual, the APA might instead have started taking steps toward a system of classification that, as in medicine, organizes disorders according to what we know about their natures and causes. Such knowledge, rather than checklists of symptoms, would then direct treatment and research.

Psychiatrists know, for instance, that depression and anxiety can derive from a number of different sources: cerebral diseases such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder; alcoholism or drug addiction; experiences of loss, deprivation or trauma; and, more generally, a vulnerable temperament, characterized by introversion, shyness and emotional intensity. Deciding which of these sources, alone or in combination, applies to a particular patient requires hours of evaluation. Prescribing an appropriate treatment involves not checking symptoms but determining who the patient is and what he or she has experienced and done.

DSM-5 displays none of this thinking. It remains a field guide organized by symptoms, clustered in categories that can expand without limit. Official, APA-approved psychiatry seems to lack the will to change. It justifies its stagnation not only by reminding its members of the chaos of the 1970s but by claiming that the U.S. health system would not pay psychiatrists if they tried to know their patients the way that they could and should.

DSM-5 is a missed opportunity to advance the discipline, instruct the public and encourage financial support for needed psychiatric services. Its editors seem willing to waste another decade before dispersing the mysteries of psychiatry and bringing practitioners and patients together in understanding what they are doing and why.

I’ve grown weary of being so negative. It’s not the way I’ve spent my life, but weighing in on the current state of psychiatry  has put me in a position of talking a lot about what’s wrong – jury-rigged studies, corruption, conflicts of interest, industrial alliances, etc. – not things that I’ve spent much time thinking about before the last few years. I prefer thinking about what makes people tick, what tangles and glitches can come up in life that throw things out of kilter, helping people find what’s right about themselves, wondering about the great mysteries of the severe mental illnesses.

This WSJ article starts with a critique of the version of psychoanalysis that dominated psychiatry in the pre-1980 days and why things needed to change. In spite of being an analyst myself, most of what he had to say are things I generally agree with, but I thought Dr. McHugh’s description of the post-1980 state of play was exceptional [above]. While critical, he’s fleshed out the essential elements in a clear and concise  way and points to a rational alternative.

I doubt very seriously that the people trying to piece together a way forward back in the 1970s had any intention of creating a simplistic symptom check-list diagnostic manual that lead to some kind of psychopharmacologic algorithmic treatment after a structured interview. And if they really thought mental illness was going to fit in a biology-only framework, they were sadly deluded. But that is what happened with the help of Managed Care and the Pharmaceutical Industry, or rather that’s what we let happen [and the APA was complicit in that]. Dr. McHugh’s is calling for a psychiatry that sets its own standard for patient care independent of the outside forces that push for the formulaic simplicity that the DSM-5 actively perpetuates. This is the tragedy of the DSM-5:
DSM-5 is a missed opportunity to advance the discipline, instruct the public and encourage financial support for needed psychiatric services. Its editors seem willing to waste another decade before dispersing the mysteries of psychiatry and bringing practitioners and patients together in understanding what they are doing and why.
Simply put. Well spoken. And the only rational goal for the future…
Mickey @ 12:09 am
Filed under: OPINION
guidelines…

Posted on Monday 20 May 2013

Anthony Rothschild, M.D.Antidepressants do “really work” and do not “cause suicide,” said Anthony Rothschild, M.D., at APA’s 2013 annual meeting today during a discussion of his second book in the Evidence-Based Guides series, the evidence-based guide to antidepressant medications [American Psychiatric Publishing, 2012]. Rothschild is the Irving S. and Betty Brudnick Endowed Chair and Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.

Rothschild said that although clinicians have successfully used antidepressants to treat millions of patients suffering from depression for 50 years, Kirsch et al. published in 2008 a paper claiming that although antidepressants are statistically superior to placebo, the magnitude of the drug-placebo difference is small and that these differences were clinically relevant only in patients with severe depression. Surprisingly, he said, the paper received considerable attention in the media, including radio, front-page newspaper coverage, and “60 Minutes.” Rothschild said that the focus on questions about whether antidepressants really worked needlessly upset patients and their families. He pointed out that many experts in the field have argued that the analysis by Kirsch and colleagues was seriously flawed because it relied upon unusual statistical techniques biased against antidepressants.

Rothschild also discussed the fact that some have questioned whether treatment with the SSRIs and other antidepressants can induce suicidal ideation and whether they worsen existing suicidal ideation. Although the totality of the reliable scientific evidence indicates that SSRIs and other antidepressants do not cause suicide, the FDA has required that all antidepressants contain a black-box warning that they are associated with “suicidality” in children, adolescents, and young adults up to age 24. Rothschild said that clinicians should be aware of two important points: [1] the FDA’s black-box warning does not indicate that antidepressants increase the risk of suicide in anyone or that they increase the risk of suicidal thinking or behavior in patients ages 25 and older; and [2] although the FDA used the concept of “suicidality” as a proxy for completed suicide, they are not the same thing. The term “suicidality” has been criticized as grossly overestimating the risk of suicide and as not being as clinically useful as more specific terminology such as ideation, behavior, attempts, and suicide.

The workshop included discussions regarding the fact that antidepressants are prescribed for many patients in addition to those who have major depressive disorder, including patients with bipolar disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, schizophrenia, and personality disorders, as well as those with medical illnesses. The workshop reviewed the use of antidepressants for so-called off-label use—to treat illnesses for which the medications do not have U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval—and emphasized that practicing clinicians need to understand the use of antidepressants among several special populations, including children and adolescents, geriatric patients, and pregnant and lactating women.

Among all the hooplah about the APA Convention and the release of the DSM-5, this simple report in the Psychiatric News is the most upsetting thing I’ve read so far. It’s about a presentation at the meetings by Anthony Rothschild, editor of an American Psychiatric Publishing Company book, The Evidence-Based Guide to Antidepressant Medications. The APA has been publishing treatment guidelines since the DSM-III came into being. They’re always discussed reverently, an accomplishment. Treatment guidelines sound good on paper, but have been a major conduit for corruption [as in TMAP, as in Dr. Trivedi's algorithm projects, etc]. The APA versions have the inevitable "Evidence-Based" title added  in for good measure.

I find this article infuriating. First, he takes on the efficacy of antidepressants. As we all know, the efficacy of the modern antidepressants is much lower and variable than we’ve been lead to believe. Most practitioners already know that from usage if they follow people closely. Dr. Rothschild takes the most extreme critic, Dr. Kirsch, and talks as if the fact that Kirsch’s methodology has been questioned as proof that the complaint has no validity. Rothschild’s bias is clear – similar to Robert Gibbons discussions. Anyone can easily find multiple other studies that confirm the complaint that the newer antidepressants operate in the range of "Lite."

But his discussion of suicidality and the Black Box warning is where Rothschild’s bias shines. It’s hard for me to imagine anyone that prescribes SSRIs hasn’t seen akathisia – agitation with aggression. It’s not common, but it’s not rare either. He does what most people do, get lost in semantics, but basically is lobbying against our knowing about something that is very real. They could easily say the truth. It is an unusual reaction that is quite frightening to patients and can lead to lethality. But Rothschild takes the it-doesn’t-happen road. That seems so un-medical to me, particularly in an official, "evidence-based" guideline book. This whole presentation reeks of drug promotion don’t-worry-about-it rhetoric instead of responsible information giving.

I’m a doctor. I need to be told the truth, not an opinion. I had to learn about the low efficacy, the akathisia, and the withdrawal syndromes on my own – by causing the problem in my own patients. I resent that, particularly from a professional organization. I still use these drugs with appropriate caution. That’s true of almost any drug in any field of medicine. But I ignore guidelines of this type in psychiatry because I can’t trust what they say, just like I don’t trust Rothschild’s presentation. I also now tend to ignore new drugs until they’ve been around for a while and stood the test of time…
Mickey @ 9:57 pm
Filed under: OPINION
beyond unacceptable…

Posted on Monday 20 May 2013

In March, friend Nancy Wilson ran across an article syndicated in multiple small town papers hawking the antidepressant, Viibryd®, with commentary by Madhukar Trivedi – not labeled as an advertisement [the article…, Viibryd® – coming to a hamlet near you…]. Trivedi is at UT Southwestern where he heads their Depression Clinic. She wrote the chairman who responded that she had discussed it with Dr. Trivedi who denied any knowledge of how his name was associated with the article [read skepticism between the lines]. Now we are alerted to a press release from Lundbeck about a new antidepressant, Vortioxetine [Brintellix® or Rexulti®] submitted for approval [FDA, EMA]. Look who it quotes:

Vortioxetine clinical phase III data show significant improvement in symptoms of major depression
  • Takeda and Lundbeck present results from pivotal phase III clinical trials with vortioxetine, an investigational compound for major depression
  • First presentation of results from four pivotal clinical studies of doses of up to 20 mg/day
  • Clinical studies demonstrate efficacy at doses of 15 mg and 20 mg per day including an improvement of overall functioning
  • The safety profile was shown to be consistent with previously completed studies at lower doses
Valby, Denmark, 18 May 2013 – H. Lundbeck A/S [Lundbeck] and partner Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited [Takeda] today announced that the companies will be presenting new data on four pivotal studies on vortioxetine, a novel investigational drug under review by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration [FDA] and the European Medicines Agency [EMA] for the treatment of major depression. The phase III data will be presented at the 2013 Annual Meeting of the American Psychiatric Association [APA] in San Francisco, USA.

The objective of these four studies was to evaluate the efficacy and safety profile of vortioxetine in doses ranging from 10-20 mg per day, complementing other studies in the New Drug Application [NDA] submission package that included dose ranges of 5-20 mg per day. Three of the four pivotal studies met the primary efficacy endpoint as measured by the change from baseline of the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale [MADRS] total score at week 8. Statistically significant improvements in overall symptoms of depression were demonstrated, as compared to placebo. A fourth study did not meet the primary endpoint. Results of all four studies provided additional information regarding the safety profile of vortioxetine.

"It is important that we continue to seek new options in depression because, even though there are effective treatments available, many patients remain symptomatic," said Madhukar Trivedi, M.D., professor of psychiatry, UT Southwestern Medical Center. "As a clinician, I’m encouraged by these data. They represent an important addition to the broader clinical profile for vortioxetine and support its potential as a new treatment for patients with MDD."
Dr. Trivedi … serves as scientific advisor for Lundbeck and Takeda.

A search of clinicaltrials.gov and PubMed does not show that Dr. Trivedi was involved with any of the studies registered or published about Vortioxetine [or for that matter Vilazodone (Viibryd®)]. Vortioxetine is a "me too" antidepressant that comes in behind the active comparators in the studies reported, but that’s not my point. Notice the careful wording, "I’m encouraged by these data." This looks for all the world like endorsements for hire to me, a new twist on the KOL motif. It also makes his denial to his chairman look even more suspect. Dr. Trivedi has a special valence for me. It was an article of his that first alerted me several years ago to read the disclosures at the end of every article very carefully [evidence-based medicine I…]. At a time when psychiatry is fighting for credibility, persisting with this kind of behavior is beyond unacceptable…
Mickey @ 7:00 am
Filed under: politics
carpe diem…

Posted on Sunday 19 May 2013

    SAN FRANCISCO — The American Psychiatric Association officially kicked off its annual meeting this weekend with the release of the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. To mark the occasion, incoming APA president Jeffrey A. Lieberman, MD, announced during the opening session that the profession of psychiatry has come of age. "This is the time for us to seize the moment, for mental illnesses to step out of the shadows, for mental health care to be made accessible and fairly reimbursed, and for psychiatry to take its rightful role in the field of medicine," he said… Despite some of the challenges, psychiatric medicine has grown by leaps and bounds, Lieberman said. He gave examples of the emergence of psychopharmacology, neuroimaging, molecular genetics and biology, which have propelled psychiatry to the forefront of modern medicine…

    We’re all mad here by DR. ALLEN FRANCES – Human nature doesn’t change that fast, but the labels used to describe it can follow fickle fashions. The vehicle of today’s fashion shift is the publication yesterday of the fifth edition of the “Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,” the official compendium of psychiatric diagnoses. DSM 5 has added many new mental disorders that include many symptoms and behaviors previously accepted as simply part of the human condition. The resulting overdiagnosis of mental disorder will have many harmful unintended consequences — the misuse of medication, unnecessary stigma, high costs, misallocated resources, narrowed expectations, a reduced sense of personal responsibility, and the misapprehension that we are all becoming sick individuals living in an increasingly sick society…

    Psychiatry faces another crisis of confidence – Psychotherapist Gary Greenberg is more blunt. “Even at its best … psychiatric diagnosis is fiction sold to the public as fact,” Greenberg writes in his new book, The Book of Woe: The DSM and the Unmaking of Psychiatry. “There is a huge disconnect between what psychiatry claims for itself, and what it can actually do,” he says… In other words, 200 years after psychiatry was recognized as a medical discipline, a stark question persists: Is psychiatry credible?…
Some moments are in no mood for seizure, and this appears to be one of them. The American Psychiatric Association with Drs. Scully, Kupfer, and Regier have spent a decade marching forward in spite of failed dreams, failed field tests, stalled research, remarkable changes in the political/social climate, and near universal criticism here and abroad. It appears that Dr. Lieberman has been handed the mantle and is continuing the march to the sea, dragging the APA along behind him. This is playing out like HBO’s The Game of Thrones or President George Bush’s landing on the Aircraft Carrier proclaiming Mission Accomplished.
    Time present and time past
    Are both perhaps present in time future,
    And time future contained in time past.
    If all time is eternally present
    All time is unredeemable.
    What might have been is an abstraction
    Remaining a perpetual possibility
    Only in a world of speculation.
    What might have been and what has been
    Point to one end, which is always present…
    T. S. Eliot, Burnt Norton
I know I always quote these same lines, but at a time like this one, "what might have been" is unavoidably on my mind. In the last decade, we’ve seen the dark side of too many things for this kind of circus. It was a time for a reformation – a time to set things right in psychiatry and that’s not what happened. The DSM-5 revision could’ve been a part of that with a rational review of the structure of the diagnostic manual – plugging of the loopholes exploited by industry. It could’ve been an influence as we enter a general era of healthcare reform. But what it became is a failed attempt at furthering an agenda of a segment of psychiatrists with dubious alliances, and an anachronistic testament to something that cried out for change. As of today, it became unredeemable and leaves us with a future with the same problems as the past – magnified by being perpetuated…
Mickey @ 11:31 pm
Filed under: OPINION
don’t know what else to do…

Posted on Sunday 19 May 2013

I suppose that this kind of defensive opening Press Conference was to be expected. And they chose to defend criticisms of specific decisions made along the way. I’ve added just a few comments along the way, but they missed the overall point of the major criticisms of their [now released] DSM-5.
APA Leaders Defend New Diagnostic Guide
MedPage Today
By John Gever
May 18, 2013

The fifth edition of the "psychiatrist’s bible" was officially released here in all its 947-page glory, with its developers offering a spirited rebuttal to their critics. Known as DSM-5, the new version of the American Psychiatric Association’s [APA] Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders was launched at a press briefing to kick off the organization’s annual meeting. Most of the changes from the previous edition had already been made public, at least in general outline.

At the briefing, DSM-5 Task Force chairman David Kupfer, MD, of the University of Pittsburgh, defended several of the most heavily criticized revisions from DSM-IV, as the last edition was called. Other top APA leaders, including current president Dilip Jeste, MD, of the University of California San Diego, and president-elect Jeffrey Lieberman, MD, of Columbia University in New York City, addressed another, more recent controversy over DSM-5, which was sparked by a blog post from National Institute of Mental Health [NIMH] Director Thomas Insel, MD. In his blog, Insel criticized the DSM classification system’s scientific validity, and his remarks were then reported in consumer media as suggesting DSM-5 is "out of touch with science," as a New York Times headline put it.

Kupfer identified several specific changes from DSM-IV in the new edition that had drawn the most heat from others in the mental health community and patient advocacy groups…
  • Autism Spectrum: …
  • Bereavement Exclusion in Major Depression: …
    APA fact sheet distributed at the briefing pointed to several features that "usually" distinguish depressive illness from normal grief in patients experiencing recent losses. They include continuous unrelieved negative mood and feelings of worthlessness and self-loathing. In normal grief, extreme sadness is typically intermittent and self-esteem is unaffected, the fact sheet said.

I just thought this was kind of funny. In the DSM-5, they distinguish grief and depression by duration of symptoms, yet in this handout, they differentiate them by specific findings [self loathing]. The funny part is that they are essentially quoting Freud’s 1917 Mourning and Melancholia without attribution.
  • Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder (DMDD]: …
    The diagnosis "is intended, in part, to address issues about potential overdiagnosis and overtreatment of bipolar disorder," Kupfer said.

If they wanted to clarify Childhood Bipolar Disorder, they could’ve done that directly. Instead, the created another fictitious heterogeneous Disorder that can be overmedicated. What were they thinking, I wonder?
  • Mild Neurocognitive Disorder:
    In a critique of DSM-5 published on the eve of its launch, the head of DSM-IV’s development in the 1980s, Allen Frances, MD, of Duke University in Durham, N.C., singled out the new edition’s inclusion of mild neurocognitive disorder as another example of medicalizing normal function… "There has been concern that we may have added a disorder that may not be important enough to merit clinical attention," Kupfer said… "Clinicians have lacked a reliable diagnosis to assess such [impairments] and to understand what might be the most appropriate treatment or services," Kupfer said. Including mild neurocognitive disorders in DSM-5 "serves two essential needs," he said. One is that it provides "an opportunity for early detection," while another is that it "encourages the development of an effective treatment plan before deficits become more pronounced and progress to dementia."

Again, missing on purpose Dr. Frances’ point that this is a black hole for false positives created based on no data. It’s an example of their doing "pretend prevention" without their beloved "evidence base."
  • Insel’s Comments: …
    Apparently without meaning to, Insel set off a firestorm with an April 29 "director’s blog" post on the NIMH website, in which he lamented that the DSM – not just the new edition but its predecessors as well – is not grounded solidly in biology. Rather, he said, "the DSM diagnoses are based on a consensus about clusters of clinical symptoms, not any objective laboratory measure.

If I may be candid, "without meaning to" my ass! Insel was grandstanding and it backfired. What’s worse. The DSM-5 Task Force agrees with Insel since their opening gambit in 2002. They were as disappointed with the DSM-5 they ultimately created as the rest of us, but they got over it as the deadlines approached.
    At the press briefing here, APA officials reiterated that there is, in fact, no disagreement with Insel. "We support what he’s trying to do," said John Scully, MD, the APA’s chief executive officer. "We want him to get biomarkers for us." Added Lieberman, "He [Insel] was trying to exhort the biomedical research community to try to break new ground that will lead to more dynamic and fundamental changes in psychiatric diagnosis." Yet, Kupfer suggested, the flaws in DSM-IV for daily clinical practice needed to be addressed in the short term, and an extension of the symptom-based approach remained the only alternative. "While we don’t yet have the biomarkers that we are hoping are on the edge of discovery, patients can’t keep waiting, and we can’t keep waiting," he said.

The DSM-5 Task Force spent years and untold amounts of money chasing the same dream Insel has to no avail. What they didn’t do was revise the DSM-IV which was in need of attention by all accounts [including that of Dr. Frances who directed that revision], and was their assigned task. They ignored the fact that the most common diagnostic category, Major Depressive Disorder, has been hopelessly flawed from day one [1980] and should have been an abiding concern along with several other major categories. Instead, they piddled around trying to add some things that were immaterial and actually detracted. They were so taken with their expertise and ideologies that they failed to notice that the train was off the track and too deaf to hear people desperately trying to help them do their job.
  • Other Criticisms …

This Press Conference is an exemplar of what they’ve done for the whole time – try to explain themselves to people who know better, banking on an authority they think they have… but don’t. I wonder if they actually miss the point as badly as it appears, or if they just don’t know what else to do…
Mickey @ 11:20 am
Filed under: OPINION
for the DSM-5…

Posted on Saturday 18 May 2013

Mickey @ 7:00 pm
Filed under: OPINION
shame…

Posted on Thursday 16 May 2013

This graphic is a cut down version of the flyer for the 4th KOL Relationship Summit with just the session topics. It’s to help PHARMA types more effectively recruit and manage the physicians who they use to promote their products. As you read through these topics keep in mind that I didn’t make this up, it’s a real brochure for a real conference, even though it reads like a C.I.A. seminar for how to recruit and handle spy networks [and get around the Sunshine Act]. Each one is worse than the next. My opinion? State Medical Boards ought to make physicians participating in such things grounds for suspension of medical licenses. There’s nothing right about this. This isn’t what Hippocrates had in mind…

Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs) possess a unique credibility, as their validity often stems from years of industry experience and medical affiliations. Relationship management is an essential part to a successful KOL program and helps foster a culture of transparent engagement and collaboration. As the healthcare landscape changes due to Healthcare Reform and the Sunshine Act, it is important for pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and medical device companies to know how their relationships with KOLs can be affected and what they must to do to maintain a valuable and engaging relationship.

After three enormously successful events, ExL Pharma is excited to bring back the 4th KOL Relationship Summit. The goal of this conference is to offer professionals from pharmaceutical, medical device, and biotechnology companies a complete understanding of the issues and strategies for effectively engaging in valuable relationships with KOLs to drive the success of a drug or medical device, educate physicians, and maintain a balance with compliance and business objectives during a changing healthcare environment.

By attending this conference, you will hear industry-specific case studies and examples including:
  • Adapting to the transparency of the Sunshine Act and the effect on KOL relationships
  • The role of medical affairs and KOL engagement
  • Defining the new wave of KOLs emerging from a changing healthcare environment
  • Leveraging local and global KOLs to stay ahead of industry globalization
  • Developing effective collaboration between commercial and medical departments
  • Maintain mutually beneficial KOL relationships
  • Understanding the thought leader perspective and expectations
  • Exploring the latest technologies for thought leader identification and expanded networking
  • Assisting KOLs in tracking and reporting payments
  • Developing a strategic KOL plan to align engagement with the product lifecycle
Mickey @ 11:13 pm
Filed under: OPINION