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
on break…

Posted on Wednesday 15 May 2013

In Nashville with a sick friend. Back Sunday.

Mickey @ 12:00 pm
Filed under: politics
a long and winding road…

Posted on Tuesday 14 May 2013

the road to Machu PicchuI don’t buy it. We are bombarded by articles making all kind of things out of Dr. Insel’s blog post, Transforming Diagnosis, an announcement that the NIMH will move away from the DSM-5 – coming just a couple of weeks before the DSM-5 even goes on sale. Like everyone else, I’ve joined in on the speculation and commentary on the reasons for this surprising move [old news…, a flair…, groundhog day…, replaces with…, damage control…, our jobs…, said it again…]. When I talk too much about the same thing, it’s because there’s something I’m trying to figure out but I haven’t gotten there yet. So for the last several days, I’ve been going over the history and rereading the articles trying to get the story clear in my mind rather than reacting to the media frenzy. I’ve done that now and here’s the conclusion. I don’t buy it. If you don’t either, and already know why, don’t bother to read further. It’s way too long. I just wanted to write it down so I didn’t have to keep mulling it over in my mind.

Since the release of the DSM-III in 1980, there have always been two versions of the paradigm for the diagnostic manual. The first one was in the DSM-III Manual itself and said:
For most of the DSM-III disorders, however, the etiology is unknown. A variety of theories have been advanced, buttressed by evidence – not always convincing – to explain how these disorders came about. The approach taken in DSM-III is atheoretical with regard to etiology or pathophysiological process except for those disorders for which this is well established and therefore included in the definition of the disorder. Undoubtedly, with time, some of the disorders of unknown etiology will be found to have specific biological etiologies, others to have specific psychological causes, and still others to result mainly from a particular interplay of psychological, social, and biological factors. The major justification for the generally atheoretical approach taken in DSM-III with regard to etiology is that the inclusion of etiological theories would be an obstacle to use of the manual by clinicians of varying theoretical orientations, since it would not be possible to present all reasonable etiologic theories for each disorder.
Robert Spitzer, in the DSM-III, p 6.
The second version, the background version, was from the group centered at Washington University in Saint Louis and was called – neo-Kraepelinian. It professed the same basis for classification [observed symptoms], but had nothing like the neutrality of Dr. Spitzer’s version. Their view has been summarized as the neoKraepelinian Tenets:
    1. Psychiatry is a branch of medicine.
    2. Psychiatry should utilize modern scientific methodologies and base its practice on scientific knowledge.
    3. Psychiatry treats people who are sick and who require treatment.
    4. There is a boundary between the normal and the sick.
    5. There are discrete mental illnesses.  They are not myths, and there are many of them.
    6. The focus of psychiatric physicians should be on the biological aspects of illness.
    7. There should be an explicit and intentional concern with diagnosis and classification.
    8. Diagnostic criteria should be codified, and a legitimate and valued area of research should be to validate them.
    9. Statistical techniques should be used to improve reliability and validity.

[1. & 2.] were directed against psychoanalysis and said that psychiatry was a medical enterprise, not involved in matters psychological. The next three [3.-5.] were a counter to the criticisms from Dr. Szasz and others who said that there was no such thing as mental illness and that psychiatry was not a medical specialty. Number 6. said that physicians were only to be involved with the biological aspects of mental illness. It didn’t say that all mental illness was biological, just that biology was the legitimate domain of psychiatric physicians. And the last three [7.-9.] were a call to use scientific methods in classification.

The Spitzer version [atheoretical, descriptive] was the official version, and under that definition, the DSM-III was used by mental health professionals of all disciplines. During the next decades, the other mental health professions became increasingly covered by health insurance as members of approved panels by the various insurers and the DSM-III [IIIR and IV] systems became the standard reporting system for mental health in America [cross referenced to the ICD-9CM, the official system by treaty].

The neoKraepelinian version was the nucleus for a dramatic change in academic psychiatry which became rapidly biomedical and psychpharmacological. Private practitioners in psychiatry increasingly followed suit with more and more doing "medication management" for the clients of practitioners in other disciplines. And over the next twenty years the journals, practice, and focus of American psychiatrists followed  the more neoKraepelinian "biological aspects of mental illness" definition.

The DSM-III-R [1988] and DSM-IV [1994] revisions made changes in the Manual, but stayed with the Spitzer version [atheoretical, descriptive]. Meanwhile, academic and organized psychiatry continued along their biomedical neoKraepelinian path. The Decade of the Brain at the NIMH spanned the 1990s and there was a stream of new drugs – antidepressants and atypical antipsychotics. The Spitzer version was in the books and used by non-psychiatrists. The neoKraepelinian version was the stuff of clinical drug trials, the explosion of psychopharmacology, and psychiatry.

But in mainstream psychiatry, something subtle had happened. The distinction between the two versions was becoming anachronistic. It was no secret that the upper levels of psychiatry were almost universally biological. I don’t think in 2000 that most of us were aware of the extensive connections between academic and organized psychiatry with PHARMA, particularly the back room connections. In this next document written in 2002 in preparation for the next DSM Revision, there is no distinction. The descriptive approach is now called neoKraepelinian. The atheoretical aspect is nowhere seen. It looks to me as if they felt that they could finally stop equivocating and create the biologically based DSM they’d always wanted:

Need to Explore the Possibility of Fundamental Changes in the Neo-Kraepelinian Diagnostic Paradigm
in A Research Agenda for the DSM-V, 2002
edited by David Kupfer, Michael First, Darrel Regier
[full text on-line]

The DSM-III diagnostic system adopted a so-called neo-Kraepelinian approach to diagnosis. This approach avoided organizing a diagnostic system around hypothetical but unproven theories about etiology in favor of a descriptive approach, in which disorders were characterized in terms of symptoms that could be elicited by patient report, direct observation, and measurement. The major advantage of adopting a descriptive classification was its improved reliability over prior classification systems using nonoperationalized definitions of disorders based on unproved etiological assumptions. From the outset, however, it was recognized that the primary strength of a descriptive approach was its ability to improve communication among clinicians and researchers, not its established validity.

Dr. Spitzer’s compromise in 1980 was to settle for inter-rater reliability and let validity go [since we have no way to determine validity anyway, it was no loss]. They go on to say that the hope had been that the DSM-III groupings would lead to etiology, but since no biomarkers were yet defined, it hadn’t worked out. Notice that biomarkers and etiology are now connected. The atheoretical is gone for good. The problem at hand was that the expected biomarkers had not been found – as in not yet found. The conclusion was that the biological bases of mental illness were not revealed by the clinical categories of the DSM-III+, and by the way, the clinical disorders not only didn’t map to biological findings, but they didn’t map to the drug treatments either. As a matter of fact, they thought the DSM categories may even be hampering research in some way.
Disorders in DSM-III were identified in terms of syndromes, symptoms that are observed in clinical populations to covary together in individuals. It was presumed that, as in general medicine, the phenomenon of symptom covariation could be explained by a common underlying etiology. As described by Robins and Guze, the validity of these identified syndromes could be incrementally improved through increasingly precise clinical description, laboratory studies, delimitation of disorders, follow-up studies of outcome, and family studies. Once fully validated, these syndromes would form the basis for the identification of standard, etiologically homogeneous groups that would respond to specific treatments uniformly.

In the more than 30 years since the introduction of the Feighner criteria by Robins and Guze, which eventually led to DSM-III, the goal of val- idating these syndromes and discovering common etiologies has remained elusive. Despite many proposed candidates, not one laboratory marker has been found to be specific in identifying any of the DSM-defined syndromes. Epidemiologic and clinical studies have shown extremely high rates of comorbidities among the disorders, undermining the hypothesis that the syndromes represent distinct etiologies. Furthermore, epidemiologic studies have shown a high degree of short-term diagnostic instability for many disorders. With regard to treatment, lack of treatment specificity is the rule rather than the exception…

Concerns have also been raised that researchers’ slavish adoption of DSM-IV definitions may have hindered research in the etiology of mental disorders. Few question the value of having a well-described, well-operationalized, and universally accepted diagnostic system to facilitate diagnostic comparisons across studies and to improve diagnostic reliability. However, reification of DSM-IV entities, to the point that they are considered to be equivalent to diseases, is more likely to obscure than to elucidate research findings.

Remember, this is a document from 2002 written by the APA psychiatrists charged with revising the DSM-IV. What they are saying is that the DSM-III, -IIIR, -IV paradigm didn’t pan out. The descriptive atheoretical system did not reveal any disease specific biological markers and so we should change the way we do diagnosis in order to find them. These biological illnesses have yet to reveal their secrets.
All these limitations in the current diagnostic paradigm suggest that research exclusively focused on refining the DSM-defined syndromes may never be successful in uncovering their underlying etiologies. For that to happen, an as yet unknown paradigm shift may need to occur. Therefore, another important goal of this volume is to transcend the limitations of the current DSM paradigm and to encourage a research agenda that goes beyond our current ways of thinking to attempt to integrate information from a wide variety of sources and technologies…

The atheoretical part of the system just quietly evaporated. This 2002 book is all about biology and neuroscience. The possibility that the biomarkers hadn’t been found because the Manual was faulty [eg absent Melancholia, etc] wasn’t considered. Even odder, there’s no mention of the possibility that many of the mental illnesses were not biological in the first place, ergo had no biomarkers hidden or otherwise. But that’s an obvious point. More cogent for the moment is that I couldn’t find where anyone considered that the major users of this diagnostic system by actual count are not psychiatrists, not people who would be involved with biological diseases or disorders. They are psychologists, social workers, counselors, etc. The content of this Research Agenda for the DSM-V was written from the perspective of biological psychiatrists frustrated that the confirmation of biomedical psychiatry had not been forthcoming, and it was being reevaluated to find a more biological-friendly system. The fact that this  tack was incompatible with the practices of the majority of mental health workers in America who use the DSM doesn’t seem to have been on the radar. In my way of thinking about this, the quiet compromise of the two paradigm versions, Spitzer vs neoKraepelinian, had been erased. So from 2004-2008, the DSM-5 Task Force held 13 planning conferences in conjunction with the NIMH, NIAAA, and NIDA before starting to work on the DSM itself, looking in to going biological. And then, starting in 2009, the NIMH introduced their RDoC:

Research Domain Criteria (RDoC): Toward a New Classification Framework for Research on Mental Disorders
by Thomas Insel, Bruce Cuthbert, Marjorie Garvey, Robert Heinssen, Daniel S. Pine, Kevin Quinn, Charles Sanislow, and Philip Wang.
American Journal of Psychiatry. 2010 167:748-751.
[full text online]

Current versions of the DSM and ICD have facilitated reliable clinical diagnosis and research. However, problems have increasingly been documented over the past several years, both in clinical and research arenas. Diagnostic categories based on clinical consensus fail to align with findings emerging from clinical neuroscience and genetics. The boundaries of these categories have not been predictive of treatment response. And, perhaps most important, these categories, based upon presenting signs and symptoms, may not capture fundamental underlying mechanisms of dysfunction. One consequence has been to slow the development of new treatments targeted to underlying pathophysiological mechanisms…

NIMH plans to maintain liaison with the American Psychiatric Association and the World Health Organization regarding mutual interests in psychiatric classification. As an initial step, representatives of the APA, WHO, and NIMH met in July 2009 to map out common ground. These organizations have also articulated the importance of adding molecular and neurobiological parameters to future diagnostic systems, but at our current state of knowledge this step seems more appropriate for research than for immediate clinical use. NIMH views RDoC as the beginning of a transformative effort that needs to succeed over the next decade and beyond to implement neuroscience-based psychiatric classification.…
Notice that the APA was there from the start of the RDoC, just like the NIMH has been there through the whole DSM-5 process. Notice that the opening argument is the same one made by the DSM-5 Task Force in 2002, and the one we’re reading in 2013 in these last couple of weeks. Finally, in 2011, the DSM-5 Task Force announced that they couldn’t bring off a biological DSM-5 after all, and they, themselves, discussed the NIMH RDoC:
Neuroscience, Clinical Evidence, and the Future of Psychiatric Classification in DSM-5
by David J. Kupfer, M.D. and Darrel A. Regier, M.D., M.P.H.
American Journal of Psychiatry 168:672-674, 2011.
[full text online]

In the initial stages of development of the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,we expected that some of the limitations of the current psychiatric diagnostic criteria and taxonomy would be mitigated by the integration of validators derived from scientific advances in the last few decades. Throughout the last 25 years of psychiatric research, findings from genetics, neuroimaging, cognitive science, and pathophysiology have yielded important insights into diagnosis and treatment approaches for some debilitating mental disorders, including depression, schizophrenia, and bipolar disorder. In A Research Agenda for DSM-V, we anticipated that these emerging diagnostic and treatment advances would impact the diagnosis and classification of mental disorders faster than what has actually occurred…

We realized from our Research Agenda conference series that we would not be able to accomplish by DSM-5′s deadline all of the things we set out to and, in fact, that portions of that agenda related to advances in neuroscience were already being addressed in other arenas. A logical extension of those discussions, as detailed in our Research Agenda  articles, is the Research Domain Criteria [RDoC] initiative recently launched by the National Institute of Mental Health [NIMH]. A commentary by Insel and colleagues  introduced readers to the working principles behind the RDoC, whose proposed reclassification of mental disorders for research purposes is predicated on a neuroscience-based framework that can contribute to a nosology in which disorders are grouped by underlying pathophysiological similarities rather than phenomenological observations…
So what do I make of this timeline? Well, first, there’s a piece that’s not yet on it – what happened in the gap between the Research Agenda of 2002 and the creation of the RDoC in 2009 – and it was a lot!:
  • 2002 was at the peak of the psychopharmacology era. The drugs were coming at a steady rate and business was booming. That year, Dr. Insel was a surprise pick to head the NIMH. It was a time of great enthusiasm, the dawn of a new millenium.
  • While it probably should’ve started in 1996 when the Chairman of Psychiatry at Georgia [Dr. Richard Borison] was convicted, the realization that there was corruption afoot in psychiatry came later. In the mid-2000s, problems with conflicts of interest, unreported PHARMA income, and ghost writing increasingly came to the fore culminating in a U.S. Senate Investigation with several psychiatry chairmen "stepping down" and others in high places censured.
  • Around the same time, the corruption in PHARMA reached the public eye. Allen Jones blew the whistle on TMAP, and elsewhere the civil suits began to pile up. In discovery, boxes of internal documents revealed the extensive connections between psychiatric authors a PHARMA, and the ubiquitous deceit in the publication of scientific data, along with a lot of shady drug promotion practices.
  • People like Dr. David Healy and others began to report unmmentioned adverse effects like suicidality. The "black box" warning was added to the antidepressants. The reports of adverse effects were joined by charges of inflated efficacy.
  • This was the era of large NIMH funded drug trials, and they were pretty disappointing. The new drugs hardly dazzled anyone.
  • In that period, we learned the term "pipeline" [drugs headed for approval], and then that there weren’t any more "me too" drugs on the way or anything to replace them
  • After a time of fretting over the "empty pipeline," the drug companies began to shut down their CNS drug development facilities – no candidates to work on.
  • This was a remarkably non-productive time in research. Lots of new technology and hype, but little in the way of results.
[just for starters]… And so the heyday of 2002 slid into a time with one piece of bad news after the other.

My own read on this narrative is cynical. First, I don’t accept that the American Psychiatric Association, Academic Psychiatry, the DSM-5 Task Force, and the Director’s office of the National Institute of Mental Health are separate entities. I see then as a consortium of people in high places who see the future of psychiatry and mental health as a function of new CNS drug development. That means that the entity we call PHARMA is part of the consortium, whether officially or unofficially – it’s a big part of the mix.

What I think happened is that the consensus around the turn of the century was that they could make the move to a solid biological psychiatry that took its place among the medical professions as a solid member.  The DSM-III had opened the door, and the DSM-5 was going to complete the process. But as time moved on and the bad news began to accumulate, things weren’t going as planned, their DSM-5 conferences were going nowhere [I read them so trust me on this point], and they had to do something. The vision of their Research Agenda was handed over to the NIMH who launched the RDoC. Once that was in place and launched, they made their announcement that they couldn’t bring it off. In the meantime, they’d ignored the real business of the revision they’d been assigned, so they got involved in a lot of add-ons [Attenuated Psychosis, Mixed Anxiety Depression, etc]. The original impetus [the future is psychopharmacology] showed in the loosened criteria for any number of diagnoses the dropped bereavement exclusion. It was a lackluster showing at best, because it wasn’t what they were really aiming for in the first place. Why did Insel jump in at the 11th hour? My guess is that it lets the DSM-5 Task Force off the hook, changing their failed attempt at a biological system into something else – a noble try, but the clinical syndromes are just not a good-enough basis for drug development or biological discovery.

I think that all these people really do believe that the only avenue to follow is psychopharmacology and new drug development. What I object to is all the behind the scenes wheeling and dealing, presented to us in carefully prepared sound bytes. I object that they haven’t listened to Dr. Robert Spitzer, Dr. Allen Frances, and the rest of us who are trying to tell them that their monocular vision is obscuring everything. The roar of criticism about the DSM-5 has all said the same thing, "You’re supposed to be revising our clinical diagnostic manual! And you’re doing something else!" Everything has been wrapped around new drug development. It’s not even about biology because they’ve ignored repeated calls to reinstate our best candidate – Melancholia. It’s just about drug development, finding new targets to entice PHARMA back into the game. They say that outright.

So I believe there is a real they composed of the groups above, with a fixed goal in mind to the exclusion of any other. They really liked the years leading up to 2002, and they just can’t let go of where they thought they were headed. In 5 days they‘re going to publish a book that will enshrine their folly…

and…

Press Release • May 13, 2013

DSM-5 and RDoC: Shared Interests

Thomas R. Insel, M.D., director, NIMH
Jeffrey A. Lieberman, M.D., president-elect, APA

NIMH and APA have a shared interest in ensuring that patients and health providers have the best available tools and information today to identify and treat mental health issues, while we continue to invest in improving and advancing mental disorder diagnostics for the future.

Today, the American Psychiatric Association’s (APA) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), along with the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) represents the best information currently available for clinical diagnosis of mental disorders  Patients, families, and insurers can be confident that effective treatments are available and that the DSM is the key resource for delivering the best available care. The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) has not changed its position on DSM-5. As NIMH’s Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) project website states, “The diagnostic categories represented in the DSM-IV and the International Classification of Diseases-10 (ICD-10, containing virtually identical disorder codes) remain the contemporary consensus standard for how mental disorders are diagnosed and treated.”

Yet, what may be realistically feasible today for practitioners is no longer sufficient for researchers. Looking forward, laying the groundwork for a future diagnostic system that more directly reflects modern brain science will require openness to rethinking traditional categories. It is increasingly evident that mental illness will be best understood as disorders of brain structure and function that implicate specific domains of cognition, emotion, and behavior. This is the focus of the NIMH’s Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) project. RDoC is an attempt to create a new kind of taxonomy for mental disorders by bringing the power of modern research approaches in genetics, neuroscience, and behavioral science to the problem of mental illness.

The evolution of diagnosis does not mean that mental disorders are any less real and serious than other illnesses. Indeed, the science of diagnosis has been evolving throughout medicine. For example, subtypes of cancers once defined by where they occurred in the body are now classified on the basis of their underlying genetic and molecular causes.

All medical disciplines advance through research progress in characterizing diseases and disorders. DSM-5 and RDoC represent complementary, not competing, frameworks for this goal. DSM-5, which will be released May 18, reflects the scientific progress seen since the manual’s last edition was published in 1994. RDoC is a new, comprehensive effort to redefine the research agenda for mental illness. As research findings begin to emerge from the RDoC effort, these findings may be incorporated into future DSM revisions and clinical practice guidelines. But this is a long-term undertaking. It will take years to fulfill the promise that this research effort represents for transforming the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders.

By continuing to work together, our two organizations are committed to improving outcomes for people with some of the most disabling disorders in all of medicine.

Mickey @ 10:00 pm
Filed under: OPINION
a thought…

Posted on Sunday 12 May 2013

There was a time – it was a long time ago, maybe 40 years ago – when I could think whatever I wanted to think. I could use a jillion models – be doctor medical model at 8AM, psychoanalytic at 9AM, cognitive behavioral before lunch, and throw in a little existentialism in the afternoon. It was like a toolbox filled with a lot of wonderful ways to think about the problems before me and my job was to bring whatever I could find to help until I found what really mattered – some shared way of understanding that my patient and I could use to make some headway. And in conferences we’d argue back and forth, the various different kinds of us, about what was right and wrong, which was all in fun because there wasn’t any right or wrong just different cameras on the same set, then we’d all go to the pub and be human together. It was an exciting time for me. I miss it – always have.

Then in the 1980s, that all changed. Because I was a psychiatrist, I was supposed to be a biologist. Well, I am a biologist, but that’s just a piece of what I am and what patients needed from me. And because I was a psychoanalyst, I was supposed to be … psychoanalytic, but that’s just a piece of what I am too and what patients needed from me. And so on and so on through the toolbox. And worse, I wasn’t supposed to meander from tool to tool until I found the one[s] that fit that patient on that day, I was supposed to have some consistent evidence-based position that could be validated by some third party to prove I wasn’t a charlatan or a I-don’t-know-what-but-it-was-a-bad-thing. I wasn’t up to it. I’d spent a long time refining my skills at doing it the other way which was some hard work, so I went off on my own and did what I’d learned to do until I retired. I’m so glad I did that.

Now it’s coming full circle. The psychologists are saying that the medical model psychiatrists are off the deep end. The biologists  are at war with each other over which biology is the correct biology. The humanists are after the robots. The analysts have learned to be quiet, but you can bet they’re thinking their thoughts. I’m sure all the existentialists in France and elsewhere are off being existential together. I know a lot of very talented and competent mental health types who come from a wide variety of backgrounds but they are unified by a few simple things – a deeply ingrained practice ethic, a suitable awe for the marvelous and monstrous variability in human beings, a genuine curiosity, broad training and life experience, and humility. If they can’t help you, they’ll at least be able to help you find someone who can.

When I think back on things, the most helpful piece of my training in mental health was becoming a hard science Internist first. The reason is that I knew a secret my psychiatric colleagues didn’t know. The hard science medicine I left was no more precise and assured than the loosy-goosy psychiatry I went to.  Sure there were more tests, more precise diagnoses, more drugs. But there was the wall of physical disease beyond which you couldn’t go. Once you found it, that was the end of the road. With mental illness, there’s no wall. Even with the worst cases of our most devastating illnesses, there’s still something that can be done, even if it is only a small thing. You may not find it, but it’s not because it’s not there.

So in one way, it makes me sad to read all these battles flying back and forth precipitated by the release of the DSM-5. On the other hand, it reminds me of those days long ago when we fought with each other to learn from each other. I’ve missed that more than I knew. And it makes me feel hopeful that what’s up ahead will be a toxic environment for the know-it-all psychiatric KOLs that have so contaminated our world [and detracted from the contributions of biologists with good sense], and their pharmaceutical marketing colleagues, and the opportunistic Managed Care types whose job it has been to keep us from doing ours. Right now, I hope right thinking psychiatrists of all flavors, psychologists of all flavors, social workers, counselors, etc. can brace themselves for a long-needed realignment that is consistent with our shared task. It won’t happen any time soon. We’ve been lost in the wilderness too long for that. But the wind blowing in the trees is at least encouraging to this old man…
Mickey @ 4:48 pm
Filed under: OPINION
said it again…

Posted on Sunday 12 May 2013

I had a patient long ago who was struggling to find a way to describe her Mom and why she was so conflicted about her – being both devoted to and oppressed by their relationship. She said, "She’s just crazy-making!" That phrase stuck with me and was probably the nidus for a later old saying I made up: "Never accept an invitation to go crazy" – which I both jokingly and seriously claim to be the only solid rule for living:
NIMH vs DSM 5: No one wins, patients lose
Saving Normal: Psychology Today
by Allen Frances, M.D.
May 10, 2013

The flat out rejection of DSM 5 by National Institute of Mental Health is a sad moment for mental health and an unsafe one for our patients. The APA and NIMH are both letting us down, failing to be safe custodians for the mental health needs of our country. DSM 5 certainly deserves rejecting. It offers a reckless hodgepodge of new diagnoses that will misidentify normals and subject them to unnecessary treatment and stigma.

The NIMH director may have hammered the nail in the DSM 5 coffin when he so harshly criticized its lack of validity. But the NIMH statement went very far overboard with its implied promise that it would soon find a better way of sorting, understanding, and treating mental disorders. The media and internet are now alive with celebrations of this NiMH ‘kill shot’. There are chortlings that DSM 5 is dead on arrival and will perhaps take psychiatry down along with it.

This is misleading and dangerous stuff that is bad for the patients both institutions are meant to serve. NIMH has gone wrong now in the very same way that DSM 5 has gone wrong in the past – making impossible to keep promises. The new NIMH research agenda is necessary and highly desirable- it makes sense to target simpler symptoms rather than complex DSM syndromes, especially since so far we have come up empty. And the new plan will further, and be furthered, by the big, new Obama investment in brain research. But the likely payoff is being wildly oversold. There is no easy solution to what is in fact an almost impossibly complex research problem…

One thing that attracted me to psychiatry from the call of hard science and the allure of answering the really big questions about the universe was the satisfaction of answering the little ones. Putting the why on her conflict with her Mom [why "crazy-making"] took some work, but it allowed her to stop being crazy-made – and the ripple effect on the rest of her life was more than worth the effort.

What Dr. Frances is talking about is, in my mind, the false dichotomy of this DSM-5/RDoC debate. The DSM-5 process and the RDoC hype both flounder in the same way, trying to knock the ball out of the park. What we needed from the DSM-5  was to just get on base. We need a cleaner, more accurate, clinical diagnostic system and we didn’t get it. They were so busy swinging for the fences that they didn’t make the simple changes that could’ve made a big [and helpful] difference.

This isn’t a fight between Freud and Kraepelin, or a war between Insel’s NIMH and Kupfer’s and Regier’s DSM-5, or psychiatry and psychology. It’s only about so many people clogging up what ought to be a serious process of defining illnesses in a way that aids the ill and the people trying to help. That’s all it is:
So what is a patient or potential patient or parent to make of the confusing struggle between NIMH and DSM5 debacle? My advice is to ignore it. Don’t lose faith in psychiatry, but don’t accept psychiatric diagnosis or treatment on faith- particularly if it is given after a brief visit with someone who barely knows you. Be informed. Ask lots of questions. Expect reasonable answers. If you don’t get them, seek second, third, even fourth opinions until you do.

A psychiatric diagnosis is a milestone in a person’s life. Done well, an accurate diagnosis is the beginning of increased self understanding and a launch to effective treatment and a better future. Done poorly it can be a lingering disaster. Getting it right deserves the kind of care and patience exercised in choosing a spouse or a house. Remember that psychiatry is neither all good or all bad. Like most of medicine, it all depends on how well it is done.

And in case we didn’t hear him, Dr. Frances just said it again: The Inmates Seem To Have Taken Over The Asylum
Mickey @ 12:19 pm
Filed under: politics
indigo girls…

Posted on Sunday 12 May 2013

Mickey @ 9:00 am
Filed under: life