220 likes | 230 Views
This article explores the evidence for increased prevalence of depression in patients with HCV, the incidence of depression with interferon treatment, and the current role of anti-depressants in interferon-related depression.
E N D
Depression in Hepatitis C Patients and Interferon Treatment Paul J. Thuluvath, MD, FRCP The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Outline • Evidence for increased prevalence of depression or associated symptoms (fatigue, reduced quality of life) in patients with HCV • Incidence of depression with interferon treatment and its potential impact on successful outcome of treatment for HCV • Pathophysiology of interferon (and HCV) induced depression • Current role of anti-depressants in interferon related depression
Common Neuropsychiatry Symptoms Fatigue Impaired quality of life Cognitive impairment Depression
Fatigue • Common in HCV – 20 to 80% (versus 20-30% with general population), but similar in HCV positive and negative blood donors • No clear relationship between severity of liver disease and depression • Conflicting data on improvement after HCV clearance • 35% (29 of 83) improvement in responders vs. 22% (75 of 348) in non-responders • Cacoub P et al J Hepatol 2002;37:545 • No difference between those who had spontaneous clearance vs. chronic carriers • Coughlan B et al Br J Health Psychology 2002;7:105
Quality of Life Studies • QOL is lower in HCV independent of the severity of liver disease (Ware, 1999; Bonkovsky 1999) • QOL is lower in HCV compared to HBV, and it is unrelated to the mode of infection (Foster, 1998) • QOL improves after viral eradication (Ware, 1999; Bonkovsky, 1999; McHutchinson, 2001) • But QOL is better in those who are unaware of HCV diagnosis (Rodgers, 1999) • No difference in QOL in Irish women with HCV RNA positive or negative (Coughlan, 2002)
Cognitive Impairment • Impairment of attention, concentration, and psychomotor speed in the presence of minimal hepatitis (Forton, DM, et al. Hepatology 2002) • Impairment is similar to other liver disease (Hilsabeck, RC, et al. Hepatology 2002) • Cerebral choline to creatine ratio elevated in basal ganglia and white matter on MRS in the presence of minimal liver disease (Forton, DM, et al. Lancet 2001) • Mechanism unknown: HCV negative strand identified in brain; immune mediated upregulation of neuroinhibitory pathways?
Depression • Depression is common in patients with HCV • Dwight, MM, et al. J Hepatol 2002;36:401-7 • Forton, DM, et al. Hepatology 2002;35:433-9 • Zdilar, et al. Hepatology 2000;31:1207-11 • El-Serag, HB. Gastroenterology 2002;123:476-82 • No large case-controlled studies to date • Suicide probability and depression similar in HCV +ve and HCV –ve intravenous drug users • Grassi, L, et al. J Affect Disord 2001;64:195-202
Confounding Factors • Anxiety about diagnosis & prognosis • Severity of liver disease • Influence of treatment (including IFN) • Ongoing or previous drug or alcohol use • Underlying personality traits • Co-infection with HIV
Problems with Published Studies • Different ‘tools’ to assess depression and QOL • No ‘controls’ and results not adjusted for comorbid conditions such as drug abuse, alcoholism, and other personality traits • Studies from ‘specialty’ clinics • Small studies except one large, retrospective study based on ICD codes in VA population
Prevalence of Psychiatric Disorders in HCV Patients • 33,842 HCV admitted to VA hospitals during 1992-9 • 31% had ‘active disorders’ defined at hospitalization for psychiatric or drug detoxification disorders • 86.4% had past or present psychiatric, drug or alcohol use disorder • El-Serag, HB, et al. Gastroenterology 2002;123:476-82
Prevalence of psychiatric disorders in HCV Patients All Vietnam War Era Veterans
Association between HCV and Neuropsychiatric Symptoms • There is significant circumstantial evidence, but no confirmatory large ‘case-control’ studies to date • Pre-existing neuropsychiatric symptoms may impact the management of HCV
Impact of Neuropsychiatric Symptoms on Treatment • 43% (242/557) did not keep VA clinic appointment and 12% (64/557) had active psychiatric or drug use disorders • Cawthorne, CH, et al. Am J Gastroenterol 2002;97:149 • Cleveland study (n = 293): 37% did not adhere to evaluation, 34% had medical or psychiatric contraindications and 13% had ongoing drug or alcohol use • Falck-Yitter, Y, et al. Ann Intern Med 2002;136:288
Adherence to Treatment • Prospective study of 81 patients in an inter-disciplinary setting: 16 psychiatric disorders, 21 methadone use, 21 former drug addiction and 23 ‘controls’ • Depression (DSM-IV) and sustained response to interferon similar in all groups • More patients in psychiatric group required anti-depressants; more drop-out (43%) from methadone group compared to 13%-18% in other groups Schaefer, M, et al. Hepatology 2003;37:443
Common Neuropsychiatric Side-effects of Interferon Irritability Anxiety Insomnia Fatigue Depression Confusion & Psychosis (rare) Suicide (extremely rare)
Neuropsychiatric Side-effects of Interferon • Common – probably in more than one-third (reported incidence varies from 6% to 70%) • Variability in incidence is due to differences in the dose, duration, patient characteristics and the ‘tools’ used to assess symptoms • Suicidal ideation is uncommon (<0.2%); very few cases of suicides while on treatment
Interferon and Depression • 39 patients prospectively evaluated by Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) • 13 (33%) developed Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) between 6th and 22nd week • 11 of 13 responded to (citalopram) Celexa (mean dose 36 mg, range 20-60 mg) • Hauser, P, et al. Mol Psychiatry 2002;7:942-7
Proposed Mechanisms for Interferon Induced Depression • No direct action (IFN does not cross blood-brain barrier) • Probably related to complex neuro-endocrine alterations: changes in opioid-dopamine, serotonin, nor-epinephrine system reported
Interferon Tryptophan 2-3-dioxygenase Indoleamine 2-3-dioxygenase 5-HT Serum tryptophan Plasma kynurenine 5-HT transporter m RNA 5-HT receptor changes Neuropsychiatric Symptoms Hypothalamic- Pituitary Axis HCV Pro-inflammatory Cytokines Interferon
Pre-emptive Treatment of High Dose Interferon Induced Depression Musselman, DL, et al. NEJM 2001;344:961-6
Pre-emptive Treatment of High Dose Interferon Induced Depression Musselman, DL, et al. NEJM 2001;344:961-6
Conclusions • IFN induced depression is common and often undiagnosed unless screened (BDI, ZSDS, CES-D) in a systematic way • Patients with depression could be treated safely and effectively with IFN provided their depression is controlled prior to treatment • SSRI may be the first line of therapy for those who develop depression during treatment • Multi-disciplinary (psychiatrists, hepatologists and nurses) approach is critical for successful management of HCV