Saxena Kirti, Silverman Melissa A, Chang Kiki, Khanzode Leena, Steiner Hans
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Division of Child Psychiatry and Child Development, Stanford University School of Medicine, 401 Quarry Road, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
J Clin Psychiatry. 2005 Dec;66(12):1541-8. doi: 10.4088/jcp.v66n1208.
Successful treatment of conduct disorder remains difficult. On the basis of a positive response to divalproex among adolescent boys with conduct disorder, we conducted an analysis of the impact of baseline comorbid diagnoses and personality factors on the likelihood of treatment response to divalproex.
Seventy-one adolescent boys with conduct disorder (DSM-IV) and a history of at least 1 offense against persons were randomly assigned to receive high- or low-dose divalproex for 7 weeks. Evaluations included best estimate diagnoses, the Clinical Global Impressions-Severity of Illness scale (CGI-S) and CGI-Improvement scale (CGI-I), the 62-item Weinberger Adjustment Inventory (WAI-62) assessment of distress and restraint, the Response Evaluation Measure assessment of immature and mature defenses, and the Achenbach Youth Self-Report assessment of overall psychopathology. All were conducted at study entry and exit, and the WAI-62 was conducted weekly throughout the 7-week study period. Treatment response was defined as a rating of much improved or very much improved on the CGI-I. Data were collected from June 1997 to April 1998.
Fifty-eight subjects completed the study and were eligible for inclusion in the analysis. Plasma divalproex level (p = .003) and immature defenses (p = .004) were significant positive predictors of treatment response, while restraint (p = .01) and level and range of psychopathology (p = .04) were significant predictors of nonresponse. Comorbidities or distress (p = .06) were not significantly associated with treatment outcome.
Predictors of response to divalproex treatment for conduct disorder were identified, despite the small sample size in this study. The pattern of positive and negative predictors of response to divalproex, an antikindling agent, tends to support a model of kindling-reinforced reactive/affective/defensive/impulsive aggression among adolescent boys with conduct disorder. Additional studies are needed to identify more subtle predictors of treatment response and to clarify the mechanisms contributing to the development of conduct disorder.
品行障碍的成功治疗仍然困难。基于患有品行障碍的青春期男孩对丙戊酸二钠有积极反应,我们分析了基线共病诊断和人格因素对丙戊酸二钠治疗反应可能性的影响。
71名患有品行障碍(DSM-IV)且至少有一次针对他人犯罪史的青春期男孩被随机分配接受高剂量或低剂量丙戊酸二钠治疗7周。评估包括最佳估计诊断、临床总体印象-疾病严重程度量表(CGI-S)和CGI-改善量表(CGI-I)、62项温伯格适应量表(WAI-62)对痛苦和克制的评估、反应评估量表对不成熟和成熟防御的评估,以及阿肯巴克青少年自我报告对总体精神病理学的评估。所有评估均在研究开始和结束时进行,WAI-62在为期7周的研究期间每周进行一次。治疗反应定义为CGI-I评定为明显改善或非常明显改善。数据收集于1997年6月至1998年4月。
58名受试者完成了研究并符合纳入分析的条件。血浆丙戊酸二钠水平(p = 0.003)和不成熟防御(p = 0.004)是治疗反应的显著正预测因子,而克制(p = 0.01)以及精神病理学水平和范围(p = 0.04)是非反应的显著预测因子。共病或痛苦(p = 0.06)与治疗结果无显著关联。
尽管本研究样本量较小,但已确定了品行障碍丙戊酸二钠治疗反应的预测因子。丙戊酸二钠作为一种抗点燃剂,其反应的正负预测因子模式倾向于支持一种关于患有品行障碍的青春期男孩中点燃强化的反应性/情感性/防御性/冲动性攻击的模型。需要进一步的研究来确定治疗反应更细微的预测因子,并阐明导致品行障碍发展的机制。