Munch G, Godart N
Centre hospitalier Sainte-Anne, 75014 Paris, France.
UVSQ, CESP, Inserm, université Paris-Saclay, université Paris-Sud, 94800 Villejuif, France; Département de psychiatrie, institut mutualiste Montsouris, 75014 Paris, France; Faculté de médecine, université Paris Descartes, 75006 Paris, France.
Encephale. 2017 Oct;43(5):464-470. doi: 10.1016/j.encep.2016.09.005. Epub 2016 Nov 18.
Adolescence is a unique phase of the human developmental process. In adolescents, psychotropic medications may have different efficacy and tolerance profiles compared to those at other stages of the lifespan. Mood stabilizers are a complex pharmacological category including lithium, some anticonvulsants, and some second generation antipsychotics. Focusing on this class of pharmacological agents, we aim to answer the following questions: in which indications and according to which modalities should mood stabilizers be prescribed during adolescence?
Information was sought from the websites of the French Haute Autorité de santé (HAS) and Agence nationale de sécurité du médicament et des produits de santé (ANSM), the American Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the British National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). Guidelines from the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP) were also reviewed. Additional articles were found using PubMed and Google Scholar. We assumed that guidelines published by a national institute were the most relevant, second information from medical academies, then literature reviews, and finally single studies. Practical prescription data were also sought from the French Vidal Drug Dictionary.
For bipolar disorder in adolescents, lithium has been the first drug licensed in France (from the age of 16) and in the USA (from the age of 12), with indications for acute mania and preventive treatment. Benefits for impulsive and self-aggressive behaviour disorders (especially relevant in case of borderline personality disorder) have also been documented, although lithium has not been licensed in any country for those indications. Extended-release tablets are usually used, at doses targeting for a lithiemia between 0.8 and 1.2mEq/L 12hours after last intake. Because of a narrow therapeutic window and potential side effects (especially nephrotoxicity), lithium prescription requires regular blood tests and good treatment compliance. None of the anticonvulsants has been licensed by a national drug administration as a mood stabilizer in adolescents. However, the AACAP recommends valproate as a first line treatment for mania, even though the NICE and the ANSM caution that valproate should not be used by women of child bearing age. Besides its teratogenic and endocrine side effects, valproate exposes one to the risk of hepatic toxicity. That is why regular liver function tests should be prescribed when valproate is chosen. According to the AACAP, carbamazepine (which is licensed for the treatment of mania in adults) is not a first line treatment for adolescents. Indeed, no clinical study has demonstrated its efficacy on manic episodes in adolescents. Moreover, carbamazepine exposes one to the risk of agranulocytosis. Lamotrigine has not been approved for adolescents, but some studies suggest its efficacy for bipolar depression (often a treatment-resistant phase) in this age group. Major side effects are the risk of Lyell or Stevens-Johnsons syndrome (which usually occur within the first eight weeks of treatment). There is no need for biological tests, just clinical monitoring. Pharmacological interactions between lamotrigine and oral contraceptives require caution. Finally, the use of some second generation antipsychotics for bipolar disorder in adolescents has been approved by national drug administrations. In France, only aripiprazole is licensed for acute mania (from the age of 13). In the USA, aripiprazole is licensed from the age of 10 for acute mania and preventive treatment, while risperidone and quetiapine are licensed from the age of 10 for acute mania, and olanzapine is licensed from the age of 13 for acute mania. The AACAP recommends second generation antipsychotics as a first line treatment for bipolar disorder. Moreover, the AACAP and the NICE recommend second generation antipsychotics for behavioural disorders in adolescents. Recommended doses are usually lower and titration slower than for adults. As in adults, adverse effects are metabolic, motor and cognitive disorders. Moreover, hyperprolactinemia, sedation and weight gain are more frequent than in adults.
Epidemiologic data for prescription of mood stabilizers in adolescents only partially concord with recommendations from drug administrations and scientific societies. On the one hand, there is a trend toward preferential prescription of second generation antipsychotics, on the other hand lithium is hardly prescribed to adolescents, less often than anticonvulsants. Thus, without approval from any drug administration, the anticonvulsants are often preferred to lithium (because of lithium's potential risks due to noncompliance or voluntary poisoning) and to second generation antipsychotics (because of their tolerance profile). Nevertheless, for prescribers it is a complex matter to compare side effects: the frequency and intensity of adverse effects is quite variable from one mood stabilizer to another, and such a thing as an expected value is therefore hard to define. Regardless of the medication chosen, compliance and therapeutic alliance are major issues. Compliance is especially low during adolescence (less than 40% according to a study on bipolar disorder). This lack of compliance has multiple determinants: poor acceptance or misunderstanding of the psychiatric disorder, indirect effects of bad relationships with parents and more generally adults, but also reckless behaviour or death wishes. Improving therapeutic alliance appears as a major challenge for health practitioners dealing with youth. One interesting path of research could be the therapeutic education programs using humanistic communication techniques (addressing both adolescents and their parents) which have already produced encouraging results.
青春期是人类发育过程中的一个独特阶段。与生命周期中其他阶段相比,青少年使用精神药物可能具有不同的疗效和耐受性。心境稳定剂是一类复杂的药物,包括锂盐、一些抗惊厥药和一些第二代抗精神病药。围绕这类药物,我们旨在回答以下问题:在青春期,心境稳定剂应在哪些适应症以及按照哪些方式进行处方?
从法国卫生高级管理局(HAS)、法国国家药品和健康产品安全局(ANSM)、美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)以及英国国家卫生与临床优化研究所(NICE)的网站获取信息。还查阅了美国儿童和青少年精神病学会(AACAP)的指南。通过PubMed和谷歌学术搜索到了更多文章。我们认为国家机构发布的指南最为相关,其次是医学学会的信息,然后是文献综述,最后是单项研究。还从法国维达尔药物词典中获取了实际处方数据。
对于青少年双相情感障碍,锂盐是法国(16岁起)和美国(12岁起)首个获批的药物,适用于急性躁狂发作和预防性治疗。尽管锂盐在任何国家均未获批用于这些适应症,但也有文献记载其对冲动和自我攻击行为障碍(在边缘性人格障碍中尤为相关)有益。通常使用缓释片,剂量目标是末次服药12小时后血锂浓度在0.8至1.2mEq/L之间。由于治疗窗较窄且存在潜在副作用(尤其是肾毒性),锂盐处方需要定期进行血液检查并确保良好的治疗依从性。没有一种抗惊厥药被国家药品管理部门批准作为青少年的心境稳定剂。然而,AACAP推荐丙戊酸盐作为躁狂发作的一线治疗药物,尽管NICE和ANSM警告育龄女性不应使用丙戊酸盐。除了致畸和内分泌副作用外,丙戊酸盐还存在肝毒性风险。这就是为什么选择丙戊酸盐时应定期进行肝功能检查的原因。根据AACAP,卡马西平(已获批用于治疗成人躁狂发作)并非青少年的一线治疗药物。实际上,没有临床研究证明其对青少年躁狂发作有效。此外,卡马西平存在粒细胞缺乏症风险。拉莫三嗪未被批准用于青少年,但一些研究表明其对该年龄组的双相抑郁(通常是难治性阶段)有效。主要副作用是发生中毒性表皮坏死松解症或史蒂文斯 - 约翰逊综合征的风险(通常在治疗的前八周内出现)。无需进行生物学检查,仅需临床监测。拉莫三嗪与口服避孕药之间的药物相互作用需要谨慎。最后,国家药品管理部门已批准一些第二代抗精神病药用于青少年双相情感障碍。在法国,仅阿立哌唑被批准用于急性躁狂发作(13岁起)。在美国,阿立哌唑10岁起获批用于急性躁狂发作和预防性治疗,利培酮和喹硫平10岁起获批用于急性躁狂发作,奥氮平13岁起获批用于急性躁狂发作。AACAP推荐第二代抗精神病药作为双相情感障碍的一线治疗药物。此外,AACAP和NICE推荐第二代抗精神病药用于青少年行为障碍。推荐剂量通常低于成人且滴定速度比成人慢。与成人一样,不良反应包括代谢、运动和认知障碍。此外,高催乳素血症、镇静和体重增加在青少年中比在成人中更常见。
青少年心境稳定剂处方的流行病学数据仅部分与药品管理部门和科学学会的建议一致。一方面,存在优先处方第二代抗精神病药的趋势,另一方面,锂盐很少用于青少年,比抗惊厥药使用得更少。因此,在未获得任何药品管理部门批准的情况下,抗惊厥药通常比锂盐(由于不依从或故意中毒导致锂盐存在潜在风险)和第二代抗精神病药(由于其耐受性)更受青睐。然而,对于处方医生而言,比较副作用是一件复杂的事情:不同心境稳定剂的不良反应频率和强度差异很大,因此很难定义一个期望值。无论选择何种药物,依从性和治疗联盟都是主要问题。青春期的依从性尤其低(根据一项关于双相情感障碍的研究,低于40%)。这种依从性差有多种决定因素:对精神疾病的接受度低或误解、与父母及更广泛的成年人关系不良的间接影响,还有鲁莽行为或求死愿望。对于处理青少年问题的健康从业者而言,改善治疗联盟似乎是一项重大挑战。一个有趣的研究方向可能是使用人文沟通技巧的治疗教育项目(针对青少年及其父母),该项目已经取得了令人鼓舞的成果。