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Severely
Mentally Ill at high risk for Cardiovascular
Disease
Newswise — A
psychiatrist at Washington University School
of Medicine in St. Louis writes in the
Journal of the American Medical Association
(JAMA) that although mortality from
cardiovascular disease has declined in the
United States over the past several decades,
patients with severe psychiatric illness are
not enjoying the benefits of that progress.
In a commentary article
in the Oct. 17 issue of JAMA, John W.
Newcomer, M.D., professor of psychiatry, of
psychology and of medicine and medical
director of the Center for Clinical Studies
at Washington University, reports that those
with illnesses such as schizophrenia,
bipolar disorder and major depression lose
25 to 30 years of life expectancy compared
to the general population. And although
suicide does claim the lives of many
psychiatric patients, most of those
premature deaths are due to cardiovascular
disease.
"This is really a
double hit," Newcomer says. "Not only are
these patients dealing with the serious
burden that accompanies their psychiatric
disorder, but they also have an increased
risk and an increased burden from major
medical conditions like diabetes, heart
disease and stroke. Ultimately, it is the
unrecognized risk factors and the
under-diagnosed and under-treated conditions
that significantly shorten the lifespan."
Newcomer says several
factors conspire to elevate risk including
reduced access to appropriate medical care.
Major mental disorders significantly impair
a person's ability to work and learn, so
patients tend to have lower incomes and
poorer dietary habits, often relying instead
on fast food.
In addition, patients
with serious psychiatric illness are much
more likely to smoke — between 50 percent
and 80 percent smoke cigarettes — and
although the severely mentally ill make up
only between 5 percent and 10 percent of the
population, they consume a disproportionate
amount of all cigarettes smoked in the
United States.
Many psychiatric
medications also tend to contribute to
weight gain, in part by making people less
active and sometimes by stimulating
appetite, and weight gain can be a prominent
side effect of some antipsychotic drugs in
particular.
"All of this adds up,"
Newcomer says. "They are more likely to eat
more high-fat food and to burn fewer
calories, so it's not surprising that this
population also tends to have higher rates
of overweight and obesity."
But that's not the whole story. Newcomer
also reports that patients with severe
mental illness are significantly less likely
to receive therapies of proven benefit for
problems with cholesterol, diabetes,
hypertension or heart disease. Those who
have survived a heart attack are less likely
to receive appropriate medications, cardiac
catheterization procedures or bypass surgery
than heart-attack patients without mental
illness.
Regarding preventive
care, Newcomer cites data from a national
study of 1,500 patients with chronic
schizophrenia. They participated in the
National Institute of Mental Health-funded
Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of
Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE) study.
The CATIE study found that 88 percent of
patients entering the study with high
cholesterol did not take lipid-lowering
drugs. Another 30 percent with diabetes at
the start of the study received no
anti-diabetes medications, and 62 percent of
those with high blood pressure were not
taking any antihypertensive medication.
Those with severe
psychiatric illness also are less likely to
be screened for high cholesterol, high blood
pressure or diabetes despite the evidence of
increased risk in general and specific
evidence that some antipsychotic drugs can
have adverse effects on body weight, glucose
metabolism and lipid levels.
A solution, Newcomer
argues, will emerge only if psychiatrists
and primary-care providers can work
together.
"This requires
coordination," he says. "And coordination
between psychiatric professionals and
primary-care providers is not easy when they
often are physically located in different
places. There are transportation issues and
scheduling issues. For healthy people, the
need to make an extra appointment lowers the
probability that it will actually happen,
and research further indicates that when
patients with severe mental disorders have
to go across the hall, it reduces the
probability they will get care. If they have
to cross the street, the probability gets
even lower. If it's across town … well,
without case managers and others working
closely with these patients, in general
those follow-ups won't happen."
Newcomer says another
problem is that lifestyle interventions that
encourage healthy eating, smoking cessation
and exercise can be difficult enough in the
general population, but they are even more
difficult when patients with schizophrenia
or other mental disorders are involved. He
says such behavioral interventions have been
shown to work even in those with severe
psychiatric illness, but achieving success
requires extra commitment and resources from
the health-care community.
Getting psychiatrists
to change their routine is important.
Newcomer says that to lower risk of
cardiovascular complications, psychiatrists
may need to regularly weigh their patients,
take blood pressure and screen appropriately
for blood glucose, cholesterol and
triglycerides.
"We're not saying
psychiatrists should start prescribing
lipid-lowering agents or diabetes drugs, but
they are on the 'front lines,' seeing
psychiatric patients much more than
primary-care providers," Newcomer says.
"It's important that psychiatrists begin to
employ some of these basic screening
techniques."
He also says that it's
vital that patients with severe mental
disorders receive needed psychiatric
medications, even though some of those drugs
may contribute to weight gain, abnormal
lipid levels and risk for cardiovascular
disease and diabetes.
"If you have a serious
psychiatric condition like schizophrenia,
you really need to take medication,"
Newcomer says. "Clearly we don't want people
to stop taking their medicine, but in some
cases, there may be alternative drugs that
have fewer effects on risk for obesity or
diabetes. Combinations of diet, exercise and
selected medication are being studied to
lower these risks without losing the
benefits that antipsychotic drugs provide
for these patients with severe psychiatric
illness."
And Newcomer believes
if such strategies can be developed and
implemented, it is possible to quickly lower
rates of cardiovascular disease and increase
life expectancy in this population.
"I think there's some
'low-hanging fruit' here," he says. "Just
getting psychiatrists engaged in this type
of general health monitoring should help.
Most of these patients already are seeing a
physician, and if that physician and medical
team can screen for cardiovascular risk
factors, we may be able to intervene and
find ways to lower that risk significantly."
Newcomer JW, Hennekens
CH. Severe mental illness and risk of
cardiovascular disease, Journal of the
American Medical Association; vol. 298
(15), pp. 1794-1796, Oct. 17, 2007.
This work was funded in
part by grants from the National Institute
of Mental Health (NIMH) of the National
Institutes of Health.
Washington University
School of Medicine's 2,100 employed and
volunteer faculty physicians also are the
medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis
Children's hospitals. The School of Medicine
is one of the leading medical research,
teaching and patient care institutions in
the nation, currently ranked fourth in the
nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through
its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St.
Louis Children's hospitals, the School of
Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.
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