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COMMENTARY 

Dr Marcia Angell and the Illusions of Anti-Psychiatry

By John H. Krystal, MD | August 13, 2012
Dr Krystal is Robert L. McNeil Jr. Professor of Translational Research; Chair, Department of Psychiatry; Chief of Psychiatry, Yale-New Haven Hospital in New Haven; and President of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology.

Dr John Krystal disputes anti-psychiatry claims[Editor's Note: American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ACNP) president Dr John Krystal recently produced a strong rebuttal to anti-psychiatry charges made by a prominent physician and former editor of The New England Journal of Medicine. Here, with permission, is Dr Krystal's recently published piece (see link)].

In a widely read 2-part article published in the New York Review of Books ("The Epidemic of Mental Illness: Why?" and "The Illusions of Psychiatry"):

(MORE: Psychism: Defining Discrimination of Psychiatry)

Dr Marcia Angell, a former editor of The New England Journal of Medicine, used the platform of books review to criticize the field of psychiatry for issues that have long been recognized within our field and are thus targeted by current research (see, for example, my ACNP President's Letter): psychiatric diagnoses are based on symptoms rather than pathophysiology, our treatments are insufficiently effective, newer medications have provided limited (if any) benefit over older medications, the pharmaceutical industry has had inappropriate relationships with individuals and organizations within our profession, there are problems in access to psychosocial treatments for psychiatric disorders, psychiatrists prescribe medications to treat symptoms rather than correcting known biological abnormalities, our understanding of the neurobiology of psychiatric symptoms is limited, and there are not objective biomarkers to guide diagnosis or to match individual patients with particular drugs. Vigorous responses to Dr Angell's articles were offered, albeit largely rejected by her, making the points that clinical data provide empirical support for the validity of symptom-based diagnoses, psychiatry is hardly unique in prescribing medications based on symptoms rather than pathophysiology, and while psychiatric pharmacotherapies have limitations, they are not very different in relative efficacy from current treatments for many chronic medical disorders.1,2 (See also "Exchange," New York Review of Books August 18, 2011) 

What was strikingly missing in the responses to Angell's article was a response to her direct and implied criticism not only of the underlying science of psychiatry, but of the reality of the distress and disability of psychiatric patients. These are critical issues because (1) the ability of psychiatry to effectively treat its patients now and in the future depends on the quality and integrity of its science, and (2) the doubt cast on the seriousness of the distress and impairments of patients seeking psychiatric treatments feeds into the residual ignorance and stigma that continue to be so harmful to patients. As president of the ACNP, I thought it was important to respond to her criticisms.  Psychiatry is engaged in a challenging battle to understand the most complex aspects of human biology and behavior and to reduce the burden arising from psychiatric disorders. It is rather shocking for a former editor of a leading medical journal to fail to recognize the challenges of brain science, the progress that has been made, and the enormous and well-documented remaining unmet medical need.3  By demeaning the real-world challenges faced by psychiatrists and their patients, selectively ignoring scientific progress that challenges her assertions, and presenting tendentious and highly selected information about the status of psychiatric neuroscience, Angell misuses her standing as a former editor of The New England Journal of Medicine and the pulpit of the New York Review of Books to further stigmatize the field of psychiatry and patients with mental disorders.

1. Angell mistakenly implies that psychiatry could abandon its diagnostic system without harming patients. She begins the first part of her essay with, "Americans are in the midst of a raging epidemic of mental illness . . . are we simply expanding the criteria for mental illness so that nearly everyone has one?" She does not consider the possibility that reduction in stigmatization of people carrying psychiatric diagnoses and improved treatment may explain changing patterns of treatment seeking. While she does not draw conclusions, the review is replete with innuendo. She suggests, for example, that the medicalization of psychiatry and its development of empirical diagnostic criteria emerged from inappropriate relationships of psychiatry and the pharmaceutical industry that served the industry's purpose of increasing the prescription of drugs. It is beyond the scope of this commentary to evaluate this hypothesis. It is noteworthy, however, that the disorder that has had the greatest increase in apparent prevalence in the US in the past decade is autism (see link). Whether there is a real increase in prevalence is a matter of contention, but factors contributing to increased case recognition were destigmatization and the emergence of effective, if highly laborious, behavioral interventions that improve language and social skills. 

Angell seems to assume that it is a mystery to the field that the DSM system is flawed. Indeed it is widely recognized that this is a provisional diagnostic system pending progress in better understanding uniquely human disorders of our most complex organ. That said, the processes of review and revision of the DSM system involve extensive reliance on epidemiology, family studies, twin and increasingly other genetic studies, that can usefully inform a descriptive diagnostic system. It is easy to criticize a descriptive system, but given the current early state of brain science, it is not very easy to suggest a better approach. Abandoning the DSM system at present would undercut diagnosis, treatment, and communication with patients and families. In my opinion, it is a mistake to suggest, even through innuendo, that society could afford for psychiatry to abandon DSM before science is at an advanced enough stage to deliver a superior alternative.

2. Angell uses a biased argument in the attempt to label antidepressants as both ineffective and harmful, without consideration of the impact of these assertions on patients who currently benefit from these medications or who might need these medications in the future. It is widely known that antidepressant medications are variably effective in people with depression. The studies by Turner et al4  and Kirsch et al5 raise important questions about who benefits from antidepressant treatment and to what degree they benefit. But these studies also have limitations, critiqued elsewhere6 (See also "Exchange," New York Review of Books August 18, 2011). Other studies provide evidence of antidepressant efficacy in the majority of patients,7 even those patients with relatively mild depression.8 In one of these studies,7 non-responders to antidepressant medication improved less than patients treated with placebo, suggesting that ongoing monitoring of treatment response may be a critical step for improving outcomes and limiting negative effects of treatment. Additional signals of antidepressant effectiveness also emerge from health services research. For example, one randomized clinical trial suggests that antidepressant treatment is more cost-effective than either an evidence-based psychotherapy or placebo.9 The cost-effectiveness of antidepressant treatment, generally embedded within psychosocial treatment,10 is further supported by evidence that optimal antidepressant treatment is more costly but more cost-effective than antidepressant treatment marred by suboptimal dosing, non-adherence to prescribed medication, or medication discontinuation.11-13 Also, although the newer antidepressant medications offer little if any evidence of enhanced efficacy over older medications, improved medication adherence with the new medications may make them more cost-effective.14 Clinicians face enormous challenges in weighing the risks and benefits of pharmacotherapy with each patient, educating patients about these risks and benefits, and monitoring these risks and benefits on an ongoing basis during treatment. Faced with a conflicting literature and the responsibility to mobilize all available resources in the effort to alleviate suffering, physicians do not have the luxury of abandoning current antidepressants while waiting for more effective alternatives. As with DSM, in my opinion it is a mistake, even through innuendo, to suggest that this might be possible. To quote Dr Peter Kramer on this issue, "It is dangerous for the press to hammer away at the theme that antidepressants are placebos. They're not. To give the impression that they are is to cause needless suffering" (See: New York Times, July 9, 2011).

Similarly, Angell writes about medication effects on the brain in a pejorative and misleading manner: "After several weeks on psychoactive drugs, the brain's compensatory efforts begin to fail, and side effects emerge that reflect the mechanism of action of the drugs. For example, the SSRIs may cause episodes of mania, because of the excess of serotonin. Antipsychotics cause side effects that resemble Parkinson's disease, because of the depletion of dopamine(Drug information on dopamine) (which is also depleted in Parkinson's disease)" (See: The Epidemic of Mental Illness: Why?). She fails to be clear that antidepressant medications do not cause bipolar disorder and it is not at all clear that antidepressants have a causal effect in most "switches" in mood among bipolar patients. Moreover, parkinsonian side effects of antipsychotic medications are avoidable in most patients, even when treated with older antipsychotic medications.15-17 

3. Angell employs information selectively and inappropriately to attack the lack of credibility of psychiatric diagnoses and psychiatric treatments. Dr Angell highlights widely acknowledged limitations in our symptom-based diagnostic system, but she fails to celebrate the substantial efforts led by Dr Thomas Insel and NIMH to advance psychiatry toward pathophysiology-based diagnoses, the Research Domain Criteria.18 She cites neuroimaging evidence to support her hypothesis that psychiatric medications are harmful to the brain. However, she does not cite evidence that antidepressants and lithium(Drug information on lithium) protect against or reverse the ill effect of stress19-25 and other neurotoxic insults26-29 in animal studies. She quotes Dr Steven Hyman as saying that long-term treatment with psychoactive substances produce "substantial and long-lasting alterations in neural function . . . the brain . . . begins to function in a manner 'qualitatively as well as quantitatively different from the normal state'" (See: The Epidemic of Mental Illness: Why?). But she fails to note that this partial quotation, taken out of context, omits the critical aspect of Dr Hyman's message. In a personal communication to me, Dr Hyman noted that the long-lasting alterations of which he frequently speaks, ie, brain plasticity, explain the slow onset of therapeutic effects, as well as some late emerging effects as tardive dyskinesia. Slowly developing therapeutic effects may not only reduce symptoms, but also produce neuroprotective and neurotrophic effects on brain structure30-34 and  "normalizing"35-40 effects on brain circuit function in patients. Angell also criticizes the increase in pharmacotherapy relative to psychotherapies, ie, Dr Eisenberg's "shift from brainlessness to mindlessness." However, Eisenberg first made his comments in the context of his Eli Lilly Lecture to the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 1996, over 15 years ago. Angell ignores the widespread acceptance that medication and psychotherapeutic treatments do not work at cross-purposes.41 Rather, antidepressant psychotherapies, pharmacotherapies, and brain stimulation treatments have converging effects on brain circuit function42-48 and generally work more effectively in combination, something that is recognized in most modern treatment guidelines.41,49-59 

Angell condemns psychiatric neuroscience for espousing a theory that it never fully accepted and certainly abandoned more than 2 decades ago. The monoamine hypotheses of depression were introduced in the 1960s and 1970s in the context of the first biological studies in patients, conducted largely by founding members of the ACNP.  It was doubted almost from its origin, based on the temporal dissociation between the rise in monoamine levels produced by antidepressants and the emergence of their therapeutic effects.  It was fully abandoned by the 1990s, when it was evident that depression had a complex biology that went beyond global monoamine deficits.60 She does not refer to the past 30 years of research on the neurobiology of depression that introduced fundamentally new mechanistic hypotheses.19,61-63 While it is fair to criticize simplistic phrases like "low serotonin" and "chemical imbalance" used in advertising or by some physician communications to patients, all fields of medicine strive to find ways of communicating complex biology to lay audiences. The "chemical imbalance" locution is not one that I endorse, but it hardly reflects the state of psychiatric neuroscience.

4. Angell presents without seriously questioning the hypothesis that neurobiological findings in psychiatry reflect toxic effects of psychopharmacologic treatment rather than the underlying neurobiology of psychiatric disorders. Dr Angell fails to acknowledge that there are now replicable genetic risk variants for a growing list of psychiatric disorders, including autism64-66 and schizophrenia,67,68 in close step with progress on other heterogeneous, genetically complex disorders such as type 2 diabetes mellitus. Dr Angell also failed to comment on the growing links between these genetics advances, neuropathological findings in post-mortem brain tissue, and pathophysiologic hypotheses.69-72 She ignores a generation of neuroimaging and neuropsychological research that indicate that brain structural and functional alterations in schizophrenia73-86 and mood disorders87-94 precede exposure to pharmacotherapeutic drugs. She also fails to cite research that shows that healthy never-medicated family members of people with psychiatric diagnoses often exhibit traits that are similar to, but less severe than, their ill relatives.95-106 Similarly, she did not acknowledge growing evidence that risk genotypes for psychiatric disorders also contribute to neuroimaging and clinical phenotypes associated with these psychiatric disorders.107-111  In addition, she criticizes psychiatry for its lack of understanding of the neurobiology of psychiatric symptoms, but she ignores progress toward explanatory cognitive neuroscience models of psychiatric symptoms, including hallucinations,112-114 delusions,115,116 depression,46,117 and fear/anxiety.118,119

5. Perhaps most seriously, Angell seems to belittle the plight of people suffering with psychiatric disorders.  According to the World Health Organization, neuropsychiatric disorders are the largest cause of disability (DALYs) in the world and depression, a major focus of Dr Angell's essay, is the leading cause of disability.3 Yet she denigrates the diagnostic system that enables depressed people to obtain care, she denies the efficacy and safety of the most common treatment for major depressive disorder, and she repudiates the notion that psychiatry research has the capacity to identify brain mechanisms underlying depression that could lead to new treatments. Dr Angell never gets beyond her criticisms to assert a positive agenda that might help to alleviate the suffering of patients.  Depression is under-funded by NIH relative to its burden of disease.120 As a result, she might have called for more research to better understand the neurobiology of depression and to improve treatment.  Also, she notes, correctly, that there are important barriers to access to psychotherapies.  But, she fails to call for better funding for these treatments by third party payers.  She stigmatizes psychiatry, but fails to address the consequences of stigma for psychiatrists and patients, including discouraging medical students from entering psychiatry (see my June ACNP Blog) or dissuading suffering people from seeking needed treatment.121  The absence of a positive agenda in Angell's essay was unfortunate. After all, what value is there in critiquing psychiatry, if not to call for actions that address the needs of psychiatric patients and society? Angell's article was an example of bad journalism. It is shocking that it was written by a former editor of The New England Journal of Medicine, a journal renowned for impartiality and rigor.

Angell has written an article filled with half-truths that would seem to call for society to abandon psychiatric diagnoses, antidepressant medications, and psychiatric neuroscience. Angell shows utter disregard for the negative impact of each of these actions on individuals with psychiatric disorders and society.  She provides no alternatives to the status quo or a constructive agenda that might ultimately speed the alleviation of human suffering.  Instead, she attacks the one clear path to better diagnoses and more effective pharmacotherapies, translational neuroscience. By stigmatizing a field progressing toward a scientific foundation and by disparaging treatments that show signs of efficacy, Dr Angell's facile criticism of psychiatry could do harm. Perhaps, in this case, doing harm in the name of ethics is, to borrow a phrase from Angell, a form of illusion.

Note: Dr Krystal's financial disclosure can be viewed here [pdf]. Click here for the full list of references [pdf]. 

 

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by susan kweskin | September 10, 2012 9:41 AM EDT

Dr. John Krystal responds:

I appreciate the thoughtful comments from David Bell and Fernando Ruiz on my response to Marcia Angell's critique of psychiatry. In different ways, each response to my commentary highlights the enormous challenges faced in the effort to enhance the capacity of psychiatry to alleviate suffering and promote recovery of people with psychiatric disorders. Both articles highlight the enormous complexity of psychiatric disorders. They also highlight important problems that emerge from this complexity, including critical gaps in our understanding of these disorders and a tendency to make slow and painstaking progress based on reductionistic approaches. In this regard, the comments from Fernando Ruiz remind me of the sage advice from Albert Einstein, "make things as simple as possible, but not simpler" (http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Albert_Einstein). The implications of this perspective for psychiatry are several-fold. Despite the many achievements of our field, we must accept that its conceptual frameworks are provisional, that our knowledge base is inadequate currently to guide the recovery of many patients, and that there is a tremendous need for research to guide improvements in diagnosis and treatment. These challenges are not unique to psychiatry, but are rather common to all of medicine. Because the suffering and disability of our patients can be so profound, psychiatrists and other mental health professionals can neither abandon our current diagnostic system nor our treatments until there are better alternatives.

by David Bell | September 09, 2012 8:25 AM EDT

Not just psychiatry, but all branches of medicine follow an unsound and illogical process using descriptive diagnosis. Descriptive diagnosis promote epidemics of pseudo-illness known as occupational neuroses that sweep through industrialised nations in successive expensive waves. Only rarely does a package of symptoms identify an illness that has a cause. Benign tertian malaria has a distinctive package that allowed savages to find a cure long before the microscope revealed the organism. Psychiatry has been blessed with two packages brilliantly identified in the 19th century, manic-depression and schizophrenia. Psychiatry has dined out far too long on these lucky breaks. It will eventually have to find causes of the disorders it confronts. Until it grasps the nettle it hands out seeming solutions that for many patients makes their suffering worse. Does the removal of stigma really explain the enormous increase in diagnosed depressive illness or the equally astrological increase in the prescription of antidepressants? And why does the illness increase in parallel with its treatment? And why do so many patients commit suicide within a short while of leaving hospital, drugged to the eyballs? I expect some will find plausible arguments to rebut my arguments, but they will not remove the real problem that psychiatry faces. I put a large range specific issues in my blog and invite comments or the riposte that will put them to rest.

by Fernando Ruiz | September 05, 2012 3:37 PM EDT

Psychiatry identity crisis?
1. Reading this well documented post in defense of psychiatry, and aware of the wave of indignation triggered by Dr. Marcia Angell's opinion on this specialty --all of them understandable and justified--, I would like to share some related thoughts on this debate. The arsenal of arguments used in this defense in order to demonstrate that our specialty is not so different from the general medicine practiced by our prestigious colleagues, are all quite pertinent and valid, and show that the advances in neurosciences are equally remarkable promising. And it is impossible to deny that there are considerable similarities between physical medicine and psychiatry; and indeed, we hold great hope in the future findings of the neurosciences. However, it also seems true that there are meaningful differences in the practice of these fields --much more differences than when we compare other specialties (dermatology, images and radiology, clinical laboratory, surgery, etc.) with the core of medicine: internal medicine. And, it is not just a difference in grade of ignorance what distinguishes general medicine from psychiatry. We do, however, we have to recognize that our specialty is particularly needy of solid and coherently organized scientific knowledge that can be translated into diagnosing and therapeutic management, though constant effort and millions of dollars have been spent since the inception of DSM III. Psychiatrists in general do not seem to concentrate in these differences. We are more preoccupied in defending our field from unjust and mostly superficial attacks --most likely because during these last several years the psychiatric practice has been boxed into a narrow medical model, to the point of it becoming the identity of our profession. Nevertheless, I think that if we ask clinical psychiatrists, many will recognize that psychiatric practice has something special that distinguishes it from the rest of the medical services, though little energy and scarce enthusiasm are displayed in reflecting over this difference, a difference that does not distance us from the general scope of medicine (to heal, to alleviate, to comfort).
I wonder if psychiatry is facing an identity crisis. If so, we of course would need to overcome it. Yet I believe it is not enough to make desperate efforts to convince our critics and ourselves that we are members of traditional medicine. We also would need to study our field very carefully and systematically to be able to conceptualize its distinctiveness and peculiarities in an intellectually coherent mode -a challenging enterprise. The human person is the one who suffers the diseases, not the liver or the brain or the mind, but the intrinsic unity that we are, living in our circumstances, with others. This basic human situation is particularly evident in our professional field. Accepting this basic fact would bring up practical and theoretical consequences for psychiatry, noted foremost by Jaspers. This author emphasizes the need to use multiple methods in the study of mental disorders, and advises abandoning biological reductionism in order to center the knowledge that we acquire on the "psychic-body wholeness", meaning the human person (the patient), in his existence and mystery. This immense challenge it is not an easy task, and not exclusively due to the intellectual complexity of the matter, but also because the surrounding economical, academic, and ideological interests opposing a psychiatric paradigm shift. Creativity, courage, and effort would be necessary to move in a different direction to the one we find ourselves sunk in. We are part --and I am convinced, an important part-- of the medical system, and not a sub discipline of traditional Internal Medicine, nor either an auxiliary specialty. Therefore, comparing psychiatry to internal medicine is not, or rather should not, be the most appropriated comparison.
Fernando R. Ruiz, MD

by BERNARD CARROLL | August 14, 2012 2:01 AM EDT

I take second place to nobody in the defense of psychiatry and psychiatric medications. See here for example: http://tinyurl.com/d9g5hba. But on reading this new post by ACNP President John Krystal I was reminded of the saying about forests and trees. I don't agree with 100% of what Marcia Angell said in NYRB, but we should not allow differences of emphasis to make us tone deaf to our critics. Notwithstanding its line by line attempt at rebuttal, accompanied by an over the top number of cited references, Dr. Krystal's commentary fails on a number of levels.

Where is an acknowledgement that billions of dollars over 30 years have resulted in no fundamentally new drugs for psychiatric disorders? ACNP member Chris Fibiger, no stranger to industry, recently expanded on this theme with a sobering editorial. [Psychiatry, the pharmaceutical industry, and the road to better therapeutics. Schizophrenia Bulletin 2012; 38(4): 649-650]. There is plenty of blame to go around and much of it lands on our own doorstep.

Where is an acknowledgement that ACNP members, including past presidents of the College, have been the subjects of scandal and of congressional investigations? The scandals and charges have included concealment of financial relationships with corporations, unreported financial conflict of interest, conflict of commitment, complaisance with ghostwriting, and misrepresentation of clinical trials, sometimes even in Neuropsychopharmacology.

Where has the leadership of ACNP been in defense of professional ethics and clinical standards when pharmaceutical corporations were busted on felony convictions to the tune of $2-3 billion for misbranding drugs and promoting unapproved uses, often with the enthusiastic support of ACNP members? There has never been a College press release affirming ACNP values after these recurring exposés. Instead, the criminal corporations are allowed quietly to remain in the College, and fainthearted Councils don't dare to rock the boat. The most recent abject failure of ACNP Council is its silence on Glaxo Study 329, which was a centerpiece of the evidence used by the U.S. Department of Justice for a $3 billion fine. A key charge was the misbranding of paroxetine for depression in youth, based on flagrant manipulation of a clinical trial report. The names of several ACNP members grace the author list of that publication. This would be a good time for ACNP members to let Council know that we are looking for principled leadership that can 'hear' the concerns about corruption and failure in our field. This is not the time for a bunker mentality.

by Ronald Pies | August 13, 2012 2:33 PM EDT

Bravo, Dr. Krystal and ACNP for the detailed debunking of the anti-psychiatry narrative! To be sure, we have a long way to go in both our diagnostic methods and our treatments, but the progress our field has made should not be nullified by misinformed, pejorative screeds. Readers of Dr. Krystal's essay may also be interested in these related pieces:

Misunderstanding Psychiatry (and Philosophy) at the Highest Level
http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/display/article/10168/1945693

Newsweek's Topsy-Turvy Take on Antidepressants
http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/home/content/article/10168/1520550

and also:

"Are Antidepressants Effective in the Acute and Long-term Treatment of Depression? Sic et Non
http://www.innovationscns.com/are-antidepressants-effective-in-the-acute-and-long-term-
treatment-of-depression-sic-et-non/

Best regards,
Ron Pies MD

More like this

Dr Marcia Angell and the Illusions of Anti-Psychiatry

Moving Beyond Hatred of Psychiatry: A Brave Voice Speaks Out

Must Mental Illness Be Uncommon?

Psychism: Defining Discrimination of Psychiatry






 
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