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COMMENTARY 

The Race to Patent Bio-tests for Schizophrenia and Depression

By Max Fink, MD | November 18, 2011
Dr Fink is Professor of Psychiatry and Neurology Emeritus at Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York. He served on the editorial board of Psychiatric Times from 2002 to 2009 and was a regular contributor for many years. He will be accepting the Thomas W. Salmon Award from the New York Academy of Medicine on November 29, 2011.

The articles by Arline Kaplan and Hagop Asiskal, MD, in the November 2011 issue of Psychiatric Times1,2 highlight the race to patent bio-tests for schizophrenia and depression. Alas, this drive is destined to fail for the same reason that earlier biotests failed—the heterogeneity of the populations for these disorders as defined by the DSM criteria. The failure of the STAR*D, STEP-BD, and CATIE studies to find assured efficacy for the treatments in the trials is sufficient evidence to question the DSM criteria.

Dr Akiskal notes that “the dexamethasone(Drug information on dexamethasone) suppression test [DST] was considered to have acceptable sensitivity and specificity for melancholia, rather than broadly defined depression.”2 But it was the view of key opinion leaders of an NIMH committee in 1982 and the 1986 Glassman APA Commission that the failure of the DST to define “major depression” doomed it for rejection in the clinic.

(MORE: Not Obsolete: Continuing Roles for TCAs and MAOIs)

In the past decade, the question has been asked whether the DST could be used to identify the melancholic patients who fail to respond to SSRI, SNRI, MAOI, and the psychotherapies, but do respond to tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) and elecroconvulsive therapy (ECT). The evidence that hypercortisolemia is a biomarker of melancholic mood disorders is compelling.

In the STAR*D study, the patient records were examined for the DSM “melancholia specifier.”3 Overall 42% to 55% of the sample were considered treatment failures. Additionally, 23.5% were positive for the melancholic specifier; their inclusion reduced the remission rates by 24.1%. Had they been excluded and treated by TCA and ECT, the overall remission rate for the SSRI would have been salvaged.

The sad history of the rejection of the DST and its present exclusion from clinical use (failure of reimbursement by insurers is a tragic consequence of the present teaching) is described by Edward Shorter and Max Fink in Endocrine Psychiatry.4 Additional references (all not reviewed by the major journals) are Taylor and Fink’s Melancholia: A Clinician’s Guide5 and the proceedings of the 2006 Copenhagen conference on Melancholia published as “Melancholia: Beyond DSM, Beyond Neurotransmitters.”6

Dr Asiskal’s opinion that “biomarkers for mental disorders [are a] field whose time has come” is correct. We have many markers that are in use—EEG criteria for epilepsy, serum tests for neurosyphilis, the lorazepam(Drug information on lorazepam) test for catatonia. Tests for hypercortisolemia are freely available for melancholia and warrant study and use.

It is timely to reconsider the DSM division of major depression and bipolar disorder that serve patients and doctors poorly and seek a new split of the mood disorders as melancholia and non-melancholia.

 

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by Ronald Pies | November 18, 2011 5:34 PM EST

I very much appreciate the comments of our long-time PT Board Member and colleague, Dr. Max Fink, on the utility of the DST and the melancholic/non-melancholic distinction. In addition, Dr. Fink and Dr. Akiskal raise the more general issue of biomarkers in psychiatry. The popular and somewhat misleading view--usually bandied about in the lay press--is that "psychiatry has no biological markers for any of its diagnoses."While it is true that we don't have many "clinic-ready" biomarkers with sufficient reliability and validity to use in everyday practice, there are some notable exceptions. For example, very few psychiatrists are aware that "Eye tracking dysfunction (ETD) is one of the most widely replicated behavioral deficits in schizophrenia" (see abstract below). It is difficult to make use of this assessment in everyday practice, but its reliability over many decades undercuts the claim that there are no biological markers in psychiatric illnesses. We need to pursue this research so that we can find practical ways of applying it--for example, in assessing so-called "pre-psychotic" or prodromal psychotic states.

--Best regards, Ron Pies

Curr Top Behav Neurosci. 2010;4:311-47.
Eye tracking dysfunction in schizophrenia: characterization and pathophysiology.
Levy DL, Sereno AB, Gooding DC, O'Driscoll GA.
Source

Psychology Research Laboratory, McLean Hospital, 115 Mill Street, Belmont, MA 02478, USA. dlevy@mclean.harvard.edu
Abstract

Eye tracking dysfunction (ETD) is one of the most widely replicated behavioral deficits in schizophrenia and is over-represented in clinically unaffected first-degree relatives of schizophrenia patients. Here, we provide an overview of research relevant to the characterization and pathophysiology of this impairment. Deficits are most robust in the maintenance phase of pursuit, particularly during the tracking of predictable target movement. Impairments are also found in pursuit initiation and correlate with performance on tests of motion processing, implicating early sensory processing of motion signals. Taken together, the evidence suggests that ETD involves higher-order structures, including the frontal eye fields, which adjust the gain of the pursuit response to visual and anticipated target movement, as well as early parts of the pursuit pathway, including motion areas (the middle temporal area and the adjacent medial superior temporal area). Broader application of localizing behavioral paradigms in patient and family studies would be advantageous for refining the eye tracking phenotype for genetic studies.

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References
1. Kaplan A. Blood tests for schizophrenia and depression: not ready for prime time. Psychiatr Times. 2011;28(11):1-6.
2. Akiskal H. Biomarkers for mental disorders: a field whose time has come. Psychiatr Times. 2011;28(11):5.
3. McGrath PJ, Khan AY, Trivedi MH, et al. Response to a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (citalopram) in major depressive disorder with melancholic features: a STAR*D report. J Clin Psychiatry. 2008; 69:1847-1855.
4. Shorter E, Fink M. Endocrine Psychiatry: Solving the Riddle of Melancholia. Oxford University Press. 2010.
5. Taylor MA, Fink M. Melancholia: The Diagnosis, Pathophysiology, and Treatment of Depressive Illness. New York: Cambridge University Press; 2006.
6. Melancholia: Beyond DSM, Beyond Neurotransmitters. Proceedings of a conference, May 2006, Copenhagen, Denmark. Acta Psychiatr Scand Suppl. 2007;(433):4-183.


 
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