"It's just senior-year worries," came the verdict. But things worsened.
Suspecting an undiagnosed learning disability, the boy's parents took him
to Hopkins psychologist David Edwin, Ph.D. Edwin, in turn, called
in psychiatrist Elizabeth Kastelic, M.D., an expert in mood disorders
of adolescents and young adults.
Malid's now stunningly well, and Kastelic's care showcases how she and her
colleagues, with their specialization in that age group, routinely give
teenagers and early twentysomethings their lives back. But Kastelic's approach
also reflects Hopkins' response to today's concerns about prescribing antidepressant
drugs for non-adults -- the suggested link between selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitors (SSRIs) and suicide that a spate of U.S. and European trials
have prompted.
Kastelic, who diagnosed Malid's depression -- it was neither senior angst
nor a learning problem -- set the teenager on a course of Prozac and cognitive
behavioral therapy. It's the best approach, confirmed by a recent national
study she and Hopkins colleague John Walkup, M.D., helped conduct.
And Kastelic closely monitored the young man's response to medication, involving
his parents in his care from the start. Both patient and family were asked
to call her should agitation or other worrying signs appear. "We do have
more families bringing in newspaper articles about SSRIs. Even if they didn't
we'd still bring it up," she says.
Among Hopkins clinicians, discussion on the drugs has increased. No fewer
than three recent Grand Rounds focused on antidepressants for young adults.
In one, Psychiatry Director Ray DePaulo, M.D., raised questions about
data linking SSRIs and suicide attempts. "No actual suicides occurred in
any of the studies the FDA reviewed, although an increase in suicidal ideas
and self injury was noted in the early weeks on the medication." So where's
the balance point between the known benefits of SSRIs in this group and
the risks? "We don't know yet," DePaulo says. "What's obvious, however,
is our need for answers. Our care of young people with major mood illness
and research into their best treatment go hand-in-hand."
Mark Riddle, M.D., a pioneer in the use of SSRIs in children, suggests
what may be behind the suicidal ideas. "An activating effect comes with
these drugs that's more common in younger patients. It helps get a patient
going. But prompting action before healthy mood returns may be an unwanted
side-effect. That, too, needs study."
All agree that typical SSRI prescription is a good thing gone wrong. More
than 80 percent of prescriptions come from physicians without a psychiatric
specialty, let alone one in adolescent mood disorders. "We've seen patients
who've gotten antidepressants without a proper diagnostic workup or proper
monitoring," Kastelic cautions. "These are serious medications for potentially
fatal diseases. They must be taken seriously."
That's the rule in the inpatient program Kastelic runs at Hopkins hospital,
where patients teenaged through early 20s are treated for mood disorders
such as depression and bipolar disorder. It's true in Psychiatry's outpatient
care as well."We specialize. We team with patients and family," she explains.
"It makes a huge difference."
For information,
call 410-614-4948.
* not the patient's
real name |