Transcript Slide 1

Medical and Specialist Interventions
in Alcohol Dependence
Peter Rice,
Consultant Psychiatrist,
NHS Tayside
ICD-10 Dependence Syndrome
-Diagnosis requires at least 3 phenomena in past year
•Difficulty in controlling use of drug in terms of onset,
termination and level of consumption.
•Increasing tolerance for drug (declining tolerance as a late phenomenon)
•Physiological withdrawal state on cessation or use of drug to avoid withdrawals.
•Strong desire or sense of compulsion to alcohol use.
•Progressive neglect of other interests.
•Persisting with use despite clear evidence of harmful consequences that the user is aware
of.
Peter Rice Oct 08
ALCOHOL WITHDRAWAL SYNDROME
Mild
Onset 6 - 12 hrs after last drink
Fine tremor with arms extended
Sweating
Anxiety
Irritability
Poor sleep
Perceptual changes
Light sensitivity
Itching
Hyperascusis
Slowed thinking
Tachycardia / hypertension
Severe
Onset 24 - 72 hrs
Gross tremor at rest
Marked sweating
Acute panic
Aggressive
Insomnia
Visual Hallucinations
Tactile hallucinations
Auditory hallucination
Disorientation.
Tachycardia/hypertension
MANAGEMENT OF ALCOHOL WITHDRAWAL
- Assess risk from history
- Explanation will reduce symptom severity.
- Gradual alcohol reduction, 25% per day will work
-Long acting benzodiazepines. Chlordiazepoxide is drug of choice.
- Adequate initial dose eg CDP 90 mg/ day, tail off over max of 7 days.
- Insomnia may persist, best to warn about this. Avoid long term hypnotics.
- Watch out for nutritional defiency. (Wernicke-Korsakov synd)
TREATMENT OUTCOMES IN ALCOHOL MISUSE
-Strong evidence base for brief interventions in some
specific settings for problem use
-Strong evidence base for some psychological and
Pharmacological interventions.
-Interventions highly cost-effective, even allowing for high
dropout rates.
- UK treatment services of limited capacity. Dept of Health
estimates capacity for approx 6% of potential need.
Which treatment or combination of treatments (pharmacological and
psychosocial) will best prevent relapse in alcohol dependent patient who have
been detoxified?
What is the most effective and efficient approach to delivering treatment taking
into account the different risk groups, locations, durations of treatment, etc?
From more than 40 nominally different therapies four psychosocial therapies
were supported by good evidence of effectiveness in people with alcohol
dependence. These should be available in specialist centres:
• Motivational Enhancement Therapy
• Coping/Social Skills Training
• Marital/Family Therapy
• Behavioural Self Control Training
These psychosocial (talking therapies) may be supplemented by:
• acamprosate (Campral)
• supervised oral disulfiram (Antabuse)
Naltrexone not recommended for routine use
OUTCOMES OF INTERVENTION
GP and HOSPITAL ADVICE
HOME DETOX
PSYCHOLOGICAL TREATMENT
- Numbers of heavy drinkers will half
- 37% of dependent drinkers abstinent at 1 year
-35% abstinent at 1 year
- 20% no benefit
DRUG TREATMENT - Acamprosate doubles abstinent rates vs control group
NATIONAL STRATEGIES - France, Italy reduced consumption
by 35-50% in past 25 years.
Restricting availabilty, advertising and sponsorship, health education.
UK Consumption risen by 25%
RELAPSE PREVENTION IN ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE
DISULFIRAM (Antabuse)
Interferes with alcohol metabolism, leading to acetaldehyde accumulation after alcohol.
Reaction :Flushing, dyspnoea, dizziness, hypotension . Wide individual variation.
Patient needs to know that reaction MAY be very serious.
Risk of reaction 7 days after last dose.
Drowsiness commonest SE. Rarely liver, confusion, skin rash, psychosis.
Use 200 mg daily. Should be psychological support available.
Effectiveness increased by supervised administration.
RELAPSE PREVENTION IN ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE
ACAMPROSATE
Reduces activity of excitatory neurotransmitter Glutamate . Probably via NMDA blockade.
Clinical action is to reduce intensity of craving in response to alcohol cue.
Typical RCT outcome is to double rates of abstinence.
Use in France for 25 yrs. UK licence for 15 yrs.
Well tolerated and safe. Commonest SE is GI upset. No evidence of dependence.
Keep using during drinking lapse.
Maintain as long as patient feels it’s making a difference. Stop if no benefit in 6 months.
THE UNMET NEED FOR ALCOHOL SERVICES IN THE UK
PREVALENCE SERVICE
UTILISATION RATIO
INTERNATIONAL NORMS
High Access 1:5
Low Access 1:10
UK PERFORMANCE
England 1:18
Scotland 1:12
Cost Effectiveness
Recent studies suggest that alcohol treatment has both short and long-term
economic benefits.
The Review of the effectiveness of treatment for alcohol problems suggests that
provision of alcohol treatment to 10 per cent of the dependent drinking population
within the UK would reduce public sector resource costs by between £109 million
and £156 million each year.
Analysis from the United Kingdom Alcohol Treatment Trial suggests that for every
£1 spent on alcohol treatment, the public sector saves £5.