The cardiovascular health of young people with severe mental illness : addressing an epidemic within an epidemic

For young people with emerging psychosis, early weight gain and its potential cardiac and metabolic consequences amplify worrying UK public health trends for young people in general. This paper will argue that if clinicians dismiss these changes as of secondary concern in psychiatric treatment for their young patients, they may be inadvertently condoning a first critical step on a path towards physical health inequalities. Greater recognition is needed for this patient population in their 20s and 30s, at ages not normally considered for active primary or secondary cardiovascular prevention, who are at high risk of dying prematurely. The early phase of psychosis presents an important treatment window for protecting cardiometabolic health.


The heart of the problem
People with severe mental illness are exposed to significant cardiometabolic risk, namely central obesity, glucose dysregulation, dyslipidaemia and metabolic syndrome, and have high rates of smoking. 3There is evidence for increased intra-abdominal fat and glucose dysregulation in people with first-episode psychosis even before treatment commences, 10 but what is striking is how these changes accelerate after initiating antipsychotic treatment.In a study 11 of 272 treatment-naive young people aged 4-19 years with a range of diagnoses including schizophrenia, the cardiometabolic effects of four commonly prescribed atypical antipsychotics -aripiprazole, olanzapine, quetiapine or risperidone -were observed prospectively for a 12-week Summary For young people with emerging psychosis, early weight gain and its potential cardiac and metabolic consequences amplify worrying UK public health trends for young people in general.This paper will argue that if clinicians dismiss these changes as of secondary concern in psychiatric treatment for their young patients, they may be inadvertently condoning a first critical step on a path towards physical health inequalities.Greater recognition is needed for this patient population in their 20s and 30s, at ages not normally considered for active primary or secondary cardiovascular prevention, who are at high risk of dying prematurely.The early phase of psychosis presents an important treatment window for protecting cardiometabolic health.
Declaration of interest D.S. received a fee for keynote presentation on early intervention in psychosis with a particular focus on the physical health issues at a Janssen-Cilag educational meeting in 2010.He provides paid consultancy to the National Audit of Schizophrenia by the Royal College of Psychiatrists' Centre for Quality Improvement.

SPECIAL ARTICLE
The cardiovascular health of young people with severe mental illness: addressing an epidemic within an epidemic Sue Bailey, 1,2 Clare Gerada, 3 Helen Lester, 4 David Shiers 5 period.Significant average weight gain occurred for all those treated, ranging between 4.4 and 8.5 kg for individual drugs, whereas the untreated comparison group gained on average only 0.2 kg.Not only do patients treated with antipsychotic medication gain weight, but they also experience significant increases in total cholesterol, triglycerides and glucose. 12oreover, these adverse effects are common; a third of firstepisode patients had evidence of metabolic disturbance within 8 months of commencing treatment. 13Of note, both diabetes and dyslipidaemia can occasionally appear even in the absence of weight gain, underlining the importance clinically of being alert to the possibility of serious metabolic disturbance occurring in those on antipsychotic medication who have not gained weight. 14 Weight gain and obesity are of particular concern because of their potential to adversely affect cardiometabolic risks.For instance, links between childhood obesity and cardiovascular risks such as dyslipidaemias, glucose intolerance and hypertension are well established 15 and can explain why childhood obesity predicts coronary heart disease in adulthood. 16Thus, it seems likely that significant weight gain in someone with an emerging psychosis may drive the emergence of other cardiometabolic disturbances.However, a lack of critical evaluation of weight gain, specifically in people with a first episode of psychosis, may have obscured the potential impact of antipsychotics.Many of the studies of weight gain involved randomised controlled trials with short follow-up times observing older people with established illness, many of whom may already have gained weight from previous antipsychotic exposure.By contrast, the European First Episode Schizophrenia Trial (EUFEST) 17 is a high-quality study which specifically examined weight gain in a treatment-naive group of firstepisode patients.This study found that the percentage gaining more than 7% of body weight during the first year of treatment was 86% for olanzapine, 65% for quetiapine, 53% for haloperidol and 37% for ziprasidone.Citing the findings of this study, Nasrallah 18 commented: 'Neither old antipsychotics, such as haloperidol, nor metabolically ''benign'' atypicals, such as ziprasidone, are exceptions'.Underlining the differential impact of antipsychotics on a treatmentnaive population, a recent systematic review concluded that weight gain due to antipsychotics had been underestimated three-to fourfold in those with first-episode psychosis. 19ethink Mental Illness, a large UK charity supporting patients with schizophrenia, has recently led a nationwide Commission on Schizophrenia.The findings are yet to be published, but what was striking from the discussions with service users at the Commission meetings is how their expectations, fears and concerns over treatment differ from those of the professionals treating them.These fears are also present in the published evidence.In the 18-month Clinical Antipsychotic Trials for Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE) study, 74% of patients with established schizophrenia discontinued medication prematurely. 20The most commonly cited reasons for discontinuation were patient choice, lack of effect or intolerability of side-effects.To return to the clinical scenario at the start of this paper, it is perhaps now worth reflecting on what might most trouble the young person facing you in the consulting room -the weight gain or the reduction in mental health symptoms.
Most likely it will be the loss of self-esteem and the added stigma that comes with extreme weight gain: 21 inability to fit into their clothes, run to catch a bus; shame at seeing friends and family because their body shape is out of control.On top of these difficulties, young people may be further distressed by other adverse drug effects such as hyperprolactinaemia (causing menstrual disturbances, sexual dysfunction and galactorrhoea) 22 and movement disorders.It is hardly surprising then that young people may stop their medicines or default clinic attendance. 23

An epidemic within an epidemic
Patients with first-episode psychosis are usually in their teens or early adulthood.Like their peers, they live in a society where increasingly sedentary lifestyles are accompanied by easy access to energy-rich foods.A recent editorial in the British Journal of General Practice emphasises the scale of the problem, 24 which has witnessed a dramatic rise in rates of obesity in young people over the past 20 years. 25The prevalence of type 2 diabetes has increased tenfold in younger people, 26 accompanied by a 14-fold increase in the incidence of myocardial infarctions. 27iven the rapid demographic shift in patterns of obesity, the impact on weight gain for young people with psychosis may be disproportionately greater, adding more evidence to our concern that we are witnessing an epidemic within an epidemic.

A way forward?
Although clarity over the precise nature and relative contribution of genetics, demographic effects and antipsychotic medicines is still lacking, what is certain is that young people acquire cardiovascular risk factors rapidly in the critical early phase of psychosis.However, this in itself also offers prevention and treatment opportunities.
Over 30 years ago Geoffrey Rose argued for a new 'prevention paradox' to tackle cardiovascular disease, which moves the focus away from simply trying to treat the endpoints of disease to the task of identifying and addressing the underlying causes. 28Could a prevention paradox offer people with psychosis a realistic way to tackle this epidemic within an epidemic?There are two tests that the prevention paradox must pass to be considered for implementationfeasibility and possibility.

Feasibility test
Many of the practical building blocks for a more preventive approach are already in place.(e) There is good evidence that conditions such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease can be prevented or delayed by a combination of increased activity, improved diet and weight loss.(f ) Primary care has provided health promotion and disease management programmes for conditions such as heart disease and diabetes for decades, so this way of working is embedded in the fabric of primary care.
More recently -since 2006 -the primary care pay-forperformance scheme, the Quality and Outcomes Framework, 29 has paid general practitioners (GPs) to measure four physical health indicators for people on the primary care mental illness register (people with severe mental illness): BMI (MH12), blood pressure (MH13), total to high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio (MH14) and blood glucose (MH15).Currently, the last two indicators are only targeted on those aged over 40 years, missing a key time when such metabolic changes arise and mitigating against good care for these vulnerable young patients.However, this is likely to change as the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidance is updated to reflect the emerging evidence base.(g) We know how to measure healthcare improvement (e.g.audit, practitioner development, service improvement programmes).

Possibility test
Encouragingly, systematic cardiometabolic screening and treatment programmes which put equal emphasis on physical well-being from the onset of treatment for psychosis are now emerging.An excellent model recently introduced across New South Wales, Australia, provides a systematic approach for all people with a first episode of psychosis based on an agreed clinical algorithm (Positive Cardiometabolic Health Algorithm, it can be downloaded from the Australian Health Education and Training Institute website: www.heti.nsw.gov.au/cmalgorithm)focused on key cardiovascular risks -weight gain, smoking, lipid and glucose abnormalities, hypertension, awareness of family history of cardiovascular disease or diabetes. 30revention of weight gain from the commencement of antipsychotics is fundamental.There is evidence of a positive impact from lifestyle interventions (cognitivebehavioural therapy, exercise and diet) on attenuating weight gain for people with first-episode psychosis. 31The impact of key individual vulnerabilities should also be thought about. 32Evidence from treating people with both schizophrenia and type 2 diabetes has demonstrated the importance of providing reinforcing lifestyle interventions over time by conveying simple consistent messages on complex topics such as cooking skills and meal planning, and incorporating memory aids. 33Frequent monitoring can predict which patients are likely to gain weight quickly. 34vidence of early rapid weight gain (e.g. 5 kg within the first 3 months) or cardiometabolic blood disturbance should prompt an urgent review of antipsychotic medication as switching antipsychotic medicine may reduce these adverse effects. 35he dominance of antipsychotic treatments as the automatic first-line approach could also be challenged. 36,37 patient-centred choice would include being offered a full menu of evidence-based treatments as well as medication, such as psychological and family interventions.Patients and their families require clear and consistent information to be able to understand and weigh up the benefits and risks of antipsychotic medication, emphasising the trade-offs of improved mental health symptoms v. increased risks to physical health.Decisions should be negotiated and fit within the aspirations and values of the individual. 38ew opportunities for pharmacological interventions should be investigated.For example, metformin has been prescribed for type 2 diabetes over 60 years and has established clinical efficacy and safety.Its use off label has successfully delayed or prevented the onset of diabetes in people with pre-diabetes (biochemically established glucose impairment).Its ability to attenuate weight gain and potentially prevent diabetes is now attracting attention in terms of the treatment of people with severe mental illness. 39This is reflected in new NICE guidance on preventing type 2 diabetes, 40 which includes a recommendation that for vulnerable groups such as those with severe mental illness who have pre-diabetes, metformin could be considered if lifestyle modification has failed to control glucose impairment.
A collaborative framework for considering the impact of antipsychotic use on cardiovascular risk has been set out in a new clinical resource developed by the Royal College of General Practitioners and the Royal College of Psychiatrists through the National Audit of Schizophrenia initiative. 41

Concluding remarks
Problematic weight gain and its potential cardiac and metabolic effects can become established within weeks of antipsychotic treatment initiation.As GPs and psychiatrists, our medical training and our role in prescribing give us a unique responsibility to actively intervene to promote physical well-being and protect cardiometabolic health for the thousands of young people with severe mental illness.This prevention paradox is key to improving the physical health of young people with psychosis, particularly those on antipsychotic medication, and addressing, in the longer term, the current 'scandal of premature mortality'.
(a) The population at risk is well defined and 'known' to specialist services and to primary care through their mental illness registers.(b) We know when to target prevention -the early critical phase of illness, and in particular the immediate phase around initiation of antipsychotic medicines.(c) We know the nature of the lifestyle issues that operate (e.g.tobacco smoking, obesity, lack of exercise).(d) We can identify and track specific modifiable risks (e.g.body mass index (BMI), lipids, glucose, smoking).