Conference Coverage

FDA not recognizing efficacy of psychopharmacologic therapies


 

FROM PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY UPDATE

Agency’s arbitrary decisions cited

“I completely agree with Dr. Stahl,” said Henry A. Nasrallah, MD, professor of psychiatry, neurology, and neuroscience, University of Cincinnati.

Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah, University of Cincinnati

Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah

In addition to the fact that symptoms are present across multiple categories, many patients manifest multiple symptoms at one time, Dr. Nasrallah pointed out. For neurodegenerative disorders associated with psychosis, depression, anxiety, aggression, and other symptoms, it is already well known that the heterogeneous symptoms “cannot be treated with a single drug,” he said. Rather different drugs targeting each symptom individually is essential for effective management.

Dr. Nasrallah, who chaired the Psychopharmacology Update meeting, has made this point many times in the past, including in his role as the editor of Current Psychiatry. In one editorial 10 years ago, he wrote that “it makes little sense for the FDA to mandate that a drug must work for a DSM diagnosis instead of specific symptoms.”

“The FDA must update its old policy, which has led to the widespread off-label use of psychiatric drugs, an artificial concept, simply because the FDA arbitrarily decided a long time ago that new drugs must be approved for a specific DSM diagnosis,” Dr. Nasrallah said.

Dr. Stahl reported financial relationships with more than 20 pharmaceutical companies, including those that are involved in the development of drugs included in his talk. Medscape Live and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Inflammatory immune findings likely in acute schizophrenia, MDD, bipolar
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
‘Landmark’ schizophrenia drug in the wings? 
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Blood pressure meds tied to increased schizophrenia risk
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Antipsychotics protective against COVID-19?
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Structural racism tied to psychosis risk in Black people
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
FDA fast tracks testing of schizophrenia drug for impaired cognition
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
FDA okays new drug option for schizophrenia, bipolar I disorder
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
How a community-based program for SMI pivoted during the pandemic
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
COVID-19: Greater mortality among psych patients remains a mystery
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Should clinicians recommend vitamin D for psychiatric patients during COVID-19?
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management