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Am J Psychiatry 165:42A, October 2008
doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2008.165.10.A42
© 2008 American Psychiatric Association
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In this Issue

Olanzapine for Anorexia Nervosa

The weight gain associated with the antipsychotic olanzapine is a possible benefit for patients with anorexia nervosa. Bissada et al. (CME, p. 1281) compared olanzapine with placebo as an additional treatment for 34 women in an intensive day hospital program for anorexia nervosa. Over 10 weeks, those randomly assigned to olanzapine gained more weight and gained weight faster; the target body mass index was reached by 88% of the olanzapine group and 56% of the placebo group. Both groups had declines in obsessions, compulsions, depression, and anxiety, but those taking olanzapine had significantly larger decreases in obsessive thoughts. Dr. Katherine Halmi discusses perplexities in randomized, placebo-controlled treatment trials for anorexia nervosa in an editorial on p. 1227.


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Compulsive Hoarding: Separate Syndrome?

People who hoard compulsively but do not have other symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) differ in several respects from hoarders with OCD. Pertusa et al. (CME, p. 1289) found that those without OCD reported less hoarding-related checking and obsessions, cited intrinsic or sentimental value as motivation, and were older when their clutter was deemed excessive. Those with hoarding plus OCD scored higher on clinician ratings of severity and functional impairment. They were also more likely to hoard letters, receipts, old medication, and bizarre items, such as rotten food. On the other hand, both hoarding groups had more family history of OCD and hoarding than people with other anxiety disorders or community comparison groups. In an editorial on p. 1229, Drs. James Leckman and Michael Bloch examine hoarding as part of their developmental and evolutionary perspective on OCD.

Adding Aripiprazole to Mood Stabilizers

Patients with bipolar disorder who responded only partially to either valproate or lithium achieved a 63% response rate after aripiprazole was added for 6 weeks, whereas adding placebo resulted in a 49% response rate. Vieta et al. (p. 1316) report that the difference in symptom reduction between adjunctive aripiprazole and placebo was evident after 1 week. The advantages for aripiprazole included a lower proportion of patients with emergent depression and more improvement in psychosocial functioning. Among the patients who completed the 6-week study, both the valproate and lithium subgroups had greater improvements with adjunctive aripiprazole than placebo. Patients taking lithium plus aripiprazole had a 28% rate of akathisia, versus 12% for those taking valproate plus aripiprazole and 4%–6% for patients taking adjunctive placebo. An editorial by Drs. Joseph Calabrese and David Kemp on p. 1234 relates clinical trials for bipolar disorder to treatment in the real world.

Diagnosing PTSD in Children

Diagnoses of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) for very young children involved in motor vehicle accidents were more reliable when based on modified symptom criteria than on established DSM-IV criteria. For older children, however, a DSM-IV diagnosis of acute stress disorder in the month following the accident was better than the alternative criteria for predicting PTSD at 6 months. For the children ages 2 to 6 years, all diagnoses were based on parental reports of symptoms. For the children ages 7–10, Meiser-Stedman et al. (p. 1326) compared the findings based on reports by the child only, by the parents only, and by both. Diagnoses based on combined parent-child reports at 2–4 weeks were better predictors of 6-month diagnoses than those based on a single source. Dr. Michael Sheeringa highlights the study’s contributions in an editorial on p. 1237.


Related Articles:

The Perplexities of Conducting Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Treatment Trials in Anorexia Nervosa Patients
Katherine A. Halmi
Am J Psychiatry 2008 165: 1227-1228. [Full Text] [PDF]

A Developmental and Evolutionary Perspective on Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: Whence and Whither Compulsive Hoarding?
James F. Leckman and Michael H. Bloch
Am J Psychiatry 2008 165: 1229-1233. [Full Text] [PDF]

Bipolar Drug Development: Are We Getting Closer to the Real World?
Joseph R. Calabrese and David E. Kemp
Am J Psychiatry 2008 165: 1234-1236. [Full Text] [PDF]

Developmental Considerations for Diagnosing PTSD and Acute Stress Disorder in Preschool and School-Age Children
Michael S. Scheeringa
Am J Psychiatry 2008 165: 1237-1239. [Full Text] [PDF]

The Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Diagnosis in Preschool- and Elementary School-Age Children Exposed to Motor Vehicle Accidents
Richard Meiser-Stedman, Patrick Smith, Edward Glucksman, William Yule, and Tim Dalgleish
Am J Psychiatry 2008 165: 1326-1337. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Efficacy of Adjunctive Aripiprazole to Either Valproate or Lithium in Bipolar Mania Patients Partially Nonresponsive to Valproate/Lithium Monotherapy: A Placebo-Controlled Study
Eduard Vieta, Caroline T’joen, Robert D. McQuade, William H. Carson, Jr., Ronald N. Marcus, Raymond Sanchez, Randall Owen, and Laurence Nameche
Am J Psychiatry 2008 165: 1316-1325. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Compulsive Hoarding: OCD Symptom, Distinct Clinical Syndrome, or Both?
Alberto Pertusa, Miguel A. Fullana, Satwant Singh, Pino Alonso, José M. Menchón, and David Mataix-Cols
Am J Psychiatry 2008 165: 1289-1298. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Olanzapine in the Treatment of Low Body Weight and Obsessive Thinking in Women With Anorexia Nervosa: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial
Hany Bissada, Giorgio A. Tasca, Ann Marie Barber, and Jacques Bradwejn
Am J Psychiatry 2008 165: 1281-1288. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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