More on long-acting injectable antipsychotics

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More on long-acting injectable antipsychotics

Benefits of early LAI use

I want to thank Dr. Nasrallah for his editorial calling for more frequent and earlier use of long-acting injectable antipsychotics (LAIs) in schizophrenia (From the Editor, Current Psychiatry, May 2021, p. 9-12). I consider LAIs to be lifesaving interventions, so I’ve offered LAI administration via a drive-up service over the past year to ensure patients could continue to receive their treatment, even through the worst times of the COVID-19 pandemic.1 LAIs can be beneficial for anyone living with schizophrenia, but are never more important than in first-episode psychosis (FEP), when repeated psychotic relapses have not yet ravaged the brain. Earlier aggressive treatment of FEP and subsequent relapses with LAIs can dramatically improve long-term outcomes for people with schizophrenia.

In addition to the neuroprotective biologic effects of early LAI usage, I’ve found that many of my FEP patients find great psychological comfort from incorporating LAIs into their treatment plan. The first psychotic break is generally when a person (and their family) feels the most afraid about the future and is in desperate need of hope that they can have a full life—with educational opportunities, sustained employment, meaningful relationships, and more. Just as society has seen the COVID-19 vaccines as a symbol of hope and the first step in overcoming the oppression of living in fear of an uncertain future, we need to help people experiencing FEP find hope in a needle.

Craig Chepke, MD, FAPA
Excel Psychiatric Associates
Huntersville, North Carolina

Reference

1. Chepke C. Drive-up pharmacotherapy during the COVID-19 pandemic. Current Psychiatry. 2020;19(5):29-30.

Dr. Nasrallah responds

Thank you, Dr. Chepke, for your letter confirming full support for using LAIs in schizophrenia. I like the phrase you coined: “hope in a needle.” The early use of LAIs in schizophrenia can provide the same type of hope that the vaccines against the life-threatening COVID-19 virus have generated in our society. Based on my direct observations, I also agree with you that the longer patients with schizophrenia remain on LAIs, the more engaged and happy they are with their progress and the quality of their lives. It is tragic that many patients never had the opportunity to return to their baseline with the early use of LAIs immediately following their first psychotic episode, instead of relapsing again and again due to their inability to adhere completely to their oral medications.

Henry A. Nasrallah, MD
Editor-In-Chief

Continue to: LAIs as the standard of care

 

 

LAIs as the standard of care

Thank you, Dr. Nasrallah, for reiterating the importance of compliance with pharmacologic management of schizophrenia after FEP (From the Editor, Current Psychiatry, May 2021, p. 9-12). Long before LAIs, I appreciated the successes patients with schizophrenia experienced when they complied with treatment after the first episode. It was clear that success was forthcoming for patients who had an interested psychiatrist and a committed relationship with them.

As you point out in your editorial, the facts are powerful, well-known, undisputed, and yet not adopted in the United States, when in other countries LAIs are first-line care. Yes, LAIs are expensive, but not nearly as expensive as the disabilities caused by noncompliance are to society.

Why isn’t LAI use the standard of care here in the United States? In the United States, there is advocacy for treatment because there’s money in it. There is no good advocacy for preventive care because there’s no immediate money in it. We have another good example of this in the United States: private, for-profit prisons. They have a vested interest in keeping prisons full and building new ones. Patients with FEP are most often treated in the hospital, where a standard of care could easily be established that mandates LAIs as first-tier care. Why is that not so? Who is pushing for it? Who is resisting?

Your editorial inspired me to advocate more strongly. Do you have advice about how to effect policy change? I know administrators respond when we talk dollars and cents, not quality of care. What is the dollar cost of not using LAIs as the standard of care after FEP? Who cares? Who would listen to the numbers?

Edward A. Major, MD, LFAPA
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry
Upstate Medical Center
Syracuse, New York

Dr. Nasrallah responds

Dr. Major, thanks for your message. Establishing a standard of care for the use of LAIs (or any other therapy) is not that simple. It requires well-coordinated collaboration among several stakeholders (clinicians, researchers, payors, advocacy groups, and a national organization such as the American Psychiatric Association). The cost issue is certainly powerful, but the equation works in favor of LAIs because 1 psychiatric hospitalization due to a psychotic relapse costs up to 3 times the annual cost of an LAI medication that can prevent that rehospitalization. In addition, disability comprises the lion’s share of the large indirect costs of schizophrenia (disability payments, lifetime room and board, incarceration and legal costs, and loss of work and generation of taxes). LAIs can save both lives and expenditures, and a lot of suffering by patients and their families. I, too, long to see the emergence of a rational standard of care for schizophrenia using LAIs right after the initial psychotic episode. Oncology and cardiology have standards of care, so why not psychiatry?

Henry A. Nasrallah, MD
Editor-In-Chief

Continue to: Psychosis and epilepsy

 

 

Psychosis and epilepsy

I just read your editorial regarding the devastating consequences of psychotic relapses (From the Editor, Current Psychiatry, May 2021, p. 9-12). I was shocked to read of the extent of the damage caused by such relapses and the positive impact of LAIs, and I thank you for opening my eyes. 

I work in the spheres of psychiatry, epileptology, and whole genome sequencing, and have experienced a psychotic episode myself (in 2013, after temporal lobe resection and overdose). I now consider myself even more lucky to be out the other side! As Governor for South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust (SLaM) and Trustee for Epilepsy Action, many of our patients have psychosis. Some patients with epilepsy even experience postictal psychosis. Just yesterday, we had a call at SLaM regarding patients from a secure unit, and a psychiatric nurse spoke about patients at risk to themselves and others because of their psychotic illness, and how crucial effective long-term care was.

Torie Robinson
CEO, Epilepsy Sparks

 

Dr. Nasrallah responds

Ms. Robinson, thank you for sharing your story. It is important to note that the neuro­biology of the psychosis that may occur with epilepsy may not be as neurodegenerative as the psychosis of schizophrenia. Many neurologic conditions can be associated with psychotic episodes, not only epilepsy. I am glad you overcame your post-temporal lobectomy psychotic episode and have had a very good outcome with high functioning.

Henry A. Nasrallah, MD
Editor-In-Chief

Disclosures
Dr. Chepke is a consultant to and speaker for Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Otsuka Pharmaceuticals, and Alkermes. The other authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in their letters, or with manufacturers of competing products.

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Benefits of early LAI use

I want to thank Dr. Nasrallah for his editorial calling for more frequent and earlier use of long-acting injectable antipsychotics (LAIs) in schizophrenia (From the Editor, Current Psychiatry, May 2021, p. 9-12). I consider LAIs to be lifesaving interventions, so I’ve offered LAI administration via a drive-up service over the past year to ensure patients could continue to receive their treatment, even through the worst times of the COVID-19 pandemic.1 LAIs can be beneficial for anyone living with schizophrenia, but are never more important than in first-episode psychosis (FEP), when repeated psychotic relapses have not yet ravaged the brain. Earlier aggressive treatment of FEP and subsequent relapses with LAIs can dramatically improve long-term outcomes for people with schizophrenia.

In addition to the neuroprotective biologic effects of early LAI usage, I’ve found that many of my FEP patients find great psychological comfort from incorporating LAIs into their treatment plan. The first psychotic break is generally when a person (and their family) feels the most afraid about the future and is in desperate need of hope that they can have a full life—with educational opportunities, sustained employment, meaningful relationships, and more. Just as society has seen the COVID-19 vaccines as a symbol of hope and the first step in overcoming the oppression of living in fear of an uncertain future, we need to help people experiencing FEP find hope in a needle.

Craig Chepke, MD, FAPA
Excel Psychiatric Associates
Huntersville, North Carolina

Reference

1. Chepke C. Drive-up pharmacotherapy during the COVID-19 pandemic. Current Psychiatry. 2020;19(5):29-30.

Dr. Nasrallah responds

Thank you, Dr. Chepke, for your letter confirming full support for using LAIs in schizophrenia. I like the phrase you coined: “hope in a needle.” The early use of LAIs in schizophrenia can provide the same type of hope that the vaccines against the life-threatening COVID-19 virus have generated in our society. Based on my direct observations, I also agree with you that the longer patients with schizophrenia remain on LAIs, the more engaged and happy they are with their progress and the quality of their lives. It is tragic that many patients never had the opportunity to return to their baseline with the early use of LAIs immediately following their first psychotic episode, instead of relapsing again and again due to their inability to adhere completely to their oral medications.

Henry A. Nasrallah, MD
Editor-In-Chief

Continue to: LAIs as the standard of care

 

 

LAIs as the standard of care

Thank you, Dr. Nasrallah, for reiterating the importance of compliance with pharmacologic management of schizophrenia after FEP (From the Editor, Current Psychiatry, May 2021, p. 9-12). Long before LAIs, I appreciated the successes patients with schizophrenia experienced when they complied with treatment after the first episode. It was clear that success was forthcoming for patients who had an interested psychiatrist and a committed relationship with them.

As you point out in your editorial, the facts are powerful, well-known, undisputed, and yet not adopted in the United States, when in other countries LAIs are first-line care. Yes, LAIs are expensive, but not nearly as expensive as the disabilities caused by noncompliance are to society.

Why isn’t LAI use the standard of care here in the United States? In the United States, there is advocacy for treatment because there’s money in it. There is no good advocacy for preventive care because there’s no immediate money in it. We have another good example of this in the United States: private, for-profit prisons. They have a vested interest in keeping prisons full and building new ones. Patients with FEP are most often treated in the hospital, where a standard of care could easily be established that mandates LAIs as first-tier care. Why is that not so? Who is pushing for it? Who is resisting?

Your editorial inspired me to advocate more strongly. Do you have advice about how to effect policy change? I know administrators respond when we talk dollars and cents, not quality of care. What is the dollar cost of not using LAIs as the standard of care after FEP? Who cares? Who would listen to the numbers?

Edward A. Major, MD, LFAPA
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry
Upstate Medical Center
Syracuse, New York

Dr. Nasrallah responds

Dr. Major, thanks for your message. Establishing a standard of care for the use of LAIs (or any other therapy) is not that simple. It requires well-coordinated collaboration among several stakeholders (clinicians, researchers, payors, advocacy groups, and a national organization such as the American Psychiatric Association). The cost issue is certainly powerful, but the equation works in favor of LAIs because 1 psychiatric hospitalization due to a psychotic relapse costs up to 3 times the annual cost of an LAI medication that can prevent that rehospitalization. In addition, disability comprises the lion’s share of the large indirect costs of schizophrenia (disability payments, lifetime room and board, incarceration and legal costs, and loss of work and generation of taxes). LAIs can save both lives and expenditures, and a lot of suffering by patients and their families. I, too, long to see the emergence of a rational standard of care for schizophrenia using LAIs right after the initial psychotic episode. Oncology and cardiology have standards of care, so why not psychiatry?

Henry A. Nasrallah, MD
Editor-In-Chief

Continue to: Psychosis and epilepsy

 

 

Psychosis and epilepsy

I just read your editorial regarding the devastating consequences of psychotic relapses (From the Editor, Current Psychiatry, May 2021, p. 9-12). I was shocked to read of the extent of the damage caused by such relapses and the positive impact of LAIs, and I thank you for opening my eyes. 

I work in the spheres of psychiatry, epileptology, and whole genome sequencing, and have experienced a psychotic episode myself (in 2013, after temporal lobe resection and overdose). I now consider myself even more lucky to be out the other side! As Governor for South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust (SLaM) and Trustee for Epilepsy Action, many of our patients have psychosis. Some patients with epilepsy even experience postictal psychosis. Just yesterday, we had a call at SLaM regarding patients from a secure unit, and a psychiatric nurse spoke about patients at risk to themselves and others because of their psychotic illness, and how crucial effective long-term care was.

Torie Robinson
CEO, Epilepsy Sparks

 

Dr. Nasrallah responds

Ms. Robinson, thank you for sharing your story. It is important to note that the neuro­biology of the psychosis that may occur with epilepsy may not be as neurodegenerative as the psychosis of schizophrenia. Many neurologic conditions can be associated with psychotic episodes, not only epilepsy. I am glad you overcame your post-temporal lobectomy psychotic episode and have had a very good outcome with high functioning.

Henry A. Nasrallah, MD
Editor-In-Chief

Disclosures
Dr. Chepke is a consultant to and speaker for Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Otsuka Pharmaceuticals, and Alkermes. The other authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in their letters, or with manufacturers of competing products.

Benefits of early LAI use

I want to thank Dr. Nasrallah for his editorial calling for more frequent and earlier use of long-acting injectable antipsychotics (LAIs) in schizophrenia (From the Editor, Current Psychiatry, May 2021, p. 9-12). I consider LAIs to be lifesaving interventions, so I’ve offered LAI administration via a drive-up service over the past year to ensure patients could continue to receive their treatment, even through the worst times of the COVID-19 pandemic.1 LAIs can be beneficial for anyone living with schizophrenia, but are never more important than in first-episode psychosis (FEP), when repeated psychotic relapses have not yet ravaged the brain. Earlier aggressive treatment of FEP and subsequent relapses with LAIs can dramatically improve long-term outcomes for people with schizophrenia.

In addition to the neuroprotective biologic effects of early LAI usage, I’ve found that many of my FEP patients find great psychological comfort from incorporating LAIs into their treatment plan. The first psychotic break is generally when a person (and their family) feels the most afraid about the future and is in desperate need of hope that they can have a full life—with educational opportunities, sustained employment, meaningful relationships, and more. Just as society has seen the COVID-19 vaccines as a symbol of hope and the first step in overcoming the oppression of living in fear of an uncertain future, we need to help people experiencing FEP find hope in a needle.

Craig Chepke, MD, FAPA
Excel Psychiatric Associates
Huntersville, North Carolina

Reference

1. Chepke C. Drive-up pharmacotherapy during the COVID-19 pandemic. Current Psychiatry. 2020;19(5):29-30.

Dr. Nasrallah responds

Thank you, Dr. Chepke, for your letter confirming full support for using LAIs in schizophrenia. I like the phrase you coined: “hope in a needle.” The early use of LAIs in schizophrenia can provide the same type of hope that the vaccines against the life-threatening COVID-19 virus have generated in our society. Based on my direct observations, I also agree with you that the longer patients with schizophrenia remain on LAIs, the more engaged and happy they are with their progress and the quality of their lives. It is tragic that many patients never had the opportunity to return to their baseline with the early use of LAIs immediately following their first psychotic episode, instead of relapsing again and again due to their inability to adhere completely to their oral medications.

Henry A. Nasrallah, MD
Editor-In-Chief

Continue to: LAIs as the standard of care

 

 

LAIs as the standard of care

Thank you, Dr. Nasrallah, for reiterating the importance of compliance with pharmacologic management of schizophrenia after FEP (From the Editor, Current Psychiatry, May 2021, p. 9-12). Long before LAIs, I appreciated the successes patients with schizophrenia experienced when they complied with treatment after the first episode. It was clear that success was forthcoming for patients who had an interested psychiatrist and a committed relationship with them.

As you point out in your editorial, the facts are powerful, well-known, undisputed, and yet not adopted in the United States, when in other countries LAIs are first-line care. Yes, LAIs are expensive, but not nearly as expensive as the disabilities caused by noncompliance are to society.

Why isn’t LAI use the standard of care here in the United States? In the United States, there is advocacy for treatment because there’s money in it. There is no good advocacy for preventive care because there’s no immediate money in it. We have another good example of this in the United States: private, for-profit prisons. They have a vested interest in keeping prisons full and building new ones. Patients with FEP are most often treated in the hospital, where a standard of care could easily be established that mandates LAIs as first-tier care. Why is that not so? Who is pushing for it? Who is resisting?

Your editorial inspired me to advocate more strongly. Do you have advice about how to effect policy change? I know administrators respond when we talk dollars and cents, not quality of care. What is the dollar cost of not using LAIs as the standard of care after FEP? Who cares? Who would listen to the numbers?

Edward A. Major, MD, LFAPA
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry
Upstate Medical Center
Syracuse, New York

Dr. Nasrallah responds

Dr. Major, thanks for your message. Establishing a standard of care for the use of LAIs (or any other therapy) is not that simple. It requires well-coordinated collaboration among several stakeholders (clinicians, researchers, payors, advocacy groups, and a national organization such as the American Psychiatric Association). The cost issue is certainly powerful, but the equation works in favor of LAIs because 1 psychiatric hospitalization due to a psychotic relapse costs up to 3 times the annual cost of an LAI medication that can prevent that rehospitalization. In addition, disability comprises the lion’s share of the large indirect costs of schizophrenia (disability payments, lifetime room and board, incarceration and legal costs, and loss of work and generation of taxes). LAIs can save both lives and expenditures, and a lot of suffering by patients and their families. I, too, long to see the emergence of a rational standard of care for schizophrenia using LAIs right after the initial psychotic episode. Oncology and cardiology have standards of care, so why not psychiatry?

Henry A. Nasrallah, MD
Editor-In-Chief

Continue to: Psychosis and epilepsy

 

 

Psychosis and epilepsy

I just read your editorial regarding the devastating consequences of psychotic relapses (From the Editor, Current Psychiatry, May 2021, p. 9-12). I was shocked to read of the extent of the damage caused by such relapses and the positive impact of LAIs, and I thank you for opening my eyes. 

I work in the spheres of psychiatry, epileptology, and whole genome sequencing, and have experienced a psychotic episode myself (in 2013, after temporal lobe resection and overdose). I now consider myself even more lucky to be out the other side! As Governor for South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust (SLaM) and Trustee for Epilepsy Action, many of our patients have psychosis. Some patients with epilepsy even experience postictal psychosis. Just yesterday, we had a call at SLaM regarding patients from a secure unit, and a psychiatric nurse spoke about patients at risk to themselves and others because of their psychotic illness, and how crucial effective long-term care was.

Torie Robinson
CEO, Epilepsy Sparks

 

Dr. Nasrallah responds

Ms. Robinson, thank you for sharing your story. It is important to note that the neuro­biology of the psychosis that may occur with epilepsy may not be as neurodegenerative as the psychosis of schizophrenia. Many neurologic conditions can be associated with psychotic episodes, not only epilepsy. I am glad you overcame your post-temporal lobectomy psychotic episode and have had a very good outcome with high functioning.

Henry A. Nasrallah, MD
Editor-In-Chief

Disclosures
Dr. Chepke is a consultant to and speaker for Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Otsuka Pharmaceuticals, and Alkermes. The other authors report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in their letters, or with manufacturers of competing products.

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Drive-up pharmacotherapy during the COVID-19 pandemic

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Drive-up pharmacotherapy during the COVID-19 pandemic

My medical career began during a tragedy. I started medical school in August 2001 at New York University, a few dozen blocks north of the World Trade Center in Manhattan. Several weeks later, the September 11 terrorist attacks devastated the city, and the rest of our country. Though we knew virtually nothing yet about practicing medicine, my entire class put on our scrubs and ran to the Bellevue Hospital emergency department to see if there was anything we could do to help. In the end, there was not much we could do that day, but the experience seared into us the notion that a physician stands tall in a crisis and does whatever it takes to help.

For me, the recent emergency we are facing with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has brought back bone-chilling memories of that time, especially because New York City has been one of the hardest-hit cities in the world. It’s hard for anyone to change routines on a dime, but I’m fortunate to run a solo private practice with a small administrative staff. I was able to pivot my medication management and therapy patients to 100% telepsychiatry overnight, even though I quite dislike the emotional distancing that the physical separation creates. However, I do administer some treatments that require my patients’ physical presence: long-acting injectable (LAI) antipsychotics, and intranasal esketamine. I consider both to be life-saving interventions, so I had to figure out how to continue offering those services while doing my part to keep everyone healthy.

Drive-up LAI antipsychotics

Many of my patients who receive LAIs are on formulations that are injected into the deltoid, so I transitioned to having them drive up to the front door of my office and roll up their sleeve so I could administer the injection without them leaving their car. If it was possible to convert a monthly deltoid injection to an equivalent quarterly deltoid injection, I accelerated that process. It took a little more thought to figure out how to best manage patients who had been getting gluteal injections. Deltoid injections are more convenient, but for certain antipsychotics, the only available LAI formulations that allow intervals longer than 1 month require gluteal administration due to the injection volume and pharmacokinetic considerations. Because of privacy and safety considerations, I didn’t feel gluteal injections would be feasible or appropriate for drive-up administration.

Maintaining patients on their gluteal injections would provide a longer duration between doses, but because patients would have to come inside the office to get them, there would be a higher risk of COVID-19 transmission. Converting them to a once-monthly equivalent with the same molecule and comparable dosage given in the deltoid via drive-up would reduce the risk of viral transmission, but requiring more frequent injections would increase the likelihood they might not show up for all doses during this crisis. I spoke with several other psychiatrists about this dilemma, and several of them favored lengthening the injection cycle as the top priority during this time. However, given the exponential curve of viral transmission in a pandemic, time is of the essence to “flatten the curve.” I decided that prioritizing the reduction of infection risk was paramount, and so I began switching my patients receiving gluteal injections with a longer duration to deltoid injections with a shorter duration. I can only hope I made the right decision for my patients, staff, and family.

Drive-up esketamine

Then came the hardest question—how do I continue to provide intranasal esketamine to my patients? There is an (appropriately) rigid Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy protocol in place that requires patients to be monitored in a medically supervised health care setting for 2 hours after receiving esketamine. Having a patient in the office for at least 2 hours would create a tremendous risk for viral transmission, even in the best-case scenario of using personal protective equipment and stringent efforts to sterilize the space. I didn’t consider putting the treatments on hold because esketamine is indicated solely for patients with treatment-resistant depression, and these patients couldn’t be effectively managed with conventional oral antidepressants. I decided I’d have to figure out a way to adapt the drive-up LAI administration process for esketamine treatments as well.

In my practice, esketamine monitoring usually occurs in a treatment room that has a back entrance to a small, private parking lot. I realized that if I had the patients pull around the building and park in the spot right outside the window, we could maintain direct observation from inside the office while they sat in their car! Patients are not permitted to drive after receiving an esketamine treatment, so we take possession of their car keys to prevent them from driving off before the end of the monitoring period. We give them one of our automatic blood pressure cuffs to take the required blood pressure readings, and they relay the results through a video telemedicine connection. We also enlist the patient’s designated driver to provide an additional set of eyes for monitoring. When the observation period ends, the cuff is retrieved and sanitized.

Meeting our patients’ needs

Our duty to our patients is vital during a crisis, and they deserve everything in our power that we can offer them. We can’t be complacent in our routines and let our fears of what might or might not happen paralyze us from moving forward. If we are flexible and creative, we can rise to overcome any challenge to meeting our patients’ needs. Throughout this ordeal, I’ve seen some of the patients I was most worried about turn out to be some of the most resilient. When our patients have risen to the occasion, what excuse do we have not to do the same?

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Craig Chepke, MD, FAPA
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University of North Carolina School of Medicine
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Medical Director, Excel Psychiatric Associates, PA
Huntersville, North Carolina
Medical Director, Timber Ridge Treatment Center
Gold Hill, North Carolina

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Craig Chepke, MD, FAPA
Adjunct Assistant Professor of Psychiatry
University of North Carolina School of Medicine
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Medical Director, Excel Psychiatric Associates, PA
Huntersville, North Carolina
Medical Director, Timber Ridge Treatment Center
Gold Hill, North Carolina

Disclosure
The author is a consultant to and speaker for Janssen Pharmaceuticals and Otsuka Pharmaceuticals.

Author and Disclosure Information

Craig Chepke, MD, FAPA
Adjunct Assistant Professor of Psychiatry
University of North Carolina School of Medicine
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Medical Director, Excel Psychiatric Associates, PA
Huntersville, North Carolina
Medical Director, Timber Ridge Treatment Center
Gold Hill, North Carolina

Disclosure
The author is a consultant to and speaker for Janssen Pharmaceuticals and Otsuka Pharmaceuticals.

Article PDF
Article PDF

My medical career began during a tragedy. I started medical school in August 2001 at New York University, a few dozen blocks north of the World Trade Center in Manhattan. Several weeks later, the September 11 terrorist attacks devastated the city, and the rest of our country. Though we knew virtually nothing yet about practicing medicine, my entire class put on our scrubs and ran to the Bellevue Hospital emergency department to see if there was anything we could do to help. In the end, there was not much we could do that day, but the experience seared into us the notion that a physician stands tall in a crisis and does whatever it takes to help.

For me, the recent emergency we are facing with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has brought back bone-chilling memories of that time, especially because New York City has been one of the hardest-hit cities in the world. It’s hard for anyone to change routines on a dime, but I’m fortunate to run a solo private practice with a small administrative staff. I was able to pivot my medication management and therapy patients to 100% telepsychiatry overnight, even though I quite dislike the emotional distancing that the physical separation creates. However, I do administer some treatments that require my patients’ physical presence: long-acting injectable (LAI) antipsychotics, and intranasal esketamine. I consider both to be life-saving interventions, so I had to figure out how to continue offering those services while doing my part to keep everyone healthy.

Drive-up LAI antipsychotics

Many of my patients who receive LAIs are on formulations that are injected into the deltoid, so I transitioned to having them drive up to the front door of my office and roll up their sleeve so I could administer the injection without them leaving their car. If it was possible to convert a monthly deltoid injection to an equivalent quarterly deltoid injection, I accelerated that process. It took a little more thought to figure out how to best manage patients who had been getting gluteal injections. Deltoid injections are more convenient, but for certain antipsychotics, the only available LAI formulations that allow intervals longer than 1 month require gluteal administration due to the injection volume and pharmacokinetic considerations. Because of privacy and safety considerations, I didn’t feel gluteal injections would be feasible or appropriate for drive-up administration.

Maintaining patients on their gluteal injections would provide a longer duration between doses, but because patients would have to come inside the office to get them, there would be a higher risk of COVID-19 transmission. Converting them to a once-monthly equivalent with the same molecule and comparable dosage given in the deltoid via drive-up would reduce the risk of viral transmission, but requiring more frequent injections would increase the likelihood they might not show up for all doses during this crisis. I spoke with several other psychiatrists about this dilemma, and several of them favored lengthening the injection cycle as the top priority during this time. However, given the exponential curve of viral transmission in a pandemic, time is of the essence to “flatten the curve.” I decided that prioritizing the reduction of infection risk was paramount, and so I began switching my patients receiving gluteal injections with a longer duration to deltoid injections with a shorter duration. I can only hope I made the right decision for my patients, staff, and family.

Drive-up esketamine

Then came the hardest question—how do I continue to provide intranasal esketamine to my patients? There is an (appropriately) rigid Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy protocol in place that requires patients to be monitored in a medically supervised health care setting for 2 hours after receiving esketamine. Having a patient in the office for at least 2 hours would create a tremendous risk for viral transmission, even in the best-case scenario of using personal protective equipment and stringent efforts to sterilize the space. I didn’t consider putting the treatments on hold because esketamine is indicated solely for patients with treatment-resistant depression, and these patients couldn’t be effectively managed with conventional oral antidepressants. I decided I’d have to figure out a way to adapt the drive-up LAI administration process for esketamine treatments as well.

In my practice, esketamine monitoring usually occurs in a treatment room that has a back entrance to a small, private parking lot. I realized that if I had the patients pull around the building and park in the spot right outside the window, we could maintain direct observation from inside the office while they sat in their car! Patients are not permitted to drive after receiving an esketamine treatment, so we take possession of their car keys to prevent them from driving off before the end of the monitoring period. We give them one of our automatic blood pressure cuffs to take the required blood pressure readings, and they relay the results through a video telemedicine connection. We also enlist the patient’s designated driver to provide an additional set of eyes for monitoring. When the observation period ends, the cuff is retrieved and sanitized.

Meeting our patients’ needs

Our duty to our patients is vital during a crisis, and they deserve everything in our power that we can offer them. We can’t be complacent in our routines and let our fears of what might or might not happen paralyze us from moving forward. If we are flexible and creative, we can rise to overcome any challenge to meeting our patients’ needs. Throughout this ordeal, I’ve seen some of the patients I was most worried about turn out to be some of the most resilient. When our patients have risen to the occasion, what excuse do we have not to do the same?

My medical career began during a tragedy. I started medical school in August 2001 at New York University, a few dozen blocks north of the World Trade Center in Manhattan. Several weeks later, the September 11 terrorist attacks devastated the city, and the rest of our country. Though we knew virtually nothing yet about practicing medicine, my entire class put on our scrubs and ran to the Bellevue Hospital emergency department to see if there was anything we could do to help. In the end, there was not much we could do that day, but the experience seared into us the notion that a physician stands tall in a crisis and does whatever it takes to help.

For me, the recent emergency we are facing with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has brought back bone-chilling memories of that time, especially because New York City has been one of the hardest-hit cities in the world. It’s hard for anyone to change routines on a dime, but I’m fortunate to run a solo private practice with a small administrative staff. I was able to pivot my medication management and therapy patients to 100% telepsychiatry overnight, even though I quite dislike the emotional distancing that the physical separation creates. However, I do administer some treatments that require my patients’ physical presence: long-acting injectable (LAI) antipsychotics, and intranasal esketamine. I consider both to be life-saving interventions, so I had to figure out how to continue offering those services while doing my part to keep everyone healthy.

Drive-up LAI antipsychotics

Many of my patients who receive LAIs are on formulations that are injected into the deltoid, so I transitioned to having them drive up to the front door of my office and roll up their sleeve so I could administer the injection without them leaving their car. If it was possible to convert a monthly deltoid injection to an equivalent quarterly deltoid injection, I accelerated that process. It took a little more thought to figure out how to best manage patients who had been getting gluteal injections. Deltoid injections are more convenient, but for certain antipsychotics, the only available LAI formulations that allow intervals longer than 1 month require gluteal administration due to the injection volume and pharmacokinetic considerations. Because of privacy and safety considerations, I didn’t feel gluteal injections would be feasible or appropriate for drive-up administration.

Maintaining patients on their gluteal injections would provide a longer duration between doses, but because patients would have to come inside the office to get them, there would be a higher risk of COVID-19 transmission. Converting them to a once-monthly equivalent with the same molecule and comparable dosage given in the deltoid via drive-up would reduce the risk of viral transmission, but requiring more frequent injections would increase the likelihood they might not show up for all doses during this crisis. I spoke with several other psychiatrists about this dilemma, and several of them favored lengthening the injection cycle as the top priority during this time. However, given the exponential curve of viral transmission in a pandemic, time is of the essence to “flatten the curve.” I decided that prioritizing the reduction of infection risk was paramount, and so I began switching my patients receiving gluteal injections with a longer duration to deltoid injections with a shorter duration. I can only hope I made the right decision for my patients, staff, and family.

Drive-up esketamine

Then came the hardest question—how do I continue to provide intranasal esketamine to my patients? There is an (appropriately) rigid Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy protocol in place that requires patients to be monitored in a medically supervised health care setting for 2 hours after receiving esketamine. Having a patient in the office for at least 2 hours would create a tremendous risk for viral transmission, even in the best-case scenario of using personal protective equipment and stringent efforts to sterilize the space. I didn’t consider putting the treatments on hold because esketamine is indicated solely for patients with treatment-resistant depression, and these patients couldn’t be effectively managed with conventional oral antidepressants. I decided I’d have to figure out a way to adapt the drive-up LAI administration process for esketamine treatments as well.

In my practice, esketamine monitoring usually occurs in a treatment room that has a back entrance to a small, private parking lot. I realized that if I had the patients pull around the building and park in the spot right outside the window, we could maintain direct observation from inside the office while they sat in their car! Patients are not permitted to drive after receiving an esketamine treatment, so we take possession of their car keys to prevent them from driving off before the end of the monitoring period. We give them one of our automatic blood pressure cuffs to take the required blood pressure readings, and they relay the results through a video telemedicine connection. We also enlist the patient’s designated driver to provide an additional set of eyes for monitoring. When the observation period ends, the cuff is retrieved and sanitized.

Meeting our patients’ needs

Our duty to our patients is vital during a crisis, and they deserve everything in our power that we can offer them. We can’t be complacent in our routines and let our fears of what might or might not happen paralyze us from moving forward. If we are flexible and creative, we can rise to overcome any challenge to meeting our patients’ needs. Throughout this ordeal, I’ve seen some of the patients I was most worried about turn out to be some of the most resilient. When our patients have risen to the occasion, what excuse do we have not to do the same?

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Current Psychiatry - 19(5)
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Current Psychiatry - 19(5)
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29-30
Page Number
29-30
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Drive-up pharmacotherapy during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Drive-up pharmacotherapy during the COVID-19 pandemic
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