Improved Outcomes for Schizophrenia Using Evidence Based Treatment
Submitting Institution
Imperial College LondonUnit of Assessment
Psychology, Psychiatry and NeuroscienceSummary Impact Type
HealthResearch Subject Area(s)
Medical and Health Sciences: Clinical Sciences
Summary of the impact
Studies conducted at Imperial College, over the last 20 years, have
improved the rational, evidence-based treatment of schizophrenia. Our
research has covered symptomatology, neurocognitive function, medication
side effects, and comorbid substance use, and involved clinical trials of
pharmacological and psychosocial treatments. We lead national quality
improvement programmes supporting the implementation of
psychopharmacological practice standards. Our work has impacted upon the
understanding, clinical assessment and treatment of this condition in both
first-episode patients and established schizophrenia, and has improved
prescribing practice and the identification and assessment of
side-effects.
Underpinning research
Key Imperial College London researchers:
Professor Thomas Barnes, Professor of Clinical Psychiatry (1984-present)
Professor Michael Crawford, Professor of Mental Health Research
(1999-present)
Professor Eileen Joyce, Professor of Neuropsychiatry (1991-2006),
Honorary Professor (2006-present)
Professor Tom Sensky, Professor in Psychological Medicine (1989-2009)
Clinical trials: Our clinical trials include the first UK study
(1993) to evaluate clozapine in treatment-resistant schizophrenia (TRS),
and the first (1997) to recruit patients with predominant negative
symptoms as the treatment target. Pioneering clinical work by Professor
Barnes and colleagues combining pharmacotherapy and psychological
intervention, specifically cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT), for
treatment-resistant schizophrenia (TRS) stimulated one of the first
randomised controlled trials (RCT; 2000) showing that adjunctive CBT
improved persistent, refractory symptoms in schizophrenia (1). Later, we
conducted (2012) a pragmatic RCT of group art therapy as an adjunctive
treatment for people with schizophrenia.
In collaboration with the University of Manchester, we developed and
conducted the cost utility of the latest antipsychotic drugs in
schizophrenia (CUTLASS) studies 1 and 2 (2006): pragmatic, double-blind
RCTs of the use of first- and second-generation antipsychotics (FGAs,
SGAs) in clinical practice (2). For these studies, Professor Barnes
developed the Antipsychotic non-neurological side-effect rating scale
(ANNSERS), a comprehensive measure for rating non-neurological, adverse
drug reactions to both FGAs and SGAs.
Antipsychotic medication side effects: Professor Barnes' work was
among the first to report an association between high-dose antipsychotic
medication and electrocardiogram (ECG) changes such as prolonged QT
interval, a period representing depolarisation and repolarisation of the
heart ventricles A long QT interval is a marker for risk of ventricular
arrhythmias and potentially sudden death.
Professor Barnes also built on his work on akathisia (with studies in
1994 and 2000), a side-effect of antipsychotic medication for which he had
provided the first detailed description of the typical subjective
experience (a subjective sense of inner restlessness/mental unease) and
characteristic patterns of restless movement. Studies of prevalence,
incidence, and risk factors were conducted and the reliability, validity
and clinical utility of the Barnes Akathisia Rating Scale (BARS) was
demonstrated (3). Work continued on the nature and correlates of negative
symptoms in schizophrenia, particularly the phenomenological overlap
between depressive features and negative symptoms.
Improving prescribing practice in mental health: Professor Barnes
was a co-founder of the Prescribing Observatory for Mental Health
(POMH-UK) in 2005. POMH-UK promotes and supports the optimal, safest use
of existing medications in psychiatric practice via national, audit-based,
quality improvement programmes (QIPs), and provides customised change
interventions for clinical services. Thus far, QIPs have tackled topics
such as use of high-dose antipsychotic medication, assessment of metabolic
side effects of antipsychotics (4), monitoring of lithium treatment,
antipsychotic medication for dementia, use of ADHD medication, and
prescribing for personality disorder.
Schizophrenia: We were among the first in the UK to identify the
relatively high prevalence of comorbid substance use in schizophrenia, in
an early, epidemiologically-based survey (1994) in south Westminster,
which revealed a high prevalence of alcohol misuse and cannabis use. In
collaboration with the Imperial College Toxicology Unit, we conducted
pioneering work using hair analysis to identify substance use in such
patients, reporting (1998) on the advantages and disadvantages of this new
laboratory ability to test for substance use. Professor Barnes also
collaborated with Professor Lingford-Hughes (Imperial) on systematic
reviews of the relationship between cannabis use and psychotic outcomes
(2007-8).
Our prospective, neurobiological study of first-episode schizophrenia in
West London, which started in 1994, was the first UK study to investigate
the nature and prevalence of cognitive deficits in early schizophrenia and
their relationship with functional outcomes, and the nature and clinical
correlates of comorbid substance use, including cannabis (5). We also
investigated the relationship between the period from onset of psychosis
to receiving antipsychotic medication (duration of untreated psychosis:
DUP) and clinical outcomes (6). Further Wellcome funding (2002) allowed
expansion of the work to first-episode psychosis.
References to the research
(1) Sensky, T., Turkington, D., Kingdon, D., Scott, J., Siddle, R.,
O'Carroll, M., Scott, J.L., Barnes, T.R.E. (2000). A randomised controlled
trial of cognitive-behavioural therapy for persistent symptoms in
schizophrenia resistant to medication. Archives of General Psychiatry,
57, 165-172. DOI.
Times cited: 298 (as at 7th November 2013 on ISI Web of
Science). Journal Impact Factor: 12.01
(2) Jones, P.B., Barnes, T.R.E., Davies, L., et al. (2006). Randomized
controlled trial of the effect on quality of life of second- vs
first-generation antipsychotic drugs in schizophrenia — Cost Utility of
the Latest Antipsychotic Drugs in Schizophrenia Study (CUtLASS 1). Archives
of General Psychiatry, 63, 1079-1087. DOI.
Times Cited: 482 (as at 7th November 2013 on ISI Web of
Science). Journal Impact Factor: 12.01
(3) Barnes, T.R.E. (2003). The Barnes Akathisia Rating Scale — Revisited.
Journal of Psychopharmacology; 17:365-370. DOI.
Times cited: 45 (as at 7th November 2013 on ISI Web of
Science). Journal Impact Factor: 3.03
(4) Barnes, T.R.E., Paton, C., Cavanagh, M., et al. (2007). A UK audit of
screening for the metabolic side effects of antipsychotics in community
patients. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 33; 1397-1403. DOI.
Times cited: 52 (as at 7th November 2013 on ISI Web of
Science). Journal Impact Factor: 8.80
(5) Barnes, T.R.E., Mutsatsa, S.H., Hutton, S.B., et al. (2006). Comorbid
substance use and age of onset in schizophrenia. British Journal of
Psychiatry, 188: 237-242. DOI.
Times Cited: 104 (as at 7th Novemebr 2013 on ISI Web of
Science). Journal Impact Factor: 6.61
(6) Barnes, T.R.E., Hutton, S.B., Chapman, M.J., et al. (2000). West
London first-episode study of schizophrenia: clinical correlates of
duration of untreated psychosis. British Journal of Psychiatry;
177:207-211.DOI.
Times Cited: 123 (as at 7th November 2013 on ISI Web of
Science). Journal Impact Factor: 6.61
Key funding:
• Wellcome Trust (1993-1995; £143,000), Co-Principal Investigators
(Co-PIs), T. Barnes and T. Sensky, A controlled study of cognitive
behaviour therapy in the management of treatment-resistant schizophrenia.
• NHS R&D Health Technology Assessment programme (1999-2002;
£1,291,593), Co-PI T. Barnes (collaboration with Manchester), Cost utility
of the latest antipsychotics in severe schizophrenia (CUtLASS): a
multi-centre, randomised controlled trial.
• Wellcome Trust (1994-1999; £540,804), Co-PIs E. Joyce and T. Barnes, A
prospective neurobiological study of first-episode schizophrenia.
• Wellcome Trust (2001-2006; £1,547,518), Co-PIs E. Joyce and T. Barnes,
Cognitive and neuroimaging abnormalities in psychosis: The West London
longitudinal first episode study.
Details of the impact
Impacts include: practitioners and services, health and welfare,
commerce, public policy Main beneficiaries include: practitioners; pharma,
patients, NICE, NHS
The BARS is the most frequently used akathisia scale in research and
clinical practice world-wide and is translated into Japanese, Spanish and
many other languages. Its introduction facilitated the identification and
standard assessment of this common and distressing antipsychotic side
effect, which was commonly misdiagnosed and untreated, adversely affecting
medication adherence and confounded clinical assessment. The BARS is
widely used in the clinical management of akathisia; improving diagnosis
and treatment, and remains the standard akathisia scale used in major
clinical trials of antipsychotic medication [1], and in the vast majority
of industry trials of SGAs for licensing, attempting to show their
superiority over FGAs or other SGAs in respect of motor side effects [2].
The ANNSERS scale for the comprehensive assessment of non-neurological
side effects has been established as a clinically applicable research
tool, with good inter-rater reliability. It was used successfully in the
CUTLASS studies and has been adopted to aid the processes of research, and
has been made available on request to clinicians for clinical assessment.
Our early ECG study reporting an association between high-dose
antipsychotic medication and prolonged QT interval raised concerns that
led to QTc (QT interval corrected for heart rate) prolongation becoming an
important safety criterion in the licensing of new antipsychotics; the
risk of QTc prolongation with some older antipsychotics led to their
withdrawal [3]. In clinical practice, liability for QTc prolongation can
be an issue in choice of antipsychotic for a particular patient, and
national clinical practice recommendations now identify indications for
ECG monitoring of antipsychotic treatment, such as prescription of high
dosage (e.g. Royal College of Psychiatrists' Consensus statement on
high-dose antipsychotic medication. CR138, May 2006).
The findings of CUTLASS 2 confirmed the superior clinical effectiveness
of clozapine for TRS in a pragmatic study, and the findings of CUTLASS 1,
along with similar findings from the US CATIE study, challenged the claims
for superiority for SGAs and influenced subsequent treatment
recommendations and prescribing practice dramatically. The distinction
between FGAs and SGAs was rendered indistinct, and clinical practice
opened up to a single class of `antipsychotics' with varying side-effect
profiles, allowing for individualised risk/benefit appraisal to guide
treatment, as reflected in the updated NICE schizophrenia guideline
(2009). The findings of our CBT study also informed the US Patient
Outcomes Research Team (PORT) psychosocial treatment guidelines [4].
The vast majority of UK mental health Trusts (and private/charitable
healthcare organisations) are subscribing members of POMH-UK [5]. POMH-UK
has increased the involvement of clinical teams in audit and quality
improvement processes, and mental health Trusts routinely include
participation in POMH-UK QIPs in their annual Quality Accounts. The
benchmarked data provide Trusts with evidence of their quality of clinical
care in respect of drug treatment, and support their submissions showing
compliance with relevant evidence-based guideline recommendations as part
of clinical governance. Detailed POMH-UK information on the quality and
variation in national prescribing practice is available on topics such as
the use of depot/long-acting injection antipsychotics and services (e.g.
learning disability and child and adolescent psychiatry) which lack
prescribing guidelines and a robust evidence base for pharmacotherapy.
Such data has been provided to NICE development groups generating
guidelines and treatment recommendations (e.g. for bipolar disorder and
psychosis and schizophrenia in children and young people).
POMH-UK has demonstrated a workable and effective methodology for QIPs in
the NHS, with participation recommended by the Care Quality Commission
(CQC), Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership (HQIP) and Royal College
of Psychiatrists [6]. Positive changes in clinical prescribing practice in
participating services nationally have been seen, for example, reduction
in the use of high-dose and combined antipsychotic medication between 2008
to 2012 in both acute inpatient and forensic services [7]; a doubling of
the prevalence of screening for metabolic side effects in community
patients with schizophrenia from 2006 to 2012; and improved monitoring of
patients on lithium from 2008 to 2012 [7]. POMH-UK change interventions
provided to clinical teams have ranged from educational tools such as a
`ready reckoner' for calculating total antipsychotic dose (now commonly
employed by clinicians and CQC second-opinion appointed doctors) to more
complex interventions such as a side-effect information folder, and a
patient-held lithium booklet (developed in collaboration with the National
Patient Safety Agency, and widely adopted in mental health Trusts: over
170,000 were ordered from 2010 to 2012) [8]. Such improvements in relation
to prescribing for people with schizophrenia were reflected in the 2012
National Audit of Schizophrenia which found high rates of clozapine
prescribing and a relatively low proportion of community patients on
high-dose antipsychotics.
An early follow-up study by Professor Barnes had found that frequent
illness relapse in schizophrenia was associated with a greater
deterioration in social functioning. Our first-episode study found an
association between longer DUP and more severe positive and negative
symptoms after one year of treatment, poorer response to treatment and
poorer outcome which informed an international notion that periods of
untreated psychosis were damaging, and that this was potentially critical
at the onset of illness [9]. This view led to the development of early
intervention services for psychosis in the UK. In our first-episode work,
one interpretation of our finding that cannabis use brings forward the
onset of psychosis in people who otherwise have good prognostic features
was that early age at onset may be due to a toxic action of cannabis
rather than an intrinsically more severe illness. The systematic reviews
in which we collaborated concluded that cannabis increased the risk of
psychotic outcomes independently of confounding intoxication effects, and
that cannabis use in people with psychotic illness was consistently
associated with increased relapse and non-adherence. The notion of
cannabis as a risk factor for schizophrenia has prompted advice on
cannabis psychosis to service users, psychiatrists and other health
workers [10].
Sources to corroborate the impact
[1] Rummel-Kluge, C., Komossa, K., Schwarz, S. et al. (2012)
Second-generation antipsychotic drugs and extrapyramidal side effects: a
systematic review and meta-analysis of head-to-head comparisons. Schizophrenia
Bulletin, 38, 167-177. DOI.
[2] Suzuki, T. (2011) Which
rating scales are regarded as 'the standard' in clinical trials for
schizophrenia? A critical review. Psychopharmacol Bull, 44,
18-31.
[3] Chung, A.K., Chua, S.E. (2011). Effects on prolongation of Bazett's
corrected QT interval of seven second-generation antipsychotics in the
treatment of schizophrenia: a meta-analysis. Journal of
Psychopharmacology, 25, 646-666. DOI.
[4] Dixon, L.B., Dickerson, F., Bellack, A.S., et al. (2010). The 2009
Schizophrenia PORT Psychosocial Treatment Recommendations and Summary
Statements. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 36 (1), 48-70. DOI.
[5] POMH-UK website: List
of member Trusts (archived
on 7th November 2013) and Joint-heads
of POMH-UK
(archived on 7th
November 2013)
[6] National
Clinical Audits for Quality Accounts (including POMH-UK). Archived
on 7th November 2013.
[7] Prescribing Observatory for Mental Health (2012). Topic 1f & 3c.
Prescribing high-dose and combination antipsychotics: acute/PICU,
rehabilitation/complex needs, and forensic psychiatric services, CCQI125
(data on file), and Monitoring metabolic side effects of patients on
antipsychotics: assertive outreach, adult and forensic psychiatric
services (Topic 2f) (2012), CCQI136 (data on file).
[8] Gerrett, D., Lamont, T., Paton, C., Barnes, T.R.E., Shah. A. (2010).
Prescribing and monitoring lithium therapy: summary of a safety report
from the National Patient Safety Agency. British Medical Journal,
341, c6258. DOI.
[9] Boonstra, N., Klaassen, R., Sytema, S., et al. (2012). Duration of
untreated psychosis and negative symptoms — A systematic review and
meta-analysis of individual patient data. Schizophrenia Research, 142,
12-19. DOI.
[10] Cannabis
& psychosis — information for health care workers. Department of
Health, Victoria, Australia. Cannabis
and mental health, Royal College of Psychiatrists' leaflet, UK.