Goodman 2014
Goodman 2014
Goodman 2014
D i s o rd e r
Wayne K. Goodman, MD*, Dorothy Grice, MD, Kyle A.B. Lapidus, MD, PhD,
Barbara Coffey, MD, MS
KEYWORDS
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) Obsessions Compulsions Serotonin
Serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SRIs) Glutamate
Cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical (CSTC) circuit History
KEY POINTS
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is marked by recurrent and disturbing thoughts
(obsessions) and repetitive behaviors (compulsions) that the person feels driven to
perform.
Patients with OCD generally recognize the senselessness of their obsessions and the
excessiveness of their compulsive behaviors.
OCD affects up to 2.3% of the population over the course of a lifetime and can be
disabling.
The 2 prevailing neurochemical based theories of OCD pathophysiology implicate the
brain serotonin and glutamate systems, with the latter gaining traction.
Based largely on brain imaging and neurosurgical experience, frontal–striatal pathways
have been proposed as the dysfunctional neurocircuit underlying obsessive-compulsive
behavior.
INTRODUCTION
Disclosures: Roche, Research Support; Medtronic, donated devices (W.K. Goodman); Brain and
Behavior Research Foundation and Simons Foundation, Research Support; Halo Neuro, Advi-
sory Board; Medtronic, donated devices (K.A.B. Lapidus).
Department of Psychiatry, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, One Gustave L. Levy Place,
Box 1230, New York, NY 10029, USA
* Corresponding author.
E-mail address: [email protected]
CLINICAL FEATURES
but a diagnosis can be made without both present. Most patients are able to acknowl-
edge their symptoms as senseless or excessive at some point during the illness. In
practice, there is a range of insight from good to poor to absent at times; DSM-5 calls
for specifying degree of insight accordingly. Symptoms produce subjective distress,
are time consuming (>1 h/d), or interfere with function.
Obsessions are experienced as intrusive and attempts are made to ignore, sup-
press, or neutralize them with another thought or action. Compulsions are repetitive
behaviors or mental acts the person feels driven to perform, either in response to an
obsession (eg, to prevent a dreaded event from occurring), or according to rigid rules
designed to prevent or reduce distress. The acts are clearly excessive or senseless.
Compulsions usually reduce distress, but are not inherently pleasurable.
Common types of obsessions include concerns about contamination (eg, fear of
dirt, germs or illness, disgust with bodily waste), safety or harm (eg, being responsible
for a fire), unwanted acts of aggression (eg, unwanted impulse to harm a loved one),
unacceptable sexual or religious thoughts (eg, sacrilegious images), and the need for
symmetry or exactness. Common compulsions include excessive cleaning (eg, ritual-
ized hand washing), checking, ordering and arranging rituals, counting, repeating
routine activities (eg, going in/out of a doorway), and hoarding (eg, difficulty parting
with possessions, regardless of their actual monetary or sentimental value). (See the
article by Frost, Steketee, and Tolin for a further discussion of this topic.) Although
most compulsions are observable behaviors (eg, hand washing), some are performed
as unobservable mental rituals (eg, silent recitation of prayers to neutralize a horrific
image). Detailed examples of obsessive-compulsive symptoms can be found in the
Symptom Checklist of the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale.19
The presence of insight distinguishes OCD from a psychotic illness, such as schizo-
phrenia, although comorbid obsessive-compulsive symptoms are not uncommon in
schizophrenia.20 Obsessions may involve unrealistic fears, but unlike delusions, they
are not fixed, unshakeable, false beliefs. Patients with OCD recognize the thoughts
as emanating from their own minds as opposed to the way auditory hallucinations
are experienced. Occasionally, an obsession can be misdiagnosed as an auditory hallu-
cination when the patient, especially a child, refers to it as “the voice in my head,” even
though it is recognized as his or her own thoughts. The symptoms of OCD may be
bizarre, but the patient recognizes their absurdity. However, the DSM-5 allows for a
range of insight as reflected in the following specifiers: Good or fair insight, poor insight,
or absent insight/delusional OCD beliefs. Poor or absent insight is not uncommon in
young children with OCD.21
Patients are often reluctant to disclose unwanted thoughts or odd behaviors
because they are embarrassed. Therefore, clinicians should probe for OCD symptoms
in patients or parents of children presenting with commonly comorbid mood or anxiety
complaints. A simple screening question follows: “Sometimes people will be bothered
by unwanted or repetitive thoughts or sudden, strong urges to check, wash, or count
things. Does anything like that ever happen to you?” More comprehensive and vali-
dated self-report screening instruments are available for identifying cases of OCD.22
Confirmation of the diagnosis requires a clinical assessment that should include a rat-
ing of symptom severity.23 Patients may not seek treatment until social, work, or
school impairment is significant or comorbid depressive symptoms have developed.
Childhood OCD is often recognized by parents or teachers who become aware of ritu-
alized behaviors or reassurance seeking that interferes with functioning.
4 Goodman et al
Much of the confusion in the professional and lay literature regarding the differences
between OCD and other conditions stems from the varied uses of the words obsession
and compulsion. To be true symptoms of OCD, obsessions and compulsions are
strictly defined as described in this article. A key point to remember is that the compul-
sions of OCD are not considered inherently pleasurable; at best, they relieve anxiety.
As a contrasting clinical example, patients seeking treatment for “compulsive” eating,
gambling, or sexual behavior may feel unable to control behaviors they acknowledge
as deleterious, but at some time in the past these acts were experienced as gratifying.
Individuals with OCD have a 7% lifetime risk of Tourette syndrome (TS) and a 20%
risk of tics.24 Distinguishing between complex motor tics and certain compulsions (eg,
repetitive touching) can be problematic. By convention, tics are distinguished from
“ticlike” compulsions (eg, compulsive touching or blinking) based on whether the
patient attaches a purpose or meaning to the behavior. For example, a patient feeling
an urge to repeatedly touch an object would be classified as having a compulsion only
if it was preceded by a need to neutralize an unwanted thought or image; complex
motor tics can be often distinguished by sensorimotor urges that precede the motor
behavior.25 Tics are often identified by “the company that they keep”; if a complex mo-
tor act is accompanied by clearcut tics (eg, head jerks), it is most likely a tic itself. How-
ever, there are many exceptions to this rule in which the same patient with OCD and
TS may have both simple and complex motor tics as well as compulsions. The types of
obsessive-compulsive symptoms present in patients with comorbid tics often can be
distinctive.26 Patients with TS and OCD often describe a need or feeling to get things
“just right,” and repeat behaviors to achieve a feeling of symmetry or exactness in
touch or appearance.27 Conversely, in patients with OCD without TS, contamination
or illness concerns are more common. (See the article by Shaw and Coffey in this issue
for a detailed discussion of relationship between OCD and tic disorders.)
The intellectual climate and scientific tools of the period have influenced each stage in
the history of OCD. Until the 1850s, obsessive-compulsive phenomena were undiffer-
entiated from other forms of insanity.28 The earliest descriptions of a malady resem-
bling OCD correspond with what would be called “scrupulosity” today.29 For
example, Robert Burton reported a case in his compendium, the Anatomy of Melan-
choly (1621)30: “If he be in a silent auditory, as at a sermon, he is afraid he shall speak
aloud and unaware, something indecent, unfit to be said.” French 19th-century ac-
counts of cases resembling OCD emphasized the central role of doubt (“folie du
doute”) and indecisiveness.28 Later French writers, including Pierre Janet in 1902,
stressed the loss of will and low mental energy (“psychasthenia”) underlying the for-
mation of obsessive-compulsive symptoms.28
Meanwhile in Germany, Westphal was the first to distinguish obsessions from delu-
sions in 1877.31 Freud adopted a similar viewpoint when he introduced the term
“obsessional neurosis” in 1895.31 The greater part of the 20th century was dominated
by psychoanalytic theories of OCD. According to psychoanalytic theory, obsessions
and compulsions reflect maladaptive responses to unresolved conflicts from early
stages of psychosexual development. Psychoanalytic treatment focused on unravel-
ing the symbolic meaning and putative childhood roots of OCD. Psychoanalytic the-
ories of OCD lost favor in the last quarter of the 20th century as new, more effective
behavioral and pharmacologic treatments were introduced.
Learning theory models of OCD gained influence as a result of the success of
behavior therapy and the growth of cognitive neuroscience.32,33 Conditioning models
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder 5
gave way to more sophisticated cognitive models32,34 (see the articles by Stern and
Steven Taylor and by Lewin and colleagues in this issue for additional details). The ef-
ficacy of a behavior therapy technique referred to as exposure and response preven-
tion has been confirmed in numerous studies of patients with OCD.
NEUROCHEMICAL HYPOTHESES
Serotonin
The observation in 1975 that clomipramine was beneficial in patients with OCD ush-
ered in a new era of neurobiological investigations.35 Previously, OCD had been
considered refractory to pharmacotherapy. In contrast with other tricyclic antidepres-
sants, clomipramine is a potent inhibitor of serotonin reuptake. The serotonin hypoth-
esis of OCD was born out of a series of case reports,35 later confirmed by randomized
clinical trials,36,37 that serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SRIs) were effective in this disor-
der. These findings were buttressed by biochemical data from patients chronically
treated with SRIs38 and by early pharmacologic challenge studies.39 With the intro-
duction of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) like fluvoxamine, these drugs
were also shown to be effective in OCD.40 To date, more than 20 randomized clinical
trials have established the efficacy of SRIs or SSRIs in OCD41 These findings were
buttressed by biochemical data from patients chronically treated by SRIs38 and by
early pharmacologic challenge studies.39 With the introduction of SSRIs like fluvox-
amine, these drugs were also shown to be effective in OCD.40,42 To date, more than
20 randomized clinical trials have established the efficacy of SRIs or SSRIs in
OCD41 (see the article by Pittenger and Block for more details on pharmacologic treat-
ment of OCD.)
The fact that SSRIs are effective in OCD is not a distinguishing feature, because these
medications have a broad spectrum of action in psychiatric conditions, including
depression and anxiety disorders. What stands out is that other antidepressant agents
that lack potency for serotonin transporter binding are generally ineffective in OCD. In
contrast, many antidepressants with other molecular targets are effective in the treat-
ment of depression and other neuropsychiatric disorders but not in OCD. The preferen-
tial efficacy of SRIs and SSRIs in OCD is well established.41 Initially, clomipramine was
shown to be more effective than tricyclic antidepressants like desipramine, which were
predominantly norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors.43 Later, SSRIs such as fluvoxamine
and sertraline were also shown to be superior to desipramine.36,44
These drug response data led researchers to hypothesize that dysfunction in brain
serotonergic systems might be related to the etiology of OCD. However, interpreta-
tions about pathophysiology based on treatment response and the presumed mech-
anism of action of the intervention are fraught with problems that have plagued the
field of psychiatry for decades. Whether it is the serendipitous discovery of neurolep-
tics improving positive symptoms of schizophrenia (leading to the dopamine hypoth-
esis of schizophrenia) or SRIs reducing obsessive-compulsive symptoms, this reverse
path to understanding etiology has yielded few new insights or novel treatments.
A number of neurobiological investigations into the role of serotonin in OCD were
launched across multiple laboratories in the 1980s and 1990s. Many of these involved
pharmacologic challenge paradigms with probes of serotonin function such as
m-chlorophenylpiperazine.39,45 These studies were designed to provoke obsessive-
compulsive symptoms as well as induce a measurable, blood-based neurohumoral
signal that could be compared with the response in healthy subjects. In addition, mul-
tiple drug trials of other serotonergic agents (eg, buspirone, tryptophan) were initiated,
mostly as adjunctive agents to augment SSRIs in partial or nonresponders to SSRI
6 Goodman et al
Glutamate
A role of the glutamatergic system in OCD has been gaining traction as a result of
emerging imaging data,52 genomic studies,53 biochemical studies of cerebrospinal
fluid,54,55 and animal models of aberrant grooming behavior.56 These findings have
spurred interest in testing the efficacy of medications (eg, riluzole) that modulate gluta-
mate function. (See the article by Pittenger and Block for a discussion of glutamatergic
agents in OCD.) Pittenger and colleagues,57 provide an excellent review of the gluta-
matergic theory of OCD elsewhere. A role for glutamate in OCD is highly compatible
with circuit-based theories of OCD discussed briefly herein.
NEUROCIRCUITRY HYPOTHESES
Functional brain imaging studies in OCD are remarkably consistent compared with
findings in most other neuropsychiatric conditions.58 Both positron emission tomogra-
phy59 and functional magnetic resonance imaging60 have shown increased activation
in regions of the orbitofrontal cortex, the anterior cingulate cortex, and parts of the
basal ganglia (particularly the head of the caudate nucleus) in the symptomatic state
compared with healthy controls.61 These areas of abnormal activation tend to
normalize with successful treatment upon repeated testing, whether with medications
or behavioral approaches.61,62 Additional evidence for a role of the basal ganglia in
OCD are case reports of “accidents of nature,” such as Sydenham chorea,63 von
Economo encephalitis,64 and ischemic events,65 in which insults to the basal ganglia,
particularly the globus pallidus, produced obsessive-compulsive behaviors. (For
further details on brain imaging in OCD see the article in this issue by Stern and Taylor
as well as reviews published elsewhere58).
A confluence of data led to the hypothesis that frontal–striatal function is disrupted
in OCD. In addition to the functional brain imaging findings mentioned, the seminal
work by Alexander and colleagues66 influenced OCD researchers to consider certain
parallel segregated cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical loops as the neuroanatomic sub-
strate for obsessive-compulsive behavior.61 More recent revisions of these models
offer a more complex picture,58 with patterns of cortical and subcortical changes in
OCD seeming to depend on the cognitive task under investigation (see the article
by Stern and Taylor elsewhere in this issue). Another component of these circuit-
based hypotheses has been the therapeutic benefit of neurosurgery in intractable
OCD.67 Both experience with ablative surgery and deep brain stimulation are compat-
ible with dysfunction of white matter tracts implicated in network theories of OCD.68
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder 7
SUMMARY
In the DSM-5, OCD has transferred from anxiety disorders to a new grouping of
obsessive-compulsive and related disorders. Ultimately, the diagnostic classification
of OCD is less important than elucidation of its pathophysiology so that more effective
treatments can be developed, especially for those many patients resistant to conven-
tional therapies. The observation that SRIs are preferentially effective in OCD led to the
so-called serotonin hypothesis of OCD. However, direct support for a role of serotonin
in the pathophysiology (eg, biomarkers in pharmacologic challenge studies) of OCD
remains elusive. A glutamatergic hypothesis of OCD has been gaining traction based
on imaging data, genomic studies, biochemical studies, and animal models of aber-
rant grooming behavior. These findings have spurred interest in testing the efficacy
of medications (eg, riluzole) that modulate glutamate function. Functional imaging
studies (both functional magnetic resonance imaging and positron emission tomogra-
phy) show fairly consistent evidence for increased activity in brain regions that form a
cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical circuit. Furthermore, these abnormalities normalize
during successful treatment of OC symptoms, whether with SRIs or cognitive–behav-
ioral therapy. A common substrate of various interventions (whether drug, behavioral,
or device) may be modulation (at different nodes) of the cortico-striato-thalamo-
cortical circuit. Hypotheses that integrate knowledge over multiple levels of analysis
(eg, genetics, neurochemical, and circuit networks) stand the best chance of
advancing our understanding of OCD.76
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