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852 J Clin Psychiatry 74:8, August 2013
Letters to the Editor
Toward Rational Use of Benzodiazepines in
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
To the Editor: A recent study in the Journal by Lund et al
1
has
provided important data: benzodiazepines are still prescribed to
30.6% of an American veteran posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
population, although from 1999 to 2009 there was a 17% decline.
In a comment,
2
Capehart encourages this trend, assuming that
this decline may reflect greater use of evidence-based therapies.
Indeed, expert consensus guidelines
3,4
recommend against the
use of benzodiazepines in PTSD, even though there is only 1
randomized controlled trial (RCT) that did not find a significant
advantage of benzodiazepines over placebo.
5
Furthermore, PTSD
is highly comorbid with substance disorders and therefore prone
to detrimental addiction effects,
6–8
and benzodiazepine-induced
anterograde amnesia has been proposed to interfere negatively with
exposure-based psychotherapies.
9
Substantial ambivalence exists
regarding the proper use of benzodiazepines in PTSD, as illustrated
by a prescription frequency variation of 14.7%–56.8% among 137
facilities in the United States.
10
Moreover, the preponderance of
clinical research on selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) in
PTSD has made some wonder why benzodiazepines are prescribed
at all.
2
Still, preclinical evidence has offered promising potential. In
particular, data from studies on the reconsolidation phase of memory,
which is activated by reexposure to conditioned stimuli, show that
specific traumatic memory is fragile and prone to disruption,
11
as
demonstrated with propranolol in humans.
12,13
The animal research
finding that midazolam is capable of obliterating long-term fear is
promising for the use of benzodiazepines in PTSD.
14
Rodent studies
have repeatedly shown that the immediately reduced contextual
fear responding produced by systemic midazolam does not recover
over time following reexposure.
14–17
This effect seems to depend
on the age of the memory; a longer interval between the initial
acquisition of fear memories and their reactivation may require
longer reactivation periods and higher doses to weaken them.
17
The effects of benzodiazepines on blockade of traumatic memory
reconsolidation therefore deserve further attention.
In fact, new pharmacologic strategies are requisite as current
PTSD therapies remain unsatisfactory. One needs to bear in mind
that the magnitude of the effects of SSRIs is limited and remission
is rarely achieved.
4,18
Furthermore, the latest Cochrane Review
19
concludes that there is no clear evidence to show that any particular
class of medication is more effective in PTSD or better tolerated than
any other. The bulk of trials showing efficacy to date have been with
SSRIs, but there is a paucity of literature on benzodiazepines. The
1990 RCT by Braun et al
5
is extensively cited in psychiatric literature
to demonstrate the notion that benzodiazepines are ineffective in
PTSD, but has very low power (N = 10), confounding withdrawal
effects, and it included only treatment-refractory, chronic PTSD
patients who were unresponsive to several antidepressants. To
date, there is no evidence on the effects of benzodiazepines on
reconsolidation of traumatic memory in PTSD.
Lund and colleagues
1
accurately mention that simply advocating
against current benzodiazepine use in PTSD, without providing
alternative strategies, is not an option. Future research is warranted;
finding the optimal memory reactivation length may become
a great clinical challenge of trial-and-error, as benzodiazepine
administration may time-dependently both inhibit and promote
forgetting in PTSD.
REFERENCES
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veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder. J Clin Psychiatry.
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good news and why we’re not done yet. J Clin Psychiatry. 2012;73(3):307–309. doi:10.4088/JCP.11com07079 PubMed
3. Veterans Health Administration, Department of Defense. VA/DoD Clinical
Practice Guideline for the Management of Post-Traumatic Stress. Version 2.0.
Washington, DC: Veterans Health Administration, Department of Defense;
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conditioned fear. Behav Neurosci. 2008;122(6):1295–1305. doi:10.1037/a0013273 PubMed
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Serge A. Steenen, MSc
Roos van Westrhenen, MD, PhD
Miranda Olff, PhD
m.olff@amc.uva.nl
Author afliations: Department of Psychiatry, Academic Medical Center, University
of Amsterdam (Mr Steenen and Dr Olf ); and Department of Psychiatry, VU University
Medical Center, VU University Amsterdam (Dr van Westrhenen), Amsterdam, the
Netherlands.
Potential conficts of interest: None reported.
Funding/support: None reported.
J Clin Psychiatry 2013;74(8):852 (doi:10.4088/JCP.13lr08383).
© Copyright 2013 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.