Abstract
Although the majority of patients with schizophrenia are not actually violent, an increased tendency toward violent behaviors is known to be associated with schizophrenia. There are several factors to consider when identifying the subgroup of patients with schizophrenia who may commit violent or aggressive acts. Comorbidity with substance abuse is the most important clinical indicator of increased aggressive behaviors and crime rates in patients with schizophrenia. Genetic studies have proposed that polymorphisms in the promoter region of the serotonin transporter gene and in the catechol-O-methyltransferase gene are related to aggression. Neuroimaging studies have suggested that fronto-limbic dysfunction may be related to aggression or violence. By identifying specific risk factors, a more efficient treatment plan to prevent violent behavior in schizophrenia will be possible. Management of comorbid substance use disorder may help prevent violent events and overall aggression. Currently, clozapine may be the only effective antipsychotic medication to repress aggressive behavior. With the current medical field moving toward tailored medicine, it is important to identify vulnerable schizophrenia populations and provide efficient treatment.
Keywords: Aggression, Violence, Schizophrenia, Neuroimaging, Antipsychotic agents
INTRODUCTION
The prevalence of major mental disorders is higher in prisoners than in the general population [1–3]. Crime rates, especially for violent offenses, are more highly correlated with psychiatric disorders [4,5]. Moreover, prisoners with mental health issues are more likely to violate prison rules and be involved in prison infractions and violent incidents [6–9].
Individuals with schizophrenia are 4 to 7 times more likely to commit violent crimes, such as assault and homicide [4,5], and 4 to 6 times more likely to exhibit general aggressive behavior, such as verbal and physical threats [10,11], compared with the general population. Despite reports from several large cohort studies indicating an increase in violent behavior in schizophrenia [4,10,12,13], some debate remains on the association between violent behavior and the disorder. One prospective study showed no significant difference in the prevalence of violence between the general population and patients with schizophrenia [14]. Several studies have shown minimal increase in hostile behavior in schizophrenia when comorbidity for substance abuse was considered as a confounding factor [14,15]. The lack of consensus among studies is attributable to the absence of uniform variables such as substance abuse, dysfunctional childhood, and positive symptoms of psychosis. A better understanding of the confounding factors associated with violent behavior and schizophrenia is needed. Thus, if the confounding factor is modifiable, specific treatment guidelines can be drafted to manage modifiable risk in patients with schizophrenia. Furthermore, identifying specific risk factors for violence allows clinicians to diagnose those who may need closer management for early violence prevention. Predicting a patient’s future conduct may cause stigmatization. Thus, structural and objective guidance measures of risk assessment, such as biological markers, are optimal.
Herein, we review the social and biological markers for violence and briefly assess the current management of patients with schizophrenia who exhibit aggressive behavior.
SCHIZOPHRENIA AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Current American Psychiatric Association guidelines indicate that identifying risk factors for violence and assessment of dangerousness should be part of the standard psychiatric evaluation [16]. Currently, there is no established tool to assess the risk factors of aggression in patients with schizophrenia. Previous studies have shown that substance abuse, alcohol abuse, neurological impairment, and social burdens increase risk of aggressive behavior (Table 1) [12,13,15,17–26]. Among the multiple risk factors, comorbid substance abuse and presence of positive symptoms, such as persecutory ideation, have been duplicated in several studies [13,19]. Patients with schizophrenia with comorbid substance abuse not only have more overt aggression, as measured with overt aggression scales, but have higher criminal conviction rates (odd ratio [OR] 2.35–16.1), and having more than one substance abuse exacerbates violent behavior [20].
Table 1.
Reference | Country | Sample | Control | Risk factors | Odds ratio | Outcome (measured) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fazel et al. (2009) [21] | Sweden | 8,003 | General population | Schizophrenia | 1.2 (p < 0.01) | Violent crime (conviction for homicide, assault, robbery, arson, sexual offense, illegal threats, intimidation) |
Comorbid Substance abuse | 4.4 (p < 0.01) | |||||
Swanson et al. (2006) [22] | USA | 1,410 | Non-violent schizophrenia | Substance abuse/dependence | 2.42 | Minor violence (simple assault without injury or weapon use) |
Recent victimization | 2.10 | |||||
Childhood conduct problem | 3.29 (p < 0.001) | Major violence (any assault using a weapon or resulting in injury) | ||||
Positive PANSS score | 2.71 (p < 0.01) | |||||
Substance use/abuse | 2.10 | |||||
Recent non-violent victimization | 2.27 (p < 0.05) | |||||
Wallace et al. (2004) [13] | Australia | 2,681 | Community population | Schizophrenia | 2.5 (p < 0.001) | Criminal convictions due to violent offenses (violence resulting in serious injury and homicide) |
Comorbid substance use | 19.1 (p < 0.001) | |||||
Koen et al. (2004) [23] | South Africa | 70 | Non-violent schizophrenia | Delusions of control | 3.7 | History of physical violence reported by family or by hospital staff |
Use of cannabis/alcohol | 6.89 | |||||
Cantor-Graae et al. (2001) [17] | Sweden | 87 | Schizophrenia without criminal offence | History of substance abuse | 50.0% vs. 11.1% in crime rate (X2 = 15.7) (p < 0.001) | Criminal convictions |
Arseneault et al. (2000) [12] | New Zealand | 39 | Cohort population | Schizophrenia | 2.5 | Court convictions for violence |
Comorbid alcohol dependence | 8.3 | |||||
Comorbid marijuana dependence | 18.4 | |||||
Räsänen et al. (1998) [18] | Finland | 76 | Cohort population | Schizophrenia | 3.6 (p < 0.01) | Violent crime records (homicide, assault, robbery, arson, violation of domestic peace) |
Comorbid alcohol abuse | 25.2 (p < 0.01) | |||||
Cuffel et al. (1994) [20] | USA | 103 | Non-violent schizophrenia | Alcohol or marijuana use | 2.35 | Clinical records of violence (including verbal/nonverbal threats, physical assaults, using a weapon) |
Polysubstance use | 12.56 (p < 0.01) | |||||
Caqueo-Urízar et al. (2016) [24] | Chile, Bolivia, Peru | 253 | OAS < 7 (non-violent) | Mean number of hospitalization in the last 3 years | 1.40 (p < 0.001) | Overt aggression scale |
Fresän et al. (2007) [25] | Mexico | 102 | OAS < 7 (non-violent) | Novelty seeking in TCI scalea | 6.12 (p = 0.001) | Overt aggression scale |
Lack of Cooperativenessb | 11.07 (p < 0.001) | |||||
Wong et al. (1997) [26] | Australia | 39 | Non-repetitive violent offenders with schizophrenia | Childhood conduct problems | 16.7 (p < 0.01) | Previous history of a violent offence (i.e., manslaughter or murder) |
Impulsive suicide attempt | 6.7 (p = 0.02) |
PANSS, positive and negative syndrome scale; OAS, overt aggression scale; TCI, temperament and character inventory.
Novelty seeking measures tendency of impulsiveness and quick loss of temper;
Lack of cooperativeness accounts for self-centered aggression and hostility.
These findings are of great clinical concern because the lifetime prevalence of comorbid substance abuse is nearly 60% in patients with schizophrenia [17,27]. Substance dependence is five times more prevalent in patients with schizophrenia than in the general population. Several hypotheses have attempted to explain the mechanism behind this phenomenon. Most antipsychotic medications block dopamine receptor D2 (D2R) that interfere with dopamine neurotransmission in the whole brain. Patients may resort to drugs of abuse to counteract the cognitive deficits induced by pre-frontal D2R blockage and compensate for the anhedonia induced by D2R blockade in the nucleus accumbens and ventral pallidum [27]. Reduction in dopamine D2 receptor has also been associated with enhanced impulsivity and reinforcement of drug use [21,27]. Overlap in genes between schizophrenia and addiction, including neuregulin 1, catechol-O-methyltransferase, v-akt murine thymoma viral oncogene homolog 1, monoamine oxidase A (MAOA), and neurexin 1 and 3, suggests a genetic vulnerability to the comorbidity. However, Fazel et al. [21] found that patients who had been diagnosed with substance abuse after being diagnosed with schizophrenia posed higher risk (OR 6.4) than those who had been diagnosed with substance abuse prior to being diagnosed with schizophrenia (OR 1.9). Whether a shared genetic susceptibility to substance abuse and schizophrenia increases violent behavior or schizophrenia leads to substance abuse that results in violent behavior is still in question.
The shared genetic susceptibility of substance abuse and schizophrenia suggests the correlation between aggressive behavior and schizophrenia may be due to substance abuse. Impulsivity, aggression, and substance abuse disorders share neurobiological commonalities [30]. Among criminal offenders, individuals with substance abuse have more judicial problems, including higher recidivism and more violent behavior in detention, which may possibly be due to the high impulsivity and aggressiveness found in this population [31]. Future studies should examine the correlation between the overlapping genes of substance abuse and schizophrenia with aggression.
Attributing aggressive behavior solely to schizophrenia may be misguided. Specific risk factors, such as substance abuse, should be targeted in the management of aggressive behavior exhibited by patients with schizophrenia. Treating the comorbid substance abuse may reduce violent behavior in these patients. Furthermore, future studies should be conducted to determine whether there is a clear causative relationship between comorbid substance abuse and violent behavior.
TESTOSERONE LEVEL IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
Numerous studies have shown a positive correlation between testosterone level and aggressive behavior and criminality in the general population and in patients with personality disorder [32–36]. However, no association has been found between criminal behavior and testosterone level in patients with schizophrenia [36]. In fact, one study found that low-normal testosterone level is significantly associated with more severe hostility symptoms in men with schizophrenia [37]. This finding is particularly interesting because several studies have found significantly lower levels of serum testosterone in men with schizophrenia during acute psychotic episodes but generally not during the maintenance phase [38–40]. The above findings suggest an association between acute psychotic episodes and lower testosterone level. However, another study showed no correlation between testosterone level and degree or type of aggression [41].
Many studies have attributed the low levels of testosterone found in patients with schizophrenia to the chronic use of antipsychotics [36]. Antipsychotics increase the risk of diabetes, and diabetes is associated with low testosterone concentrations [42,43]. In the short-term, anti-psychotics, such as haloperidol, suppress serum testosterone [44]. However low testosterone is found in anti-psychotic-naive patients with schizophrenia, suggesting a disease component to reduced testosterone levels [45]. Further study is needed to assess the negative correlation between testosterone and aggression in newly diagnosed schizophrenia to confound for chronic antipsychotic use.
GENETIC MARKERS OF AGGRESSION IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
Genetic background is estimated to account for 50% of human aggression [46]. Numerous studies have investigated the gene responsible for aggression in schizophrenia. The genes responsible for regulating the serotonergic and catecholaminergic systems are considered key genes. Several studies have shown reduction in cerebrospinal fluid levels of serotonin metabolite 5-hydroxyindole-acetic acid in aggressive males with deviant behavior [47–49]. However, genetic studies on serotonin transporter have identified no significant association between aggression and schizophrenia [50,51]. Catechol-O-meth-yltransferase and MAOA genes encoding for enzymes responsible for catabolism of catecholamine have also been explored. Catechol-O-methyltransferase and MAOA knockout mice showed elevated aggression [52]. Studies have shown varied results, partly due to different sample populations and varying measures of aggression (Table 2) [23,50,51,53–70]. The most recent meta-analysis found no association between any polymorphism and aggression and did not provide any evidence supporting the use of genetic markers for risk prediction and management of aggression in schizophrenia patients [71]. However, this analysis cannot be considered conclusive because sample sizes used in the review were small. Moreover, a complex behavior such as aggression is likely to be mediated by complex interaction among many genes, as opposed to what single polymorphism studies have been trying to pinpoint. Future studies examining the genetic association between aggression and schizophrenia using alternative study designs are needed.
Table 2.
Reference | Country | Sample | Control | Outcome (measured) | Gene | Main findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tosato et al. (2011) [54] | Italy | 80 | Non-violent SCZ (OAS < 22, ≤1 aggressive episode) | OAS | Val158Met polymorphism of COMT | Met/Meta homozygous associated with higher aggression than Val/Val |
Number of episodes of aggression (6-year f/u) | ||||||
Kim et al. (2008) [55] | South Korea | 574 (165 SCZ) | Non-violent SCZ | Repeated violence resulting in confinement | No significant association between the aggressive behavior and COMT Val158Met polymorphism | |
Documented serious assault to others | ||||||
Han et al. (2006) [56] | South Korea | 132 | OAS | Met allele associated with increased aggression in SCZ | ||
Park et al. (2002) [57] | South Korea | 103 | Documented assaults (hospital records and official arrest records) | No association between COMT gene and violence in schizophrenia | ||
Liou et al. (2001) [58] | China | 198 | Non-violent SCZ | Physical aggression against others (medical chart review) | No significant difference in allele frequencies btw violent and non-violent SCZ | |
Jones et al. (2001) [53] | UK | 180 | OAS | Val/Val homozygotes associated with higher aggression in SCZ (vs. other genotypes) | ||
Lachman et al. (1998) [59] | USA | 55 | Non-violent SCZ | Documented physical assault to others (hospital records and official arrest records) | Higher frequency of Met/Met homozygous found in violent behavior SCZ | |
Guan et al. (2014) [60] | China | 579 | Non-violent SCZ (300) | Modified OAS | Val66Met polymorphism of BDNF gene | Val66Met polymorphism not associated with aggressive behavior |
Chung et al. (2010) [61] | South Korea | 101 | Non-homicide SCZ | Homicide conviction | Val66Met polymorphism not associated with aggressiveness in SCZ | |
Koh et al. (2011) [62] | South Korea | 232 (99 SCZ) | Healthy Control | Homicide conviction | Val158Met polymorphism of | No difference in distribution of Val158Met polymorphism |
Non-homicide violent SCZ | Non-homicide violent conviction | COMT gene | between criminal SCZ (vs. healthy control) | |||
TPH1 A218C | TPH1-CC recessive associated with homicidal SCZ (vs. A-carrier genotype) | |||||
Gu et al. (2009) [63] | China | 584 | Healthy Control Non-violent SCZ | Documented homicide or malicious injury | COMT gene SNP (rs4680-rs165599-rs737865) | No association between individual SNPs and violent behavior |
Haplotype A-A-G (vs. GGA) | Higher frequency of haplotype A-A-G associated with violent behavior | |||||
Hong et al. (2008) [64] | South Korea | 193 | Non-violent SCZ | Homicide conviction | Val158Met polymorphism of COMT gene | No difference in distribution of Val158Met polymorphism between violent and non-violent SCZ |
Ala72Ser SNP of COMT gene | L allele (low COMT activity) of Ala72Ser more frequent in violent SCZ | |||||
Koen et al. (2004) [23] | South Africa | 70 | Non-violent SCZ | History of violence reported by family or hospital staff | Val158Met polymorphism of COMT MAO A, MAO B polymorphism | COMT or MAO A polymorphism not associated with violence in SCZ |
Zammit et al. (2004) [65] | UK | 346 150 (COMT) | OAS | No association between MAO A, MAO B and COMT polymorphisms and aggressive behavior | ||
Strous et al. (2003) [66] | Israel | 122 | Life history of aggression scale | Met/Met homozygous associated with higher aggression than Val | ||
No association between MAO A and aggression | ||||||
Kim et al. (2009) [67] | South Korea | 103 | Non-violent SCZ | ≥2 violent acts leading to confinement | 5-HTTLPR | No difference in the distribution of genotype/allele between violent and non-violent SCZ-frequency of short allele associated with high angry temperament subscale score in aggressive patients |
Fresan et al. (2007) [68] | Mexico | 71 | Non-violent SCZ (OAS ≥6) | OAS | DRD4 polymorphism (7R allele) | Higher prevalence of 7R variant of DRD4 gene in aggressive SCZ |
MAO-A polymorphism | No association between the MAO-A gene and aggressive behavior | |||||
Han et al. (2004) [51] | South Korea | 168 | OAS | Val158Met polymorphism of COMT | Met homozygote associated with increased aggression in SCZ (especially in aggression against others) | |
5-HTTPR | L(long) allele associated with higher all episode of aggression | |||||
Nolan et al. (2000) [50] | USA | 84 | Non-violent SCZ | History of ≥2 assaults on others | MAO-A polymorphism | 5-HTT or MAO-A polymorphism not associated with violence in SCZ |
5-HTT polymorphism | ||||||
Kotler et al. (1999) [69] | Israel | 92 | Non-violent SCZ | Imprisoned for homicide | Val158Met polymorphism of COMT | Higher frequency of Met/Met found in violent SCZ (vs. non-violent) |
D4DR | No association between violent SCZ with D4DR, | |||||
5-HTTLPR | 5-HTTLPR polymorphism | |||||
Tsai et al. (1999) [70] | Taiwan | 186 | Non-violent SCZ | Physical aggression against others (hospital records) | Allelic variant C267T of 5-HT6 gene | No significant difference in genotype/allele frequencies between SCZ with or without aggressive behaviors |
SCZ, schizophrenia; OAS, overt aggression scale; COMT, catechol-O-methyltransferase; BDNF, brain derived neurotrophic factor; TPH1-CC, tryptophan hydroxylase-1 A218C gene for 5-HT metabolism; MAO, monoamine oxidase; 5-HTTLPR, serotonin transporter-linked polymorphic region; 5-HTT, serotonin transporter; D4DR, dopamine D4 exon III repeat length polymorphism; 5-HT6, serotonin type 6 receptor.
Met is the low activity allele.
NEUROIMAGING FINDINGS REGARDING AGGRESSION AND VIOLENCE IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
Abnormalities in various parts of the brain have been associated with increased aggression with no single brain area acting as a key region. Hoptman and Antonius [72] found that frontal and temporal abnormalities were associated with aggression in schizophrenia. Several other studies have found that different brain regions influence violence in schizophrenia (Table 3) [26,73–86]. Aggression control is multifaceted, and dysfunction in functional connectivity between the amygdala and prefrontal cortex tends to predict higher levels of aggression [73,74]. The most consistent findings from the structural studies were reduced volumes of the hippocampus and the frontal lobe (in particular, the orbitofrontal and anterior cingulate cortex) in patients with schizophrenia with a history of violence or higher aggression scores. These findings suggest that dysfunctions of fronto-limbic regions in schizophrenia can be associated with aggression or violence. However, the neuroimaging findings of aggression and violence were methodologically heterogeneous, with four particular areas of concern: different definitions of violence, region of interest versus whole-brain studies, small subject samples, and group comparisons in a heterogeneous diagnostic category [87].
Table 3.
Reference | Country | Sample | Control | Imaging study | Outcome (measured) | Main findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kumari et al. (2009) [75] | UK | 38 (24 SCZ) | Healthy control Non-violent SCZ | Structural MRI | Record of serious physical fatal or near fatal violence (≥5 in Gunn and Robertson scale) | ↑ Impulsiveness in violent SCZ which correlated negatively with ↓ hippocampal volume (vs. correlated with ↓ OFC grey matter volume in non-violent SCZ and healthy control) |
Puri et al. (2008) [76] | UK | 26 | Non-violent SCZ | History of violent offence (homicide, attempted murder, grave bodily harm) | Bilateral ↓ in cerebellar and supramarginal gyrus-associated cerebral cortical grey matter (vs. non-violent SCZ) | |
Hoptman et al. (2006) [77] | USA | 49 | Total aggression severity score-derived from OAS | ↑ Left caudate volume with higher total aggression score | ||
Rüsch et al. (2008) [78] | Italy | 110 (55 SCZ) | Healthy controls | Modified OAS | Bilaterally ↑ inferior frontal white matter volume associated with suicidality and self-aggression in schizophrenia | |
Hoptman et al. (2005) [79] | USA | 49 | OAS | ↑ Left OFC gray matter volumes associated with aggression ↑ Left than right OFC white matter volumes associated with comorbid substance use disorder |
||
Barkataki et al. (2006) [80] | UK | 43 (30 SCZ) | Healthy Control | History of detainment for violence (e.g., homicide, attempted murder, wounding) | ↓ Whole brain volume (vs. non-violent SCZ and healthy control) | |
Non-violent SCZ | ↓ Hippocampal volume (vs. healthy control) | |||||
Hoptman et al. (2002) [81] | USA | 14 | Axial diffusion tensor MRI | Buss Durkee Hostility Inventory | Inferior frontal white matter microstructure is associated with impulsivity and aggression | |
Life History of Aggression Self-report | ||||||
Kumari et al. (2009) [82] | UK | 53 (26 SCZ) | Healthy control | fMRI (shock threat) | History of serious violence (≥5 in Gunn and Robertson scale) | Exaggerated thalamic-striatal activity to later threat periods (vs. non-violent SCZ and healthy control) |
Non-violent SCZ | ||||||
Dolan et al. (2009) [73] | UK | 24 | Low Psychopathy SCZ | fMRI (facial affect series recognition task) | High psychopathy score (> 18 in PCL:SV) | ↓ BOLD response in right amygdala-prefrontal cue when presented with fearful cue |
Hoptman et al. (2010) [74] | USA | 46 (21 SCZ) | Healthy controls | fMRI (voxelwise FC analysis) | Buss Perry aggression questionnaire | ↓ Functional connectivity between amygdala and prefrontal cortex (vs. healthy control)(lower functional connectivity associated with higher self-reported aggression in SCZ) |
Kumari et al. (2006) [83] | England | 48 (25 SCZ) | Healthy control | fMRI (working memory load task) | History of serious violence according to clinical and criminal records (≥4 in Gunn and Robertson scale) | Bilateral activation deficit in the frontal lobe and precuneus compared to the healthy control Activation deficit in the right inferior parietal region when compared to the NVS |
Non-violent SCZ | ↓ Right inferior parietal region (vs. non-violent SCZ). | |||||
Joyal et al. (2007) [84] | Canada | 48 (36 SCZ) | Healthy control | fMRI (go/no-go task) | Homicide offense | ↓ Activation of orbital, basal regions of PFC (vs. control and non-criminal SCZ) |
Non-criminal SCZ | ↑ Activation in motor, premotor anterior cingulate cortex (vs. non-criminal SCZ) | |||||
Wong et al. (1997) [26] | Australia | 39 | NRVOs with SCZ | MRI, FDG-PET, EEG | Previous history of violent offence (i.e., manslaughter or murder) | Asymmetrical gyral pattern in temporo-parietal region in RVOs (Absent in NRVOs) |
Not associated with hypometabolism in this area in PET | ||||||
EEG abnormality localized to temporal side in RVOs | ||||||
Wong et al. (1997) [85] | Australia | 31 SCZ | NRVOs with SCZ | FDG-PET | Previous history of violent offence (i.e., manslaughter or murder) | ↓ FDG uptake in left anterior-inferior temporal regions (vs. bilateral reduction in NRVOs) |
Spalletta et al. (2001) [86] | Italy | 15 SCZ | Non-violent SCZ | SPECTa | Hospital records of aggression | ↓ Prefrontal rCBF under neuropsychological stress (NOT at resting state) |
SCZ, schizophrenia; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; OAS, overt aggression scale; OFC, orbitofrontal cortex; PCL:SV, psychopathy check list: Screening version; BOLD, blood oxygen level-dependent; NVS, non violent schizophrenia; FDG-PET, fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography; EEG, electroencephalogram; RVOs, repetitive violent offenders; NRVOs, non-repetitive violent offenders; SPECT, single photon emission computed tomography; rCBF, regional cerebral blood flow.
MANAGEMENT OF AGGRESSION IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
Antipsychotic treatment significantly reduces aggression in patients with schizophrenia [88]. However, who should receive treatment and which drugs should be administered are still under debate. Because no specific biomarkers or pharmacogenetic tests are available to guide treatment choice, treatment is still chosen based on broad guidelines and is not personalized.
The overwhelming opinion in the past was that atypical antipsychotics, such as clozapine, risperidone, quetiapine, and ziprasidone, were the most effective drugs in the treatment of patients with aggression and violent behavior [89–91]. However, two large double-blind trials found no advantage to the use of second-generation anti-psychotics in treating chronic schizophrenia, thereby questioning its true effectiveness [53,92]. There is still mixed evidence showing clozapine and olanzapine are more effective than haloperidol; however, the same study shows perphenazine, a first-generation drug, is more effective than haloperidol as well [93]. Another study using data from the Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness project also did not find any advantage to the use of second-generation antipsychotics in violence risk reduction, compared with perphenazine [88]. However, that study did not include treatment response to clozapine, the most effective drug in reducing aggression in patients with schizophrenia [90,94–96].
Although mixed results question the use of atypical antipsychotics as first-line treatment for schizophrenia, clozapine may still be the most effective drug in reducing aggression. The exact mechanism of clozapine’s anti-aggressive effect is not yet understood, but the effect seems to be independent of the sedative and antipsychotic effect of the drug [97]. Moreover, little improvement has been made in antipsychotics since clozapine in the 1950s. Expert consensus guideline [98] has recommended the use of clozapine and risperidone as first-line treatments for chronic aggression. Despite this recommendation, clozapine is rarely used as a first-line treatment because of its hematological side effects. Burdensome full blood count monitoring is required throughout the treatment. Such tedious monitoring may increase the already high non-adherence seen in schizophrenia [99]. When administering clozapine, interventions including medication education, psychoeducation, and motivational interviewing techniques should be utilized to increase compliance [100].
Treatment of substance use disorder may also be helpful in managing aggressive behavior in patients with schizophrenia. Second-generation antipsychotics, such as clozapine and risperidone, have been found to reduce the drive to self-medicate the negative symptoms [101] and not to have the side effects of typical antipsychotics, allowing for better control for substance use. Moreover, low striatal dopamine is associated with neuroleptic-induced dysphoria and with vulnerability to addiction. Choosing an antipsychotic medication that is a weak dopamine D2 blocker will avoid further compromising dopamine striatal functioning, thus reducing the possibility of addictive behavior [102].
CONCLUSION
Identification of risk factors should provide a basis for a management plan and not a means of labeling a patient as pre-delinquent, especially because aggression significantly decreases under treatment [88]. Despite efforts to find biological, genetic markers associated with aggression in schizophrenia, no consistent findings have been established to explain violent and aggressive behavior in schizophrenia. Further study is needed before any discussion on using such markers to predict patient behavior.
Among multiple risk factors, comorbid substance abuse has repeatedly been found to be associated with aggressive behavior. Patients with schizophrenia without comorbid substance abuse have only a slight increased risk of violent crime compared with the general population, suggesting that substance abuse plays a mediating role. Whether aggressive behavior in schizophrenia can solely be attributed to comorbid substance abuse or whether a specific underlying gene results in both the aggression and comorbid substance abuse in schizophrenia requires further study. Nonetheless, treating the comorbid substance abuse is necessary in managing violent behavior in patients with schizophrenia.
With the increasing perception that patients undergoing psychiatric treatment are dangerous, precariously identifying risk factors can exacerbate this notion.
Footnotes
Conflicts of Interest
No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.
Author Contributions
Study design: WonKyung Cho, Won-Suk Shin, Minji Bang, Doo-Yeoun Cho, Sang-Hyuk Lee. Data review, interpretation and manuscript preparation: WonKyung Cho, Won-Suk Shin, Minji Bang, Doo-Yeoun Cho, Sang-Hyuk Lee. Writing—original draft: WonKyung Cho, Won-Suk Shin, Doo-Yeoun Cho, Sang-Hyuk Lee. Writing—review & editing: Iseul An, Doo-Yeoun Cho, Sang-Hyuk Lee. Supervision: Doo-Yeoun Cho, Sang-Hyuk Lee.
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