Abstract
BackgroundSchizophrenia and substance use disorders (SUDs) are often comorbid conditions that present clinical challenges due to their heterogeneity and the difficulties associated with poor physical health, low medication adherence, high relapse and hospitalization rates, and increased risk of mortality. This is often exacerbated by a fragmented health care system that treats addiction and mental illness separately, leading to delays in proper diagnosis and treatment.Main textThe aim of this narrative review, based on an extensive literature search and experts’ clinical experience, is to synthesize evidence on the psychopathological and clinical characteristics of patients, the burden and management at the level of healthcare system, and possible gaps in the treatment of schizophrenia with comorbid SUD in order to understand and address the needs of patients. Treatment options, differences between antipsychotic medications, and the benefits of long-acting formulations and partial dopaminergic agonists are described. Partial dopamine agonists (aripiprazole, cariprazine, and brexpiprazole) have demonstrated good control of psychotic symptoms and SUDs with a favorable safety profile.ConclusionPharmacological interventions should be accompanied by psychosocial support within an integrated and multidisciplinary approach that promotes shared decision-making and a good therapeutic alliance between the entire medical team and the patient.
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