Sajatovic Martha, Tatsuoka Curtis, Dines Philipp, Bialko Christopher S, Athey Melanie, Williams Tiffany, Cassidy Kristin A
Department of Psychiatry, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, USA ; Department of Neurology, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, USA.
Department of Neurology, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, USA.
Patient Prefer Adherence. 2014 Apr 17;8:487-91. doi: 10.2147/PPA.S56790. eCollection 2014.
Psychotropic-related weight gain is a common concern among patients with bipolar disorder (BD). This concern affects satisfaction with treatment and may lead to non-adherence and relapse. This was a 12-week, uncontrolled prospective trial of patient-choice-facilitated ziprasidone switching among non-adherent BD patients with weight concerns. This study was conducted from January 2011 to July 2012.
Patients were asked to identify the "offending" BD medication which they believed was causing weight problems, and this agent was replaced with ziprasidone. The primary outcome was change in adherence as measured with the Tablets Routine Questionnaire (TRQ). Secondary outcomes included medication attitudes, BD symptoms, global psychopathology, social functioning, and quality of life.
The most common agents causing weight concerns were quetiapine (N=7, 23%), aripiprazole (N=4, 13%), olanzapine, lithium, and divalproex (all N=3, 10%). Adherence improved from a baseline of missing 48.6% of prescribed BD medication in the past week (44.9% in the past month) to missing 25.3% (P=0.002) of prescribed BD medication in the past week (P<0.001, in the past month) at endpoint. Medication attitudes, symptoms, functioning, and quality of life improved but there were no differences in body weight.
While findings must be tempered by methodological limitations such as small sample and uncontrolled design, patient-facilitated medication-switching appeared to improve adherence and BD outcomes in these non-adherent individuals. Additional studies involving patient-facilitated medication-switching and shared decision-making in BD are needed.
与精神药物相关的体重增加是双相情感障碍(BD)患者普遍关注的问题。这种担忧会影响对治疗的满意度,并可能导致不依从和病情复发。这是一项为期12周的非对照前瞻性试验,针对有体重问题的不依从BD患者,由患者自主选择换用齐拉西酮。该研究于2011年1月至2012年7月进行。
要求患者找出他们认为导致体重问题的“致病”BD药物,并用齐拉西酮替代该药物。主要结局是用片剂常规问卷(TRQ)测量的依从性变化。次要结局包括用药态度、BD症状、整体精神病理学、社会功能和生活质量。
最常导致体重问题的药物是喹硫平(N = 7,23%)、阿立哌唑(N = 4,13%)、奥氮平、锂盐和丙戊酸盐(均为N = 3,10%)。依从性从基线时过去一周漏服48.6%的BD处方药物(过去一个月为44.9%)改善到终点时过去一周漏服25.3%(P = 0.002)的BD处方药物(过去一个月P < 0.001)。用药态度、症状、功能和生活质量有所改善,但体重没有差异。
尽管研究结果因样本量小和非对照设计等方法学局限性而受到影响,但患者自主选择的药物转换似乎改善了这些不依从个体的依从性和BD结局。需要开展更多涉及患者自主选择药物转换和双相情感障碍共同决策的研究。