Division of Psychiatry, University College London, London, UK; North East London Foundation NHS Trust, London, UK.
Nuffield Trust, London, UK.
Lancet Psychiatry. 2023 Nov;10(11):848-859. doi: 10.1016/S2215-0366(23)00258-4. Epub 2023 Sep 28.
Maintenance antipsychotic medication is recommended for people with schizophrenia or recurrent psychosis, but the adverse effects are burdensome, and evidence on long-term outcomes is sparse. We aimed to assess the benefits and harms of a gradual process of antipsychotic reduction compared with maintenance treatment. Our hypothesis was that antipsychotic reduction would improve social functioning with a short-term increase in relapse.
RADAR was an open, parallel-group, randomised trial done in 19 National Health Service Trusts in England. Participants were aged 18 years and older, had a diagnosis of recurrent, non-affective psychotic disorder, and were prescribed an antipsychotic. Exclusion criteria included people who had a mental health crisis or hospital admission in the past month, were considered to pose a serious risk to themselves or others by a treating clinician, or were mandated to take antipsychotic medication under the Mental Health Act. Through an independent, internet-based system, participants were randomly assigned (1:1) to gradual, flexible antipsychotic reduction, overseen by treating clinicians, or to maintenance. Participants and clinicians were aware of treatment allocations, but assessors were masked to them. Follow-up was for 2 years. Social functioning, assessed by the Social Functioning Scale, was the primary outcome. The principal secondary outcome was severe relapse, defined as requiring admission to hospital. Analysis was done blind to group identity using intention-to-treat data. The trial is completed and has been registered with ISRCTN registry (ISRCTN90298520) and with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03559426).
4157 people were screened, of whom 253 were randomly allocated, including 168 (66%) men, 82 (32%) women, and 3 (1%) transgender people, with a mean age of 46 years (SD 12, range 22-79). 171 (67%) participants were White, 52 (21%) were Black, 16 (6%) were Asian, and 12 (5%) were of other ethnicity. The median dose reduction at any point during the trial was 67% in the reduction group and zero in the maintenance group; at 24 months it was 33% versus zero. At the 24-month follow-up, we assessed 90 of 126 people assigned to the antipsychotic dose reduction group and 94 of 127 assigned to the maintenance group, finding no difference in the Social Functioning Scale (β 0·19, 95% CI -1·94 to 2·33; p=0·86). There were 93 serious adverse events in the reduction group affecting 49 individuals, mainly comprising admission for a mental health relapse, and 64 in the maintenance group, relating to 29 individuals.
At 2-year follow-up, a gradual, supported process of antipsychotic dose reduction had no effect on social functioning. Our data can help to inform decisions about the use of long-term antipsychotic medication.
National Institute for Health Research.
对于患有精神分裂症或反复发作性精神病的患者,建议维持抗精神病药物治疗,但这种治疗的不良反应较多,且长期疗效的证据有限。我们旨在评估与维持治疗相比,逐渐减少抗精神病药物剂量的益处和危害。我们的假设是,减少抗精神病药物剂量会改善社会功能,但会在短期内增加复发的风险。
RADAR 是一项在英格兰 19 个国民保健署信托基金中进行的开放性、平行组、随机试验。参与者年龄在 18 岁及以上,被诊断为反复发作的非情感性精神障碍,并正在服用抗精神病药物。排除标准包括过去一个月内有精神健康危机或住院、被治疗临床医生认为对自己或他人构成严重威胁,或根据《精神卫生法》被强制服用抗精神病药物的人。通过一个独立的、基于互联网的系统,参与者被随机(1:1)分配到逐渐、灵活地减少抗精神病药物剂量的组,由治疗临床医生监督,或维持治疗。参与者和临床医生知道治疗分配情况,但评估者对此不知情。随访时间为 2 年。社会功能由社会功能量表评估,这是主要结局。主要次要结局是严重复发,定义为需要住院治疗。使用意向治疗数据进行盲法分析。该试验已经完成,并已在 ISRCTN 注册中心(ISRCTN86135126)和 ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03559426)注册。
共筛选了 4157 人,其中 253 人被随机分配,包括 168 名(66%)男性、82 名(32%)女性和 3 名(1%)跨性别者,平均年龄为 46 岁(SD 12,范围 22-79)。171 名(67%)参与者为白人,52 名(21%)为黑人,16 名(6%)为亚洲人,12 名(5%)为其他种族。在试验期间的任何时候,剂量减少组的中位数剂量减少为 67%,维持治疗组为 0;24 个月时,剂量减少组为 33%,维持治疗组为 0。在 24 个月的随访中,我们评估了随机分配到抗精神病药物剂量减少组的 126 人中的 90 人和随机分配到维持治疗组的 127 人中的 94 人,发现社会功能量表没有差异(β 0.19,95%CI-1.94 至 2.33;p=0.86)。剂量减少组有 93 例严重不良事件影响 49 人,主要为精神健康复发住院,维持治疗组有 64 例,涉及 29 人。
在 2 年的随访中,逐渐减少抗精神病药物剂量的支持性过程对社会功能没有影响。我们的数据可以帮助人们做出关于长期使用抗精神病药物的决策。
英国国家卫生研究院。