Sajatovic M, Ramirez L F, Vernon L, Brescan D, Simon M, Jurjus G
Cleveland Veterans Administration Medical Center, USA.
Int J Psychiatry Med. 1996;26(3):309-17. doi: 10.2190/NY2L-6YF4-B1DA-W6DX.
This report reviews the efficacy and tolerability of risperidone therapy in elderly patients with chronic psychosis.
A computer search was conducted for all patients who were sixty-five years or older at the time of risperidone therapy at the Cleveland VAMC. Data collected included psychiatric diagnosis, risperidone dosage/side effects, concurrent medications, comorbid medical diagnosis, and response to treatment. Treatment response was quantified on a graduated scale.
Twenty-six patients age sixty-five or older were included in this sample. Mean age of the group was 70.4 years. Mean risperidone dosage was 3.8 mg/day for a mean duration of 251 days. Eighteen of twenty-six patients (69%) had schizophrenia, two of twenty-six (8%) had schizoaffective disorder, two of twenty-six (8%) had bipolar disorder, and four of twenty-six (15%) had other psychotic disorders. Patients had a mean of 2.4 medical diagnoses in addition to their primary psychiatric diagnosis. Twenty-two of twenty-six patients (85%) had clinical improvement on risperidone, and twenty of twenty-six (77%) had improvement that was either marked or moderate. Risperidone therapy was very well tolerated in this elderly population with nineteen of twenty-six patients (73%) remaining on risperidone therapy at completion of this study. Medical illness did not appear to be worsened or complicated by risperidone therapy.
Risperidone appears to be an effective and well tolerated antipsychotic for elderly patients with chronic psychosis.