Chouinard G, Kopala L, Labelle A, Beauclair L, Johnson S V, Singh K I
Louis-H Lafontaine Hospital, Allan Memorial Institute, Montreal, Quebec.
Can J Psychiatry. 1998 Dec;43(10):1018-25. doi: 10.1177/070674379804301007.
Since most clinical trials of atypical antipsychotics have been conducted in hospitalized patients, a Phase-IV, multicentre, 8-week, open-label, flexible-dose study was performed to assess the efficacy and safety of risperidone in outpatients with schizophrenia.
Three hundred and thirty patients with a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III-R) diagnosis of schizophrenia were enrolled at 61 Canadian sites. Upon trial entry, the patients had their neuroleptic and antiparkinsonian drugs discontinued, and treatment with risperidone was initiated at a dose of 2 mg daily, then increased by 2 mg daily on each of the 2 following days until the initial target dose of 6 mg daily was reached on day 3. No further titration was allowed until day 14, after which the dose could be increased or decreased.
During the stabilization phase (days 14-56), the dose was unchanged in 44% of the patients, increased in 24%, decreased in 23%, and titrated both up and down in 9% of the patients. In the efficacy-evaluable population (n = 292), treatment with risperidone produced substantial (-26.4) and significant (P = 0.0001) improvement in the total Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) score. At the end of the study (week 8), 85% of patients were classified as clinically improved according to an a priori definition (that is, 20% or more decrease from baseline in total PANSS score). On their last study visit, 75% of patients reported their experience with risperidone as better than their previous neuroleptic therapy. Risperidone was generally well tolerated. The adverse events reported by more than 5% of the patients were insomnia, nausea, headache, somnolence, dizziness, fatigue, anxiety, vomiting, and ejaculation disorder. Seventy-four percent of the reported treatment-related adverse events were recorded during the first 2 weeks of the trial, possibly because of the discontinuation of prior neuroleptic and antiparkinsonian drugs followed by immediate upward titration of risperidone. However, only 8.5% of adverse events were reported to have occurred during week 3, and only 0.8% of adverse events were reported for week 8. Risperidone treatment produced significant improvements over baseline in the incidence and severity of extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS). A slight but statistically significant increase in body weight was observed.
The results of this open-label, Phase-IV trial in a large population of outpatients with schizophrenia found that risperidone was superior to the neuroleptics that patients had previously taken in terms of efficacy and severity of EPS. Our results suggest the use of risperidone at lower doses in outpatients with schizophrenia.
由于大多数非典型抗精神病药物的临床试验是在住院患者中进行的,因此开展了一项IV期、多中心、为期8周的开放标签、灵活剂量研究,以评估利培酮在精神分裂症门诊患者中的疗效和安全性。
61个加拿大研究点招募了330名符合《精神障碍诊断与统计手册》(DSM-III-R)精神分裂症诊断标准的患者。试验开始时,停用患者的抗精神病药物和抗帕金森病药物,开始使用利培酮治疗,初始剂量为每日2mg,随后在接下来的2天中每天增加2mg,直至第3天达到每日6mg的初始目标剂量。在第14天之前不允许进一步调整剂量,之后剂量可以增加或减少。
在稳定期(第14 - 56天),44%的患者剂量未变,24%的患者剂量增加,23%的患者剂量减少,9%的患者剂量有增有减。在可评估疗效的人群(n = 292)中,利培酮治疗使阳性和阴性症状量表(PANSS)总分有显著(-26.4)且有统计学意义(P = 0.0001)的改善。在研究结束时(第8周),根据预先定义(即PANSS总分较基线下降20%或更多),85%的患者被归类为临床改善。在最后一次研究访视时,75%的患者报告他们使用利培酮的体验优于之前的抗精神病药物治疗。利培酮总体耐受性良好。超过5%的患者报告的不良事件有失眠、恶心、头痛、嗜睡、头晕、疲劳、焦虑、呕吐和射精障碍。74%的报告的与治疗相关的不良事件记录在试验的前两周,这可能是因为之前停用了抗精神病药物和抗帕金森病药物,随后立即上调利培酮剂量。然而,仅8.5%的不良事件报告发生在第3周,第8周仅报告了0.8%的不良事件。利培酮治疗使锥体外系症状(EPS)的发生率和严重程度较基线有显著改善。观察到体重有轻微但有统计学意义的增加。
这项针对大量精神分裂症门诊患者的开放标签IV期试验结果发现,利培酮在疗效和EPS严重程度方面优于患者之前服用的抗精神病药物。我们的结果表明,精神分裂症门诊患者可使用较低剂量的利培酮。