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Management of antipsychotic treatment discontinuation and interruptions using model-based simulations

BACKGROUND: Medication nonadherence is a well described and prevalent clinical occurrence in schizophrenia. These pharmacokinetic model-based simulations analyze predicted antipsychotic plasma concentrations in nonadherence and treatment interruption scenarios and with treatment reinitiation. METHOD...

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Autores principales: Samtani, Mahesh N, Sheehan, John J, Fu, Dong-Jing, Remmerie, Bart, Sliwa, Jennifer Kern, Alphs, Larry
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3413023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22888277
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CPAA.S32735
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author Samtani, Mahesh N
Sheehan, John J
Fu, Dong-Jing
Remmerie, Bart
Sliwa, Jennifer Kern
Alphs, Larry
author_facet Samtani, Mahesh N
Sheehan, John J
Fu, Dong-Jing
Remmerie, Bart
Sliwa, Jennifer Kern
Alphs, Larry
author_sort Samtani, Mahesh N
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Medication nonadherence is a well described and prevalent clinical occurrence in schizophrenia. These pharmacokinetic model-based simulations analyze predicted antipsychotic plasma concentrations in nonadherence and treatment interruption scenarios and with treatment reinitiation. METHODS: Starting from steady state, pharmacokinetic model-based simulations of active moiety plasma concentrations of oral, immediate-release risperidone 3 mg/day, risperidone long-acting injection 37.5 mg/14 days, oral paliperidone extended-release 6 mg/day, and paliperidone palmitate 117 mg (75 mg equivalents)/28 days were assessed under three treatment discontinuation/interruption scenarios, ie, complete discontinuation, one week of interruption, and four weeks of interruption. In the treatment interruption scenarios, pharmacokinetic simulations were performed using medication-specific reinitiation strategies. RESULTS: Following complete treatment discontinuation, plasma concentrations persisted longest with paliperidone palmitate, followed by risperidone long-acting injection, while oral formulations exhibited the most rapid decrease. One week of oral paliperidone or risperidone interruption resulted in near complete elimination from the systemic circulation within that timeframe, reflecting the rapid elimination rate of the active moiety. After 1 and 4 weeks of interruption, minimum plasma concentrations were higher with paliperidone palmitate than risperidone long-acting injection over the simulated period. Four weeks of treatment interruption followed by reinitiation resulted in plasma levels returning to predicted therapeutic levels within 1 week. CONCLUSION: Due to the long half-life of paliperidone palmitate (25–49 days), putative therapeutic plasma concentrations persisted longest in simulated cases of complete discontinuation or treatment interruption. These simulations may help clinicians better conceptualize the impact of antipsychotic nonadherence on plasma concentrations, and the impact of medication-specific reinitiation strategies after intermittent nonadherence.
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spelling pubmed-34130232012-08-10 Management of antipsychotic treatment discontinuation and interruptions using model-based simulations Samtani, Mahesh N Sheehan, John J Fu, Dong-Jing Remmerie, Bart Sliwa, Jennifer Kern Alphs, Larry Clin Pharmacol Original Research BACKGROUND: Medication nonadherence is a well described and prevalent clinical occurrence in schizophrenia. These pharmacokinetic model-based simulations analyze predicted antipsychotic plasma concentrations in nonadherence and treatment interruption scenarios and with treatment reinitiation. METHODS: Starting from steady state, pharmacokinetic model-based simulations of active moiety plasma concentrations of oral, immediate-release risperidone 3 mg/day, risperidone long-acting injection 37.5 mg/14 days, oral paliperidone extended-release 6 mg/day, and paliperidone palmitate 117 mg (75 mg equivalents)/28 days were assessed under three treatment discontinuation/interruption scenarios, ie, complete discontinuation, one week of interruption, and four weeks of interruption. In the treatment interruption scenarios, pharmacokinetic simulations were performed using medication-specific reinitiation strategies. RESULTS: Following complete treatment discontinuation, plasma concentrations persisted longest with paliperidone palmitate, followed by risperidone long-acting injection, while oral formulations exhibited the most rapid decrease. One week of oral paliperidone or risperidone interruption resulted in near complete elimination from the systemic circulation within that timeframe, reflecting the rapid elimination rate of the active moiety. After 1 and 4 weeks of interruption, minimum plasma concentrations were higher with paliperidone palmitate than risperidone long-acting injection over the simulated period. Four weeks of treatment interruption followed by reinitiation resulted in plasma levels returning to predicted therapeutic levels within 1 week. CONCLUSION: Due to the long half-life of paliperidone palmitate (25–49 days), putative therapeutic plasma concentrations persisted longest in simulated cases of complete discontinuation or treatment interruption. These simulations may help clinicians better conceptualize the impact of antipsychotic nonadherence on plasma concentrations, and the impact of medication-specific reinitiation strategies after intermittent nonadherence. Dove Medical Press 2012-07-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3413023/ /pubmed/22888277 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CPAA.S32735 Text en © 2012 Samtani et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd. This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Samtani, Mahesh N
Sheehan, John J
Fu, Dong-Jing
Remmerie, Bart
Sliwa, Jennifer Kern
Alphs, Larry
Management of antipsychotic treatment discontinuation and interruptions using model-based simulations
title Management of antipsychotic treatment discontinuation and interruptions using model-based simulations
title_full Management of antipsychotic treatment discontinuation and interruptions using model-based simulations
title_fullStr Management of antipsychotic treatment discontinuation and interruptions using model-based simulations
title_full_unstemmed Management of antipsychotic treatment discontinuation and interruptions using model-based simulations
title_short Management of antipsychotic treatment discontinuation and interruptions using model-based simulations
title_sort management of antipsychotic treatment discontinuation and interruptions using model-based simulations
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3413023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22888277
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CPAA.S32735
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