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Efficacy, safety, and impact on hospitalizations of paliperidone palmitate in recent-onset schizophrenia

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy, safety, and impact on hospitalizations of long-acting injectable paliperidone palmitate (PP) treatment, in patients with recent-onset schizophrenia who had not responded satisfactorily to oral antipsychotics. METHODS: In this 18-month, open-label, Phase-IIIb stud...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Fan, Si, Tianmei, Chiou, Chiun-Fang, Harris, Anthony WF, Kim, Chang Yoon, Jahagirdar, Padmashree, Ascher, Steve
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4362974/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25792835
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/NDT.S77778
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author Zhang, Fan
Si, Tianmei
Chiou, Chiun-Fang
Harris, Anthony WF
Kim, Chang Yoon
Jahagirdar, Padmashree
Ascher, Steve
author_facet Zhang, Fan
Si, Tianmei
Chiou, Chiun-Fang
Harris, Anthony WF
Kim, Chang Yoon
Jahagirdar, Padmashree
Ascher, Steve
author_sort Zhang, Fan
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy, safety, and impact on hospitalizations of long-acting injectable paliperidone palmitate (PP) treatment, in patients with recent-onset schizophrenia who had not responded satisfactorily to oral antipsychotics. METHODS: In this 18-month, open-label, Phase-IIIb study from Asia-Pacific region, patients (18–50 years) with recent-onset (≤5 years) schizophrenia unsatisfactorily treated with previous oral antipsychotics were initiated on PP 150 mg eq on day 1, 100 mg eq on day 8, followed by flexible once monthly maintenance doses of 50–150 mg eq. The number and duration of hospitalizations were compared using a mirror analysis method between two periods: retrospective (12 months before PP initiation) and prospective (12 and 18 months after PP treatment) periods. RESULTS: A total of 303 out of 521 (58%) patients (mean age, 28.7 years; 65.5% men, 92.5% Asian) completed the study. Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) total score improved significantly from baseline to month 18 (mean [standard deviation, SD] change: −11.3 [21.38], P<0.0001, primary endpoint). Subgroup analysis revealed greater improvements among patients with worse disease severity at baseline: PANSS ≥70 versus <70 (mean [SD] change: −23.1 [24.62] vs −4.7 [15.98], P<0.0001 each). Secondary efficacy endpoints such as Clinical Global Impression of Schizophrenia (CGI-SCH), Medication Satisfaction Questionnaire (MSQ) scores showed significant improvements (P<0.0001) from baseline; 33.3% patients achieved symptom remission. In mirror analyses set (N=474), PP significantly (P<0.0001) reduced mean number of hospitalization days/person/year (12-month: 74.3 vs 19.7; 18-month: 74.3 vs 18.9) as well as percentage of patients requiring hospitalization in past 12 months (12-month: 39.7% vs 24.6%; 18-month: 39.7% vs 25%), and PP treatment increased the proportion of patients not requiring hospitalization (12-month: 60.3% vs 75.4%; 18-month: 60.3% vs 75%) from retrospective to prospective period. Adverse events (≥15%) were extrapyramidal symptoms-related (31.3%), injection-site pain (18.6%), and insomnia (15.2%). CONCLUSION: PP was efficacious and generally tolerable with significant reductions observed in both number of hospitalizations and days spent in hospital.
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spelling pubmed-43629742015-03-19 Efficacy, safety, and impact on hospitalizations of paliperidone palmitate in recent-onset schizophrenia Zhang, Fan Si, Tianmei Chiou, Chiun-Fang Harris, Anthony WF Kim, Chang Yoon Jahagirdar, Padmashree Ascher, Steve Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat Original Research OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy, safety, and impact on hospitalizations of long-acting injectable paliperidone palmitate (PP) treatment, in patients with recent-onset schizophrenia who had not responded satisfactorily to oral antipsychotics. METHODS: In this 18-month, open-label, Phase-IIIb study from Asia-Pacific region, patients (18–50 years) with recent-onset (≤5 years) schizophrenia unsatisfactorily treated with previous oral antipsychotics were initiated on PP 150 mg eq on day 1, 100 mg eq on day 8, followed by flexible once monthly maintenance doses of 50–150 mg eq. The number and duration of hospitalizations were compared using a mirror analysis method between two periods: retrospective (12 months before PP initiation) and prospective (12 and 18 months after PP treatment) periods. RESULTS: A total of 303 out of 521 (58%) patients (mean age, 28.7 years; 65.5% men, 92.5% Asian) completed the study. Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) total score improved significantly from baseline to month 18 (mean [standard deviation, SD] change: −11.3 [21.38], P<0.0001, primary endpoint). Subgroup analysis revealed greater improvements among patients with worse disease severity at baseline: PANSS ≥70 versus <70 (mean [SD] change: −23.1 [24.62] vs −4.7 [15.98], P<0.0001 each). Secondary efficacy endpoints such as Clinical Global Impression of Schizophrenia (CGI-SCH), Medication Satisfaction Questionnaire (MSQ) scores showed significant improvements (P<0.0001) from baseline; 33.3% patients achieved symptom remission. In mirror analyses set (N=474), PP significantly (P<0.0001) reduced mean number of hospitalization days/person/year (12-month: 74.3 vs 19.7; 18-month: 74.3 vs 18.9) as well as percentage of patients requiring hospitalization in past 12 months (12-month: 39.7% vs 24.6%; 18-month: 39.7% vs 25%), and PP treatment increased the proportion of patients not requiring hospitalization (12-month: 60.3% vs 75.4%; 18-month: 60.3% vs 75%) from retrospective to prospective period. Adverse events (≥15%) were extrapyramidal symptoms-related (31.3%), injection-site pain (18.6%), and insomnia (15.2%). CONCLUSION: PP was efficacious and generally tolerable with significant reductions observed in both number of hospitalizations and days spent in hospital. Dove Medical Press 2015-03-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4362974/ /pubmed/25792835 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/NDT.S77778 Text en © 2015 Zhang et al. This work is published by Dove Medical Press Limited, and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Original Research
Zhang, Fan
Si, Tianmei
Chiou, Chiun-Fang
Harris, Anthony WF
Kim, Chang Yoon
Jahagirdar, Padmashree
Ascher, Steve
Efficacy, safety, and impact on hospitalizations of paliperidone palmitate in recent-onset schizophrenia
title Efficacy, safety, and impact on hospitalizations of paliperidone palmitate in recent-onset schizophrenia
title_full Efficacy, safety, and impact on hospitalizations of paliperidone palmitate in recent-onset schizophrenia
title_fullStr Efficacy, safety, and impact on hospitalizations of paliperidone palmitate in recent-onset schizophrenia
title_full_unstemmed Efficacy, safety, and impact on hospitalizations of paliperidone palmitate in recent-onset schizophrenia
title_short Efficacy, safety, and impact on hospitalizations of paliperidone palmitate in recent-onset schizophrenia
title_sort efficacy, safety, and impact on hospitalizations of paliperidone palmitate in recent-onset schizophrenia
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4362974/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25792835
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/NDT.S77778
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