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This is a 12-week, with a 32-week follow-up, rater-blind, randomized controlled trial to determine whether patients with chronic schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder receiving two different antipsychotics simultaneously will have any significant change in psychopathology following conversion to antipsychotic monotherapy. Additionally, the effects of conversion to antipsychotic monotherapy will be assessed by neurocognitive tests.
The study will be conducted at the Clinical Research and Evaluation Facility (CREF), a specialized research unit jointly operated by the Nathan S Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research (NKI) and Rockland Psychiatric Center (RPC). Patients will be recruited from the regular in-patient units of RPC and transferred to the CREF. Following baseline assessments, patients will be randomized to continued antipsychotic polypharmacy treatment or to systematic conversion to monotherapy.
Conversion to antipsychotic monotherapy will be assessed across multiple domains of psychopathology using the Positive and Negative Symptom Scale (PANSS). The primary outcome measure is PANSS total score. The secondary outcome measure is time on medication (all-cause dropouts). Mixed Model Repeated Measures (MMRM) will test the hypothesis that conversion to antipsychotic monotherapy will show minimal change from the control group.
Full description
Background:
Often, treatment resistant schizophrenia patients are treated with high doses of, or polypharmacy with, antipsychotics, or both. There is a lack of systematic evidence for either practice, and this is not recommended by most treatment guidelines. Often polypharmacy results in dosages well above the recommended upper limit of dosage. Recent studies of antipsychotic utilization, have reported that approximately 10-60% of patients are prescribed at least two antipsychotics.
Moreover, antipsychotic treatment carries substantial risks, including the potential development of tardive dyskinesia or metabolic syndrome. Higher doses may expose patients to more adverse events or consequences without any additional therapeutic benefit. Clear benefits of long-term treatment with antipsychotic polypharmacy have rarely been reported, and there is a void of long term double blind, placebo controlled trials.
Antipsychotic polypharmacy remains common, including patients receiving atypical antipsychotics. To our knowledge, no one has published a study of a systematic, randomized controlled conversion to antipsychotic monotherapy for patients with chronic schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder receiving atypical antipsychotic polypharmacy.
Design:
Hospitalized patients with DSM-IV-TR schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder meeting the following criteria: (1) at least two antipsychotics, (2) stable dosages for at least one month prior to baseline, (3) baseline dosages of at least one of the antipsychotics are at least olanzapine 15 mg, ziprasidone 120 mg, quetiapine 500 mg, risperidone 4 mg, aripiprazole 10 mg, paliperidone 6 mg, any dose of clozapine, or any first generation antipsychotic >300 chlorpromazine equivalents.
After a baseline assessment, patients will be randomized to conversion to antipsychotic monotherapy of one of their two antipsychotics or continued on their combination antipsychotic treatment. Other psychotropics will be left unchanged from baseline, and the prescription of a new psychotropic will not be permitted, excepting lorazepam and benztropine as detailed below.
If a patient is randomized to conversion to monotherapy, then the decision of which of the two baseline antipsychotics to continue will occur as follows:
If one is clozapine, then clozapine will be continued.
In all other cases:
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24 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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