| Literature DB >> 20856919 |
Abstract
Paliperidone palmitate is a new long-acting antipsychotic injection for the treatment of acute and maintenance therapy in schizophrenia. Paliperidone (9-hydroxyrisperidone) is the major active metabolite of risperidone and acts at dopamine D(2) and serotonin 5HT(2A) receptors. As with other atypical antipsychotics, it exhibits a high 5HT(2A):D(2) affinity ratio. It also has binding activity as an antagonist at α(1)-and α(2) adrenergic receptors and H(1) histaminergic receptors, but has virtually no affinity for cholinergic receptors. Paliperidone palmitate has been shown to be effective in reducing Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale total scores in four short-term trials in acute schizophrenia. It was also effective as maintenance therapy in a long-term trial in which time to recurrence of symptoms was significantly longer in paliperidone-treated patients compared with placebo. In addition, paliperidone was shown to be noninferior to risperidone long-acting injection in one study, but this noninferiority was not established in another longer study comparing the two drugs. Treatment should be initiated with 234 mg on day 1 and 156 mg on day 8, followed by a recommended monthly maintenance dose of 39-234 mg based on efficacy and tolerability. Paliperidone palmitate is generally well tolerated, although it can cause weight gain and a rise in prolactin levels, which is generally greater in women than in men. Overall, paliperidone palmitate may have advantages over other currently available long-acting injections, and therefore may be a useful alternative for the treatment of schizophrenia, although further long-term trials comparing it with active treatments are warranted.Entities:
Keywords: injection; long-acting; paliperidone palmitate; schizophrenia
Year: 2010 PMID: 20856919 PMCID: PMC2938305 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S8505
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Figure 1Formation of paliperidone from paliperidone palmitate.
Paliperidone palmitate injection dose and administration information13
| Initiation | Dose | Administration route |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | 234 mg | Deltoid muscle only |
| Day 8 (±2 days) | 156 mg | Deltoid muscle only |
| From Day 36 every four weeks (±7 days) | 39–234 mg | Either gluteal or deltoid muscle |
| Oral (mg/day) | Intramuscular (every four weeks) | |
| 2 | 39 mg (25 mg eq) | |
| 4 | 78 mg (50 mg eq) | |
| 6 | 117 mg (75 mg eq) | |
| 9 | 156 mg (100 mg eq) | |
| 12 | 234 mg (150 mg eq) | |
Notes: Although commercially available product dosage strengths of paliperidone palmitate are labeled in milligrams (mg) of paliperidone, all current published poster presentations and clinical trials have doses reported as milligram equivalents (mg eq) of paliperidone.
Abbreviation: mg eq, milligram equivalents.
Pharmacokinetic properties of paliperidone palmitate13–16
| Median time to maximum plasma concentration | 13 days |
| Plasma protein binding (racemic paliperidone) | 74% |
| Mean apparent volume of distribution | 391 L |
| Median apparent half-life (after single-dose administration) | 25–49 days |
| Metabolism | Minimal metabolism occurs in the liver (dose adjustment needed only in severe hepatic impairment) |
| Excretion | Up to 60% excreted unchanged by kidneys (lower doses needed in renal impairment) |
Summary of efficacy studies for paliperidone palmitate
| Authors | Study details | Number of patients (n) | Length | Paliperidone palmitate dose and route | Outcome | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doses | (mg) | route | |||||||
| Kramer et al | RCT, DB, PC | 247 (197 ITT analysis) | 9 weeks | Gluteal | Mean PANSS total (SD) | ||||
| Baseline | Change from baseline | ||||||||
| 50 | 78 | 88.0 (12.39) | −5.2 (21.5) ( | ||||||
| 100 | 156 | 85.2 (11.09) | −7.8 (19.4) ( | ||||||
| Placebo | 87.8 (13.90) | 6.2 (18.3) | |||||||
| Gopal et al | RCT, DB, PC | 388 | 13 weeks | Gluteal | Mean PANSS total (SD) | ||||
| Baseline | Change from baseline | ||||||||
| 50 | 78 | 90 (10.8) | −3.5 (2.67) ( | ||||||
| 100 | 156 | 90 (11.7) | −6.9 (2.65) ( | ||||||
| 150 | 234 | 92 (11.7) | −5.5 (3.61) | ||||||
| Placebo | 92 (12.6) | −4.1 (1.83) | |||||||
| Pandina et al | RCT, DB, PC | 652 | 13 weeks | Deltoid/gluteal | Mean PANSS total (SD) | Estimated effect sizes versus pbo | |||
| Baseline | Change from baseline | ||||||||
| 25 | 39 | 86.9 (11.99) | −8.1 | (0.28) | |||||
| 100 | 156 | 86.2 (10.77) | −11.6 | (0.49) | |||||
| 150 | 234 | 88.4 (11.70) | −13.2 | (0.55) | |||||
| Placebo | 86.8 (10.31) | −2.9 ( | |||||||
| Hough et al | RCT, DB, PC, study to evaluate efficacy in prevention of recurrence of symptoms | 312 included in the interim analysis | 52 weeks | 25 | 39 | Gluteal | Time to relapse in PP patients versus placebo ( | ||
| 5 phases | 50 | 78 | |||||||
| 100 | 156 | ||||||||
| Gopal et al | Long-term, open-label, extension-phase study (see Hough et al | 388 | 52-week extension (median treatment duration 338 days) | Mode doses | OLE Baseline PANSS total score (SD) for total PP group: 58.1 (18.33) | ||||
| 100: 56% | 156 | ||||||||
| 50: 34% | 78 | ||||||||
| 75: 9% | 117 | ||||||||
| 25: 1% | 39 | ||||||||
| Nasrallah et al | RCT, DB, PC, parallelgroup, dose-response study | 518 (514 ITT population) | 13 weeks | Gluteal | Mean PANSS total (SD) | ||||
| Baseline | Change from baseline | ||||||||
| 25 | 39 | 90.7 (12.2) | −13.6 (21.45) ( | ||||||
| 50 | 78 | 91.2 (12.0) | −13.2 (20.14) ( | ||||||
| 100 | 156 | 90.8 (11.7) | −16.1 (20.36) ( | ||||||
| Placebo | 90.7 (12.2) | −7.0 (20.07) | |||||||
| Fleischhacker et al | RCT, parallel-group, noninferiority study of PP compared with RLAI | 749 | 53 weeks | PP: 39, 78, 117 or 156 mg/four weeks (+ oral pbo and IM pbo/two weeks) | Mean (SD) change from baseline to endpoint (LOCF) in PANSS total (60–120 at baseline): | ||||
| Pandina et al | RCT, DB, parallel-group, multicenter comparative study with RLAI | 1220 total | 13 weeks | PP: 78, 156 or 234 mg/four weeks (+ oral pbo and IM pbo/two weeks) | Baseline PANSS total score, mean (SD): | ||||
Notes: Statistically significant;
Commercially available product dosage strengths of paliperidone palmitate are labeled in milligrams (mg) whereas current published poster presentations and clinical trials use doses reported as milligram equivalents (mg eq) to paliperidone.
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; DB, double-blind; ITT, intention to treat; LOCF, last observation carried forward; OLE, open label extension; Pp, paliperidone palmitate; pbo, placebo; PC, placebo-controlled; PANSS, positive and negative symptom scale; pts, patients; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RLAI, risperidone long-acting injection; SD, standard deviation.
Summary of safety studies for paliperidone palmitate
| Authors | Study details | Number of patients (n) | Safety outcomes for paliperidone palmitate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kramer et al | RCT, DB, PC | 247 | Incidence of TEAEs:
Pbo: 64% PP 78 mg: 65% PP 156 mg: 60% Pbo: 10% PP 78 mg: 3%; PP 156 mg: 2% Pbo: 1% PP 78 mg: 5% PP 156 mg: 8% Pbo: 7.0 (1–32); PP 78 mg: 6.5 (1–35); PP 156 mg: 7.0 (2–65) Pbo: 6.0 (2–33); PP 78 mg: 18.0 (6–54); PP 156 mg: 30.0 (9–93) Pbo: 15.0 (4–242); PP 78 mg: 12.0 (3–41); PP 156 mg: 20.0 (2–120) Pbo: 8.0 (3–180); PP 78 mg: 33.5 (11–769); PP 156 mg: 66.5 (9–228) Pbo: −0.3 ± 3.0 PP 78 mg: 0.7 ± 2.7 ( PP 156 mg: 1.4 ± 3.5 ( Pbo: −0.1 ± 1.0 PP 78 mg: 0.3 ± 0.9 ( PP 156 mg: 0.5 ± 1.2 ( |
| Hough et al | Randomized, 25-week, crossover study comparing deltoid and gluteal administration of PP 78, 117, and 156 mg | 252 (ITT: 249) | Overall incidence of TEAEs:
Deltoid-period 1: 64%, period 2: 51% Gluteal-period 1: 63%, period 2: 46% Period 1: 7% deltoid, 10% gluteal Period 2: 2% deltoid, 6% gluteal |
| Gopal et al | RCT, DB, PC | 388 | Incidence of TEAEs:
Pbo group: 76% PP group: 79% Pbo: −0.7 (5.26) 78 mg: 1.0 (5.17) 156 mg: 1.5 (3.79) 234 mg: 0.9 (3.16) Women-[Pbo: −11.21 (28.99); PP 78 mg: 32.04 (24.64); PP 156 mg: 40.17 (48.07); PP 234 mg: 62.33 (29.32)] Men-[Pbo: 1.20 (9.99); PP 78 mg: 7.13 (10.33); PP 156 mg: 15.10 (13.92); PP 234 mg: 15.21 (14.08)] |
| Pandina et al | RCT, DB, PC 13 weeks | 652 | Similar TEAE rates:
Pbo group: 65% PP group: 60–63% Pbo: 5% PP: 39 mg: 6% PP: 156 mg: 8% PP: 234 mg: 13% Women: 4.72–37.24 ng/mL Men: 3.73–13.15 ng/mL |
| Hough et al | RCT, DB, PC | 408 | Abnormal weight increase (≥7%):
PP: 23% versus pbo: 12% from transition baseline to endpoint PP: 6% versus pbo: 3% from DB baseline to endpoint PP: 3% versus pbo: 1% Women-PP: 12.7 (28.64) versus pbo: −16.6 (28.70) Men-PP: 3.7 (15.70) versus pbo: −9.2 (12.36) |
| Gopal et al | Open-label, extension-phase (see Hough et al | 388 | Weight change for total PP group: 0.9 ± 4.26 kg Mean increase in pbo/PP group: 7.16 ng/mL (male); 17 ng/mL (female) Mean changes in PP/PP group: −2.59 ng/mL (male); −3.07 ng/mL (female) |
| Nasrallah et al | RCT, DB, PC | 514 | Discontinuation due to TEAEs:
Pbo: 6%; PP groups: 4% PP 156 mg: +1.3 kg and 0.5 kg/m2 PP 78 mg: +0.8 kg and 0.3 kg/m2 PP 39 mg: +0.4 kg and 0.2 kg/m2 Women-[Pbo: −8.8 (7.36); PP 39 mg: 9.3 (5.49); PP 78 mg: 35.1 (6.70); PP 156 mg: 43.6 (7.73)] Men-[Pbo: −2.1 (1.67); PP 39 mg: 4.0 (2.40); PP 78 mg: 6.8 (2.18); PP 156 mg: 10.4 (2.24)] |
| Coppola et al | One-year, open-label study evaluating long-term safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of PP 234 mg monthly | 212 | A total of 184 pts (87%) experienced ≥1 TEAE. Nasopharyngitis, insomnia, injection-site pain, headache, tachycardia |
| Fleischhacker et al | RCT, 53-week, parallel-group, noninferiority study of PP compared with RLAI | 747 (included in safety analysis) | Rates of TEAEs:
76% in PP + pbo group 79% in RLAI + oral risperidoneRates of TEAEs leading to discontinuation 7% in PP + pbo group 6% in RLAI + oral risperidone group 29% in PP group versus 21% in RLAI group 6% in PP group versus 10% in RLAI group PP group: −0.2 kg (6.01) versus RLAI group: 0.8 kg (5.65) |
| Pandina et al | RCT, DB, parallel-group, noninferiority study with RLAI 13 weeks | 1214 (safety analysis set) | Rate of TEAEs:
PP (57.9%) versus RLAI (52.8%) |
Abbreviations: DB, double-blind; ECG, electrocardiogram; EPS, extrapyramidal symptoms; ITT, intention to treat; PP, paliperidone palmitate; pbo, placebo; PC, placebocontrolled; RC, randomized controlled trial; SD, standard deviation; TEAE, treatment emergent adverse effect.
Adverse effects of paliperidone compared to other antipsychotics
| Drug | QTc prolongation | Hypotension | Sedation | Weight gain | Metabolic syndrome | Extrapyramidal symptoms | Anticholinergic | Prolactin elevation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amisulpride | + | − | − | − | + | + | − | +++ |
| Aripiprazole | − | − | − | +/− | +/− | +/− | − | − |
| Asenapine | + | − | + | − | − | + | − | +/− |
| Chlorpromazine | ++ | +++ | +++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | +++ |
| Clozapine | + | +++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | − | +++ | − |
| Haloperidol | +++ | + | + | + | + | +++ | + | +++ |
| Olanzapine | + | + | ++ | +++ | +++ | +/− | + | + |
| Paliperidone | −/+ | ++ | + | ++ | ++ | + | + | +++ |
| Quetiapine | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | − | + | − |
| Risperidone | + | ++ | + | ++ | ++ | + | + | +++ |
| Sulpiride | + | − | − | + | + | + | − | +++ |
Abbreviations: +++, high incidence/severity; ++, moderate incidence/severity; +, low incidence/severity; −, very low incidence/severity. Adapted from The Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines 10th Edition.30