| Literature DB >> 21559324 |
Alexander C Tsai1, Nicholas Z Rosenlicht, Jon N Jureidini, Peter I Parry, Glen I Spielmans, David Healy.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Aripiprazole, a second-generation antipsychotic medication, has been increasingly used in the maintenance treatment of bipolar disorder and received approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for this indication in 2005. Given its widespread use, we sought to critically review the evidence supporting the use of aripiprazole in the maintenance treatment of bipolar disorder and examine how that evidence has been disseminated in the scientific literature. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21559324 PMCID: PMC3086871 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1000434
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Figure 1Publications identified for review.
These publications were identified using a systematic search of PubMed and Scopus, as well as a manual search of the supplemental new drug application submitted to the FDA to obtain an additional indication for the use of aripiprazole in the maintenance treatment of bipolar disorder.
Figure 2Clinical trials identified for review.
These clinical trials were identified using a systematic search of ClinicalTrials.gov, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, the World Health Organization (WHO) International Clinical Trials Registry, and the Bristol-Myers Squibb Clinical Trials Disclosure Web site, as well as a manual search of the supplemental new drug application submitted to the FDA to obtain an additional indication for the use of aripiprazole in the maintenance treatment of bipolar disorder. The “duplicates” were each matched to published studies (see Figure 1).
Figure 3Keck study participant flow.
Participants had to complete the 6- to 18-wk stabilization phase before they were eligible for randomization. After completion of the 26-wk double-blind phase, participants were invited to continue in the 74-wk extension phase.
Figure 4Publications citing the Keck study.
These publications were identified using Web of Science(R) Science Citation Index Expanded. Those that discussed the Keck study in relation to the maintenance treatment of bipolar disorder were evaluated on three quality indicators, as shown.
Treatment guidelines and reviews of aripiprazole for the treatment of bipolar disorder.
| Author, Year, Country | Financial Disclosure Related to Bristol-Myers Squibb | Methods | Quality Indicators | Narrative Recommendation | ||
| A | B | C | ||||
| Goodwin, 2009, Great Britain | Yes | Consensus panel | No | No | No | “Aripiprazole was more effective than placebo
after acute and continuation treatment of mania with
aripiprazole: no effect on depression was discernable. Acute
withdrawal of the active agent did not produce an excess of
early relapse in this study.” |
| Yatham, 2009, Canada | Yes | Consensus panel | No | No | No | “Given that efficacy was shown primarily for
mania, aripiprazole is included as a first-line maintenance
treatment for bipolar disorder for the treatment and prevention
of mania.” |
| Suppes, 2005, United States | Yes | Consensus panel | No | No | No | “Aripiprazole is recommended based on a
randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 6-month
maintenance study in which patients received open-label
aripiprazole until stable, then were randomized to either
placebo or aripiprazole for the 6-month follow-up.”
|
| Garcia-Amador, 2006, Spain | Yes | Narrative review | Yes | Yes | No | “These data support the decision by the US
FDA to approve aripiprazole for the maintenance treatment of
bipolar patients, beyond the treatment of acute mania.”
|
| McIntyre, 2007, Canada | Yes | Narrative review | Yes | Yes | No | “Aripiprazole is established as being
efficacious in acute mania and for the prevention of manic
relapse in BD. Aripiprazole efficacy is confirmed on primary and
secondary efficacy parameters.”
|
| Fagiolini, 2008, United States | Yes | Narrative review | Yes | Yes | No | “This 100-week study showed a significantly
longer time to relapse with aripiprazole when compared with
placebo.” |
| McIntyre, 2007, Canada | Yes | Narrative review | Yes | Yes | No | “A single, randomized, double-blind, parallel
group, placebo-controlled study reported on the safety and
efficacy of aripiprazole in preventing relapse of a mood episode
in recently manic or mixed episode patients with bipolar I
disorder.” |
| Ulusahin, 2008, Turkey | None disclosed | Narrative review | Yes | Yes | No | “One double-blind, randomized, placebo
controlled clinical trial of 100-week aripiprazole monotherapy,
which is the longest clinical trial among the trials conducted
in bipolar disorder among the second-generation antipsychotics,
showed that aripiprazole was effective for relapse prevention in
bipolar patients.” |
| Muzina, 2009, United States | Yes | Narrative review | Yes | Yes | No | “The results from a 100-week study of
aripiprazole for the prevention of bipolar I episodes represent
the longest maintenance study since early lithium trials and
support the use of aripiprazole as maintenance treatment,
primarily against manic relapses.”
|
| Fountoulakis, 2009, Greece | Yes | Systematic review | Yes | Yes | Yes | “Recent reviews suggest that aripiprazole is
efficacious in acute mania and in the maintenance treatment of
bipolar disorder, with a favourable safety and tolerability
profile, with minimal propensity for clinically significant
weight gain and metabolic disruption.”
|
| McIntyre, 2010, Canada | Yes | Systematic review | Yes | Yes | Yes | “The available evidence supports the efficacy
and tolerability of aripiprazole in the maintenance treatment of
bipolar disorder.” |
A, reported any quantitative data; B, reported any adverse events; C, reported any study limitations.
BD, bipolar disorder.