| Literature DB >> 22536066 |
Haya Ascher-Svanum1, Alan Jm Brnabic, Anthony H Lawson, Bruce J Kinon, Virginia L Stauffer, Peter D Feldman, Katarina Kelin.
Abstract
It is often difficult to determine whether a patient may best benefit by augmenting their current medication or switching them to another. This post-hoc analysis compares patients' clinical and functional profiles at the time their antipsychotic medications were either switched or augmented. Adult outpatients receiving oral antipsychotic treatment for schizophrenia were assessed during a 12-month international observational study. Clinical and functional measures were assessed at the time of first treatment switch/augmentation (0-14 days prior) and compared between Switched and Augmented patient groups. Due to low numbers of patients providing such data, interpretations are based on effect sizes. Data at the time of change were available for 87 patients: 53 Switched and 34 Augmented. Inadequate response was the primary reason for treatment change in both groups, whereas lack of adherence was more prevalent in the Switched group (26.4% vs 8.8%). Changes in clinical severity from study initiation to medication change were similar, as indicated by Clinical Global Impressions-Severity scores. However, physical and mental component scores of the 12-item Short-Form Health Survey improved in the Augmented group, but worsened in the Switched group. These findings suggest that the patient's worsening or lack of meaningful improvement prompts clinicians to switch antipsychotic medications, whereas when patients show some improvement, clinicians may be more likely to try bolstering the improvements through augmentation. Current findings are consistent with physicians' stated reasons for switching versus augmenting antipsychotics in the treatment of schizophrenia. Confirmation of these findings requires further research.Entities:
Keywords: augmentation; drug substitution; polypharmacy; schizophrenia; switching
Year: 2012 PMID: 22536066 PMCID: PMC3333785 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S30268
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Measures at study entry for patients whose antipsychotic medication was Switched (n = 53) or Augmented (n = 34) during the 12-month study period
| Measure | n | Mean (SD) |
|---|---|---|
| CGI-S | ||
| Switched | 53 | 4.10 (1.02) |
| Augmented | 34 | 4.30 (0.99) |
| SF-12 PCS | ||
| Switched | 53 | 46.25 (9.89) |
| Augmented | 34 | 41.95 (9.58) |
| SF-12 MCS | ||
| Switched | 53 | 35.27 (10.17) |
| Augmented | 34 | 37.17 (10.80) |
| EQ-5D utility | ||
| Switched | 51 | 0.68 (0.22) |
| Augmented | 31 | 0.64 (0.29) |
| EQ-5D Health State | ||
| Switched | 53 | 62.15 (21.51) |
| Augmented | 34 | 53.97 (26.24) |
| SUMD-A | ||
| Switched | 47 | 12.81 (4.33) |
| Augmented | 30 | 12.27 (5.10) |
| DAI-10 | ||
| Switched | 51 | 2.82 (4.80) |
| Augmented | 33 | 3.03 (4.48) |
Abbreviations: CGI-S, Clinical Global Impressions-Severity scale; DAI-10, 10-item Drug Attitude Inventory; EQ-5D, 5-dimension European Quality of Life scale; MCS, mental health component score; PCS, physical component score; SF-12, 12-item Short-Form Health Survey; SD, standard deviation; SUMD-A, Scale to Assess Unawareness of Mental Disorder-Abbreviated version.
Figure 1Effect sizes and changes from study entry to time of first switch or augmentation among patients experiencing a switch to (gray bars), or augmentation with (black bars), another oral antipsychotic following study initiation: (A) illness severity, as measured by the CGI-S, (B) functioning and well-being, as measured by the SF-12 physical (left) and mental component score (right), (C) quality of life, as measured by the EQ-5D utility index (left) and health state score (right), and (D) attitude towards medication intake and insight into illness, as measured by the SUMD-A (left) and DAI-10 (right), respectively.
Notes: P = 0.01, difference between mean SF-12 PCS change scores for Switched and Augmented groups. All other measures were not statistically significant.
Abbreviations: CGI-S, Clinical Global Impressions-Severity scale; DAI-10, 10-item Drug Attitude Inventory; EQ-5D, 5-dimension European Quality of Life scale; MCS, mental health component score; ES, effect size for Augmented patient group, relative to Switched patient group, on change scores from study entry to time of first switch/augmentation event; PCS, physical component score; SF-12, 12-item Short-Form Health Survey; SD, standard deviation; SUMD-A, Scale to Assess Unawareness of Mental Disorder-Abbreviated version.