| Literature DB >> 23983935 |
Cynthia A Bossie1, Dong-Jing Fu, Jennifer Kern Sliwa, Yi-Wen Ma, Larry Alphs.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine the tolerability of the recommended initiation doses for once-monthly injectable paliperidone palmitate in patients who have recently been diagnosed with schizophrenia and for whom high doses may pose tolerability concerns.Entities:
Keywords: paliperidone palmitate; recent diagnosis; schizophrenia; tolerability; treatment
Year: 2011 PMID: 23983935 PMCID: PMC3736921 DOI: 10.1177/2045125311413006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Adv Psychopharmacol ISSN: 2045-1253
Corresponding dose expression equivalents of paliperidone and paliperidone palmitate.
| Paliperidone (active fraction) (mg eq) | Paliperidone palmitate (mg) |
|---|---|
| 150 | 234 |
| 100 | 156 |
| 75 | 117 |
| 50 | 78 |
| 25 | 39 |
Figure 1.Subject randomization and completion in intent-to-treat (ITT) study populations: overall population and recently diagnosed subgroup. In the recently diagnosed subgroup, discontinuation rates due to adverse events were 10.3% (4 of 39) with paliperidone palmitate 150/100 mg eq and 2.7% (1 of 37) with placebo. Corresponding rates in the overall study population were 6.2% (10 of 161) and 6.9% (11 of 160) respectively.
Baseline demographics of the recently diagnosed (≤5 years since diagnosis) subgroup and overall study population.
| Parameter | Recently diagnosed subgroup, ITT n = 146 | Overall study population, ITT n = 636 |
|---|---|---|
| Male | 100 (68) | 427 (67) |
| Female | 46 (32) | 209 (33) |
| Mean (SD) | 31.2 (9.6) | 39.4 (10.6) |
| Mean age at diagnosis (SD) | 28.3 (9.7) | 25.4 (8.2) |
| Caucasian | 95 (65) | 343 (54) |
| Black | 30 (21) | 192 (30) |
| Asian | 21 (14) | 92 (14) |
| Other | 0 (0) | 9 (1) |
| Paranoid | 127 (87) | 558 (88) |
| Disorganized | 1 (<1) | 17 (3) |
| Catatonic | 2 (1) | 2 (<1) |
| Undifferentiated | 14 (10) | 54 (8) |
| Residual | 2 (1) | 5 (1) |
| 87.3 (10.5) | 87.1 (11.2) | |
| Mild | 1 (<1) | 16 (3) |
| Moderate | 82 (56) | 307 (48) |
| Marked | 56 (38) | 275 (43) |
| Severe | 7 (5) | 37 (6) |
CGI-S, Clinical Global Impressions – Severity; ITT, intent to treat; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; SD, standard deviation.
Figure 2.Days 1–7: adverse events in ≥2% of patients receiving paliperidone palmitate and in a higher percentage of patients receiving paliperidone palmitate than placebo. Events that met these criteria during the week following the first injection in the recently diagnosed subgroup were injection site pain, agitation, and headache; relative risks were not statistically significant as determined by the 95% confidence intervals. The same events met these criteria in the overall study population.
Figure 3.Days 8–36: adverse events in ≥5% of patients receiving paliperidone palmitate and in a higher percentage of patients receiving paliperidone palmitate than placebo. In the recently diagnosed subgroup, anxiety met the criteria during the first month following the second injection; the relative risk was not statistically significant as determined by the 95% confidence interval. No events met these criteria in the overall study population.
Figure 4.Movement disorder-related adverse events over entire study. Parkinsonism was the most common movement disorder-related event during the entire study period in the recently diagnosed subgroup given paliperidone palmitate, with hyperkinesia being the most common movement disorder-related event in those given placebo. As with other events, the relative risks were not statistically significant as determined by the 95% confidence intervals.
Figure 5.Prolactin-related adverse events over entire study. One male patient with recently diagnosed schizophrenia treated with placebo reported ejaculation disorder during the entire study period. In the overall study population, there was one additional report of a female patient treated with paliperidone palmitate who reported a loss of libido.
PANSS, CGI-S, and PSP mean baseline, mean changes from baseline to endpoint and effect sizes: paliperidone palmitate versus placebo (95% confidence interval, p-value).
| Parameter | Recently diagnosed subgroup | Overall study population | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paliperidone palmitate 150/100 mg eq (234/156 mg) (n = 39) | Placebo (n = 37) | Paliperidone palmitate 150/100 mg eq (234/156 mg) (n = 161) | Placebo (n = 160) | |
| Baseline, mean (SD) | 88.1 (10.89) | 85.2 (10.39) | 86.2 (10.77) | 86.8 (10.31) |
| Change from baseline at endpoint, mean (SD) | –16.5 (20.43) | –2.2 (20.91) | –11.6 (17.63) | –2.9 (19.26) |
| Effect size at endpoint | –0.7 (–1.16, –0.23) | –0.5 (–0.69, –0.25) | ||
| Baseline, mean (SD) | 4.4 (0.60) | 4.4 (0.65) | 4.4 (0.63) | 4.6 (0.63) |
| Change from baseline at endpoint, mean (SD) | –0.8 (1.21) | –0.3 (1.29) | –0.6 (1.13) | –0.3 (1.13) |
| Effect size at endpoint | –0.4 (–0.88, 0.03) | –0.3 (–0.48, –0.04) | ||
| Baseline, mean (SD) | 49.9 (12.40) | 51.4 (11.84) | 50.2 (12.78) | 49.7 (12.33) |
| Change from baseline at endpoint, mean (SD) | 9.2 (13.68) | 2.9 (17.46) | 6.1 (13.59) | 1.7 (15.60) |
| Effect size at endpoint | 0.4 (–0.05, 0.86) | 0.3 (0.08, 0.52) | ||
Effect size at endpoint was for paliperidone palmitate versus placebo. The type of effect size is Cohen’s d; p-value is from two-sided Z test. CGI-S, Clinical Global Impressions – Severity; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; PSP, Personal and Social Performance; SD, standard deviation.