| Literature DB >> 25886006 |
Chris J Bushe1, Deborah Falk2, Ernie Anand3, Marta Casillas4, Elena Perrin5, Rashna Chhabra-Khanna6, Holland C Detke7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Olanzapine long-acting injection (LAI) for the treatment of schizophrenia was associated with a cluster of symptoms termed post-injection delirium/sedation syndrome (PDSS) in a small percentage (~2%) of patients during clinical trials. The objective of this analysis was to evaluate the rate and clinical characteristics of PDSS since olanzapine LAI entered commercial use.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25886006 PMCID: PMC4389990 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-015-0450-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Number of cases and rate of PDSS in routine clinical practice
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| Total number of injections | 38,721 | 49,991 | 88,712 | 411,209b | 499,921c |
| Total number of patients | 2131 | 4001 | 6132 | 58,868d | 65,000d |
| Number of PDSS events | 19 (in 18 patients) | 47 (in 45 patients) | 66 (in 63 patients) | 272 (in 270 patients) | 338 |
| Rate of PDSS (% of injections) | 0.05 | 0.09 | 0.07 | 0.07e | N/Af |
| Rate of PDSS (% of patients) | 0.84 | 1.1 | 1.03 | 0.46g | N/Af |
aPost-marketing safety studies and spontaneous reports combined.
bEstimated by excluding the number of vials used in the post-marketing safety studies, and assuming that only 75% of all vials sold are used.
cIncludes estimated number of injections administered outside of the post-marketing safety studies.
dEstimated number of patients receiving an injection outside of the post-marketing safety studies.
eBased on the estimated number of injections administered outside of the post-marketing safety studies.
f Not applicable; actual rates from post-marketing safety studies and estimated rates from spontaneous reports cannot be combined.
gBased on the estimated number of patients receiving an injection outside of the post-marketing safety studies.
PDSS = post-injection delirium/sedation syndrome.
PDSS cases in routine clinical practice according to number of injections and time to onset
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| 1–3 | 43 (83/193) |
| 4–9 | 30 (58/193) |
| 10–20 | 13 (26/193) |
| >20 | 13 (26/193) |
| Unknown | 145/338 |
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| ≤1 hour | 91 (294/323) |
| 1–2 hours | 7 (24/323) |
| 2–3 hours | 1 (4/323) |
| Precise time unknown but within 3-hour observation period | 1/338 |
| Time unknown | 15/338 |
The table shows the percentage of cases of PDSS according to the number of injections received at the time the syndrome occurred, and according to time to onset after injection, in two post-marketing safety studies and spontaneous reports.
aThe number of injections received before PDSS occurred was known for 193 of the 338 cases.
bThe precise time to onset of PDSS was known for 323 of the 338 cases.
PDSS = post-injection delirium/sedation syndrome.
Figure 1Time to onset of PDSS among cases presenting in the first 60 minutes after injection. The figure illustrates the percentage of cases of PDSS in routine clinical practice according to time to onset among 294 cases presenting in the first 60 minutes after injection. PDSS = post-injection delirium/sedation syndrome.
Treatments administered during PDSS events in routine clinical practice
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| No treatment | 19 (47/243) |
| Medication | 31 (75/243) |
| Potentially sedative drug | 19 (45/243) |
| Intravenous fluids | 25 (60/243) |
| Monitoring | 21 (51/243) |
| Oxygen | 5 (13/243) |
| Physical restraint | 4 (9/243) |
| Admission to intensive care unit | 18 (44/243) |
| Ventilation/intubation | 5 (13/243) |
The table shows the treatment requirements for PDSS in the 243 cases where treatment data were available from two post-marketing safety studies and spontaneous reports.
aSome cases involved more than one type of treatment, and are therefore included more than once in the table.
PDSS = post-injection delirium/sedation syndrome.
Figure 2Most frequently reported symptoms of PDSS in routine clinical practice. The figure illustrates the most frequently reported symptoms, expressed as a percentage of the total number of PDSS events (n = 338), in routine clinical practice. PDSS = post-injection delirium/sedation syndrome.
Comparison of characteristics of PDSS in routine clinical practice and formal clinical trials [5-8]
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| Rate of PDSS (% of injections) | 0.07% | 0.07–0.09% |
| Rate of PDSS (% of patients) | 0.46–1.03% | 1.4–2.0% |
| Cases starting within 60 minutes of injection | 91% | 80% |
| Cases requiring hospitalisation | 65% | 77% |
| Cases requiring medication/specific treatment | 31% | 37% |
| Cases showing recovery within 72 hours | 88% | 100% |
| Cases involving delirium-related AEs | 86% | 97% |
| Cases involving sedation-related AEs | 89% | 87% |
| Cases involving delirium & sedation-related AEs | 74% | 83% |
AE = adverse event; PDSS = post-injection delirium/sedation syndrome.