| Literature DB >> 26082620 |
Alexandre González-Rodríguez1, Rosa Catalán2, Rafael Penadés2, Clemente Garcia-Rizo3, Miquel Bioque4, Eduard Parellada5, Miquel Bernardo2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Short-term studies focused on once-monthly paliperidone palmitate (PP) at doses of 25 mg eq, 50 mg eq, 75 mg eq, 100 mg eq, or 150 mg eq have shown its efficacy and tolerability in the treatment of schizophrenia patients. However, few open-label and long-term studies are available regarding this new pharmacological formulation. Thus, our main aim was to review the scientific evidence on efficacy, safety, tolerability, and preference of PP in these populations.Entities:
Keywords: efficacy; long-acting antipsychotics; once-monthly paliperidone palmitate; psychosis; relapses; safety; schizophrenia
Year: 2015 PMID: 26082620 PMCID: PMC4459629 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S63948
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Characteristics and study design of the reviewed studies on once-monthly paliperidone palmitate
| Author, year | Topic | Sample (n) | Study design | Aims | Severity of patients | Comparison groups |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hough et al 2009 | Efficacy, safety, tolerability, and preference | 252 | 25-week randomized, multicenter, cross-over trial | To evaluate the safety and tolerability of PP in the injection sites (deltoid – gluteus) | Mild | 1:1:1 |
| Hough et al 2010 | Efficacy, safety, and tolerability | 849 | Two phases 9-week open label | To assess efficacy and tolerability of PP in delaying time-to-relapse | Mild | 1:1 |
| Nasrallah et al 2010 | Efficacy, safety, and tolerability | 514 | 13-week multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, dose–response study | To assess the efficacy and safety of three fixed doses of PP | Mild | 1:1:1:1 |
| Pandina et al 2010 | Efficacy and safety | 652 | 13-week randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled multicenter study | To assess the efficacy and safety of higher doses of PP | Acute patients | 1:1:1:1 |
| Alphs et al 2011 | Efficacy, safety, and tolerability | 312 | Post hoc analysis of a 13-week randomized, double-blind, placebo- controlled, multicenter clinical trial | To assess onset of efficacy and tolerability | Acute (markedly to severely ill) | 1:1:1:1 |
| Bossie et al 2011a | Efficacy and tolerability | 652 | Post hoc analysis of a 13-week randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, clinical trial | To examine the tolerability of the initiation doses for PP and efficacy | Acute, mild | 1:1:1:1 |
| Bossie et al 2011b | Efficacy and tolerability | 652 | 13-week randomized, double- blind, placebo-controlled, clinical trial | To investigate the time of onset of efficacy and tolerability of PP | Mild | 1:1:1:1 |
| Li et al 2011 | Efficacy, safety, and tolerability | 452 | 13-week open-label, rater-blinded, parallel-group, noninferiority study | To evaluate the noninferiority of PP to RLAI | Acute | 1:1 |
| Pandina et al 2011 | Efficacy, safety, and tolerability | 1,220 | 13-week randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, active-controlled, parallel-group multicenter noninferiority comparative study | To assess noninferiority of PP versus RLAI | Acute | 1:1 |
| Coppola et al 2012 | Safety and tolerability | 212 | 1-year open-label, long-term prospective, multiple-dose, multicenter study | To evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of PP 150 mg eq | Mild | Treatment A (fixed doses of PP 150 mg eq) |
| Sliwa et al 2012 | Efficacy and tolerability | 645 | Post hoc analysis from an open- label, double-blind, multiphase trial | To investigate long-term tolerability according to duration of illness | Mild-severe | Recently diagnosed |
| Fleischhacker et al 2012 | Efficacy, safety, and tolerability | 749 | 53-week double-blind, noninferiority trial | To assess the safety and tolerability of PP in maintenance therapy | Acute | 1:1 |
| Alphs et al 2013 | Efficacy and tolerability | 747 | Post hoc analysis of a 13-week randomized, double-blind clinical trial | To evaluate clinical response to treatment with PP and RLAI | Mild | 1:1 |
| Fu et al 2014 | Efficacy, safety, and tolerability | 334 | Post hoc safety and efficacy analyses of a 13-week, double- blind, double-dummy, multicenter comparative study | To compare efficacy and tolerability of PP with oral risperidone (and RLAI) during the first month of treatment | Mild | 1:1 |
| Gopal et al 2014 | Safety and tolerability | 4,357 | 6-month, post hoc analysis of randomized, controlled, long-term, clinical research studies | To determine the incidence of tardive dyskinesia in PP and PER | Mild | 1:1 |
| Schreiner et al 2014 | Efficacy, safety, and tolerability | 593 | 6-month prospective flexible- dose, interventional, single-arm, international, unblinded | To explore the tolerability, safety, and treatment response | Nonacute symptomatic | PP (50–150 mg eq) |
| Alphs et al 2014 | Efficacy, safety, and tolerability | 450 | 15-month, randomized, active- controlled, open-label, board-blinded, parallel-group, flexible-dose, multicenter study | To assess the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of PP in both explanatory and pragmatic approaches | Severe | PP versus oral antipsychotics |
| Hargarter et al 2015 | Efficacy, safety, and tolerability | 212 | 6-month prospective, multicenter, nonrandomized, single-arm, open-label study | To explore treatment outcomes and suggest recommendations for use of PP | Acute | PP (50–150 mg eq) |
| Zhang et al 2015 | Efficacy and safety | 521 | 18-month, nonrandomized, single- arm, open-label, mirror-designed, multicenter, Phase-IIIb study | To assess the effectiveness and safety of PP and impact on hospitalization in patients previously treated with oral AP | Mild-severe | PP (50 mg eq, 75 mg eq, 100 mg |
Abbreviations: AP, antipsychotics; PER, paliperidone extended release; PP, paliperidone palmitate; RLAI, risperidone long-acting injection.
Efficacy, safety, and tolerability assessment and main outcomes of reviewed studies on once-monthly paliperidone palmitate
| Author, year | Efficacy assessment | Safety and tolerability assessment | Efficacy outcomes | Safety and tolerability outcomes | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hough et al 2009 | PANSS | TEAEs | (Efficacy assessments were presented at baseline) | Similar reporting of TEAEs in both injection sites during the last 8 weeks after switching | Local tolerability weekly better with gluteal injections |
| Hough et al 2010 | PANSS | TEAEs | Time-to-relapse was higher in PP treated schizophrenia patients | Injection-site pain was similar between both groups | Schizophrenia patients receiving PP showed a delay in psychotic relapses and similar tolerability than placebo treated patients |
| Nasrallah et al 2010 | PANSS | SAS | Significant improvement in psychotic symptoms in all PP groups | Similar TEAEs frequencies in PP groups and placebo | All doses of PP were efficacious and well tolerated |
| Pandina et al 2010 | PANSS | TEAEs | Psychotic symptoms improved significantly in all PP dose groups versus placebo | Injection-site pain and dizziness were the TEAEs most commonly encountered | PP at doses of 25 mg eq, 100 mg eq, or 150 mg eq was efficacious compared to placebo |
| Alphs et al 2011 | PANSS | TEAEs | Improvement of psychotic symptoms after receiving 234 mg PP | TEAEs (most frequently): headache, insomnia, schizophrenia exacerbation, injection site pain, agitation | Acute treatment with PP is effective and well tolerated for markedly to severely schizophrenia patients |
| Bossie et al 2011a | PANSS | TEAEs | Improvement of psychotic symptoms (PANSS) after initiation doses in all PP groups | Injection site pain, headache, and agitation more common in PP versus placebo | Initiation doses of PP in recently diagnosed schizophrenia demonstrated improvement in psychotic symptoms |
| Bossie et al 2011b | PANSS | TEAEs | After the day 8 injection, PP groups showed greater improvement than placebo, that continued at day 22 and 36 | No unexpected tolerability findings | Initiation doses of PP were associated with significant improvement in psychotic symptoms by day 8, 22, and 36 |
| Li et al 2011 | PANSS | TEAEs | Similar improvement in psychotic symptoms between both groups (PP, RLAI) | TEAEs rates were similar between groups | PP demonstrated noninferiority compared to RLAI |
| Pandina et al 2011 | PANSS | TEAEs | Similar decrease in psychotic symptoms in both groups | Proportion of TEAEs and EPS-related TEAEs similar in both groups | Noninferiority of PP to RLAI was demonstrated in acutely ill schizophrenia patients |
| Coppola et al 2012 | PANSS | TEAEs | – | The most frequent TEAEs: nasopharingitis, insomnia, injection-site pain, headache, tachycardia, akathisia, and tremor | Safety results of PP 150 mg eq and other doses were consistent with previous studies |
| Sliwa et al 2012 | – | TEAEs | – | Nasopharingitis rates were higher in chronically ill patients compared to recently diagnosed | TEAEs associated with prolactin levels were similar in both groups, but higher in recently diagnosed women than chronically ill female schizophrenia patients |
| Fleischhacker et al 2012 | PANSS | TEAEs | PP did not show comparable efficacy to RLAI (design dependent) | Insomnia most common adverse event, similar in both groups | Both treatments showed a similar tolerability |
| Alphs et al 2013 | PANSS | TEAEs | Significant reduction in psychotic symptoms (PANSS, CGI) and functionality (PSP) across all groups | PP: Insomnia, headache, injection-site pain | Treatment with PP or RLAI contributes to improvement of treatment response and adherence |
| Fu et al 2014 | PANSS | TEAEs | Efficacy was similar between PP and RLAI groups | TEAEs rates at week 13 for PP were 54.7% versus 50.3% for RLAI | For the completed study, tolerability after initiation of treatment with PP or RLAI was similar in early diagnosed schizophrenia patients |
| Gopal et al 2014 | – | Schooler-Kane standardized research criteria for TD (AIMS) | – | N=4 studies based on PP | TD appears to be similar in both groups (PP and PER) |
| Schreiner et al 2014 | PANSS | ESRS | 64% of patients improved in psychotic symptoms and functionality | TEAEs: mild or moderate Injection-site pain, insomnia, and anxiety (most frequently) | Nonacute symptomatic schizophrenia patients switched to PP showed an improvement in psychotic symptoms |
| Alphs et al 2014 | Time to first treatment failure | – | Results not published | – | Certain clinical features might be associated with increased risks of arrests (preliminary results, final results not published) |
| Hargarter et al 2015 | PANSS | TEAEs | After 6 months, 67% of patients treated with PP achieved ≥30% improvement in psychotic symptoms | TEAEs most frequently reported: injection-site pain and insomnia | PP in acute schizophrenia patients unsuccessfully treated with oral antipsychotics was well tolerated |
| Zhang et al 2015 | PANSS | MSQ | After 18 months a significant improvement in psychotic symptoms was found in all dimensions of PANSS, CGI-SCH in patients treated with PP | TEAEs related to disorders (14.6%): worsening of psychotic symptoms 31% mild–moderate EPS adverse events | PP in patients previously treated with oral antipsychotics seems to be efficacious and well tolerated after 18 months |
Abbreviations: AIMS, Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale; BARS, Barnes Akathisia Rating Scale; CGI-S, Clinical Global Impression-Severity Scale – Severity; CGI-SCH, Clinical Global Impression-Schizophrenia scale; EPS, extrapyramidal symptoms; ESRS, Extrapyramidal Symptoms Rating Scale; ESRS-A, Extrapyramidal Symptom Rating Scale – Abbreviated; GISF, Global Impression of Sexual Function; Mini-ICF-APP, Mini International Classification of Functionality, Disability and Health Rating for Activity and Participation Disorders; MSQ, Medication Satisfaction Questionnaire; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; PP, paliperidone palmitate; PSP, Personal and Social Performance Scale; RLAI, risperidone long-acting injectable; SAS, Simpson Angus Scale; SDS, Schedule for Deficit Syndrome; SWN, Subjective Well-being under Neuroleptics Scale; TD, tardive dyskinesia; TEAEs, treatment-emergent adverse events; VAS, Visual Analog Scale.