| Literature DB >> 28086761 |
Amy L Gillespie1, Ruta Samanaite2, Jonathan Mill3,4, Alice Egerton2, James H MacCabe2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Schizophrenia is a highly heterogeneous disorder, and around a third of patients are treatment-resistant. The only evidence-based treatment for these patients is clozapine, an atypical antipsychotic with relatively weak dopamine antagonism. It is plausible that varying degrees of response to antipsychotics reflect categorically distinct illness subtypes, which would have significant implications for research and clinical practice. If these subtypes could be distinguished at illness onset, this could represent a first step towards personalised medicine in psychiatry. This systematic review investigates whether current evidence supports conceptualising treatment-resistant and treatment-responsive schizophrenoa as categorically distinct subtypes.Entities:
Keywords: Classification; Clozapine; Schizophrenia; Treatment refractory; Treatment resistance; Treatment response
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28086761 PMCID: PMC5237235 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-016-1177-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1Flowchart of identified, included and excluded studies
Definitions of treatment-resistance
| Study | Chlorpromazine dose and trial length | Number of trials necessary | Minimum length of illness | Minimum severity score | Specify symptoms | Clozapine prescription | Responsive to clozapine | Inability to live independently | Prospective confirmation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 28 | “Therapeutic doses” | 2 | x | ||||||
| 29 | “Adequate” | 2 | CGI ≥ 4 | >4 on 1+ specified PANSS item | |||||
| 17 | 400–600 | 2 | 5 years | BPRS > 45 | >4 on 2+ specified BPRS items | x | |||
| 18 | 400–600 | 2 | 5 years | BPRS > 45 | >4 on 2+ specified BPRS items | x | |||
| 27 | NICE algorithm | CGI < 4 | x | ||||||
| 30 | 400 mg | 2 | CGI > 4 | One of specified BPRS items | |||||
| 33 | 400 mg | 2 | CGI ≥ 4 | One of specified BPRS items | x | ||||
| 34 | “sufficient duration” | “several” | May score 5–7 | x | |||||
| 32 | “optimal clinical requirements” | 3 | Continuous for 2 years | x | |||||
| 35 | 400 mg | 2 | CGI ≥ 4 | One of specified BPRS items | x | ||||
| 36 | “sufficient duration” | “several” | x | ||||||
| 31 | “sufficient duration” | “several” | x | ||||||
| 37 | 1000 mg | 3 | BPRS > 45 | >4 on 2+ specified BPRS items | x | x | |||
| 38 | 1000 mg | 3 | |||||||
| 39 | 750 mg | 3 | Continuous for 2 years | GAS < 40 | x | ||||
| 40 | 4–6 weeks | 2 | <30% decrease in PANSS | ||||||
| 41 | Kane criteria | inclusive | inclusive | ||||||
| 42 | Therapeutic doses | 2 | |||||||
| 43 | 750 mg | 3 | 2 years | BPRS > 45 |
Definitions of treatment-responsiveness
| Study | Consistent good response to antipsychotics | Remission allowing discharge | Remission sustained over long period | Minimum severity before treatment | Minimum improvement | Maximum severity after treatment | Relapse when medication discontinued | Prospective confirmation | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 28 | >50% decrease in BPRS/PANSS | ||||||||
| 29 | x | ||||||||
| 17 | 6 months | x | ≤3 PANSS item scores; | ||||||
| 18 | 6 months | x | ≤3 PANSS item scores; | ||||||
| 27 | At most mildly ill (CGI) | ||||||||
| 30 | x | CGI > 4 | |||||||
| 33 | x | CGI > 4 | No psychotic symptoms | ||||||
| 34 | x | May score 1–4 | |||||||
| 32 | x | at least 1 admission | “full or partial remission” | ||||||
| 35 | x | CGI > 4 | No psychotic symptoms | ||||||
| 36 | x | ||||||||
| 31 | x | ||||||||
| 37 | 20% decrease in BPRS total | CGI rating ≤3 or BPRS score ≤ 35 | |||||||
| 38 | x | CGI rating of “very/much improved” | 12 weeks haloperidol < 30 mg | ||||||
| 39 | x | at least 1 admission | “full or partial remission” | CGI rating ≤3 or BPRS score ≤ 30 | x | x | |||
| 40 | >30% decrease in PANSS | x | |||||||
| 41 | “at most mild” | ||||||||
| 42 | x | ||||||||
| 43 | x | at least 1 admission | BPRS score ≤ 30 | x |