| Literature DB >> 28254958 |
Michael Berk1, Rothanthi Daglas2, Orwa Dandash2, Murat Yücel2, Lisa Henry2, Karen Hallam2, Craig Macneil2, Melissa Hasty2, Christos Pantelis2, Brendan P Murphy2, Linda Kader2, Saji Damodaran2, Michael T H Wong2, Philippe Conus2, Aswin Ratheesh2, Patrick D McGorry2, Sue M Cotton2.
Abstract
BackgroundLithium and quetiapine are considered standard maintenance agents for bipolar disorder yet it is unclear how their efficacy compares with each other.AimsTo investigate the differential effect of lithium and quetiapine on symptoms of depression, mania, general functioning, global illness severity and quality of life in patients with recently stabilised first-episode mania.MethodMaintenance trial of patients with first-episode mania stabilised on a combination of lithium and quetiapine, subsequently randomised to lithium or quetiapine monotherapy (up to 800 mg/day) and followed up for 1 year. (Trial registration: Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry - ACTRN12607000639426.)ResultsIn total, 61 individuals were randomised. Within mixed-model repeated measures analyses, significant omnibus treatment × visit interactions were observed for measures of overall psychopathology, psychotic symptoms and functioning. Planned and post hoc comparisons further demonstrated the superiority of lithium treatment over quetiapine.ConclusionsIn people with first-episode mania treated with a combination of lithium and quetiapine, continuation treatment with lithium rather than quetiapine is superior in terms of mean levels of symptoms during a 1-year evolution. © The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2017.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28254958 DOI: 10.1192/bjp.bp.116.186833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Psychiatry ISSN: 0007-1250 Impact factor: 9.319