| Literature DB >> 29379293 |
Abstract
The course of schizophrenia is characterized by multiple relapses, incomplete remission of symptoms, enduring cognitive deficits, and social and occupational functional impairments. Nonadherence to antipsychotic medication is a major determinant of this poor outcome. Long-acting injectable antipsychotics were developed specifically to address the nonadherence problem and are increasingly considered as an early treatment option, in an attempt to prevent accruing morbidity. This review focuses on paliperidone palmitate, the long-acting injectable (LAI) formulation of paliperidone. After considering the pharmacology of paliperidone palmitate, we review the randomized controlled trials, as well as pertinent observational, pragmatic studies for paliperidone once-monthly injections in schizophrenia. Finally, we review the recently introduced 3-monthly formulation of paliperidone palmitate. Taken together, the studies indicate that paliperidone palmitate (PP) has good efficacy compared with placebo and comparable with other antipsychotics including risperidone. The tolerability profile of PP is similar to that of risperidone, with the most important side effects being prolactin elevation, weight gain, and extrapyramidal symptoms. Advantages of PP include the extensive research database and clinical experience with paliperidone and its parent compound risperidone, the availability of different LAI formulations (once-monthly, 3-monthly, and perhaps even longer acting formulations in future), and the novel dose initiation procedure that provides rapid onset of action without the need for oral antipsychotic supplementation.Entities:
Keywords: long-acting antipsychotics; paliperidone palmitate; relapse-prevention; schizophrenia
Year: 2018 PMID: 29379293 PMCID: PMC5759847 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S139633
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Summary of randomized, controlled trials for once-monthly paliperidone palmitate vs placebo
| Source (year) | Brief description of study | Follow-up period | Sample size, N | Treatment/intervention | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kramer et al (2010) | RCT comparing PP-1M/placebo | 9 weeks | 197 | PP dosage of 50 or 100 mg eq. received (gluteal) on days 1, 8, and 36 or placebo | • PANSS total scores improved for both doses ( |
| Nasrallah et al (2010) | RCT comparing PP-1M/placebo | 13 weeks | 518 | PP dosage of 25, 50, and 100 mg eq. received (gluteal) on days 1 and 8, then every 4 weeks (ie, on days 36 and 64), or placebo | • All PP dose groups showed significant improvement vs placebo in the PANSS total score ( |
| Gopal et al (2010) | RCT comparing PP-1M/placebo | 13 weeks | 388 | PP dosage of 50, 100, or 150 mg eq. received (gluteal) monthly after two initial doses given 1 week apart, or placebo | • Only 30 participants were randomized to the 150 mg eq. dose group, and definitive conclusions could not be drawn from the results of that group |
| Pandina et al (2010) | RCT comparing PP-1M/placebo | 13 weeks | 652 | PP dosage of 150 mg eq. received (deltoid) on day 1 and dose of 25, 100, or 150 mg eq. on day 8 and then once monthly thereafter, or placebo | • PANSS total improved significantly ( |
| Alphs et al (2011) | NA | NA | 312 | NA | • In post hoc analysis in subgroup (n=312), compared with placebo, PP improved psychotic symptoms by day 4 and after subsequent injections, dose-dependent improvements persisted |
| Hough et al (2010) | Relapse-prevention RCT comparing PP-1M/placebo | Phase I (up to 7 days screening) | 951 | NA | • Time to relapse was significantly delayed for PP ( |
| Gopal et al (2011) | Study reporting on Phase V (OLE) of Hough et al (2010) | 1 year | 288 | PP flexi dosages of 25, 50, 75, or 100 mg eq. received (gluteal) and paliperidone ER 3 mg tablets | • Most frequently reported adverse events were insomnia (7%), worsening of schizophrenia, nasopharyngitis, headache and weight increase (6% each) |
| Fu et al (2017) | RCT comparing PP-1M/placebo | Phase I (25 weeks OL) | 667 | Subjects were treated with PP-1M either as monotherapy or in combination with antidepressants or mood stabilizers | • Improvements in all PSP domains were observed during the open-label phase and were maintained during the double-blind phase with PP but not with placebo |
Notes:
Phase 2b study;
two-hundred and eighty-eight of 388 enrolled patients completed the open-label extension.
Abbreviations: eq., equivalent; RCT, randomized controlled trial; PP, paliperidone palmitate; PP-1M, paliperidone palmitate once-monthly; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; CGI, Clinical Global Impression Severity Scale; PSP, Personal and Social Performance Scale; EPS, emergent extrapyramidal symptoms; OL, open-label; OLE, open-label extension; DB, double blind; ER, extended-release; BMI, body mass index; NA, not applicable.
Summary of comparative randomized, controlled trials for once-monthly paliperidone palmitate
| Source (year) | Brief description of study | Follow-up period | Sample size, N | Treatment/intervention | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fleischhacker et al (2012) | RCT comparing PP-1M/RLAI-1M | 53 weeks | 747 | Acutely symptomatic patients received PP dosage of 50 mg eq. on days 1 and 8, followed by flexible dosing (25–100 mg eq.) once-monthly, or RLAI 2-weekly, 25 mg on days 8 and 22 followed by flexible dosing (25–50 mg) starting from day 36, with oral risperidone supplementation | • Mean (SD) change from baseline to end point in PANSS total score was −11.6 (21.22) for PP and −14.4 (19.76) for RLAI. |
| Pandina et al (2011) | RCT comparing PP-1M/RLAI-1M | 13 weeks | 1,220 | • Mean PANSS total score change from baseline to end point decreased similarly in both groups. | |
| Fu et al (2014) | Post hoc subgroup analysis in markedly to severely ill subjects drawn from Pandina et al (2011) | 292 | PP dosage received (deltoid) of 150 mg eq. on day 1 and 100 mg eq. on day 8. Flexible dosing of 50 mg or 100 mg eq. (deltoid or gluteal) on day 36 and day 64. | • PANSS total scores improved significantly in both arms from day 4 through to end point. | |
| Fu et al (2014) | Post hoc, subgroup analysis in subjects drawn from Pandina et al (2011) | 334 | 25, 37.5, or 50 mg on days 64 and 78; and oral supplementation with risperidone on days 1–28 | • No significant differences in the mean weight change, most metabolic parameters, or mean efficacy measures were observed. | |
| Li et al (2011) | OL RCT comparing PP-1M/2-weekly RLAI | 13 weeks | 452 | PP dosages received (deltoid) of 150 mg eq. on day 1 and 100 mg eq. on day 8, then once-monthly flexible dosages of 50, 100, or 150 mg eq. received (deltoid or gluteal). | • Mean (SD) change from baseline to end point in PANSS total scores was −23.6 (16.28) for the PP group and −26.9 (15.43) for RLAI group. |
| Koshikawa et al (2016) | OL RCT comparing effect of PP-1M/RLAI on social functioning | 6 months | 30 | Patients previously treated with RLAI continued with RLAI or received PP | • The PP-treated patients showed greater degree of total social functioning, independent life competence, and performance as compared to the RLAI group. |
| Takekita et al (2016) | In the same sample as Koshikawa et al (2016), | • The results suggested that PP might improve attention and processing speed more than RLAI. | |||
| Alphs et al (2016) | Pragmatic, OL RCT comparing PP-1M/OA | 15 months | 444 | Monthly injectable PP (78–234 mg) or daily OA | • The mean cumulative function of treatment failure events and institutionalizations differed significantly in favor of PP compared with oral antipsychotics ( |
| Kwon et al (2015) | OL RCT assessing patient satisfaction with switching from OA to PP-1M | 21 weeks | 154 | Immediate switch group received PP dosages of 150 mg eq. on day 1 and 100 mg eq. on day 8, and for later visits the recommended dose was 75 mg eq. or 25, 50, 75, 100, or 150 mg eq. The delayed switch group was maintained on current OA from days 1–56 and received PP dosages of 150 mg eq. on day 57 and 100 mg eq. on day 64, and for later visits the recommended dose was 75 mg eq. or 25, 50, 75, 100, or 150 mg eq. | • Medication satisfaction improved significantly in both groups, with comparable efficacy and tolerability. |
| Naber et al (2015) | OL RCT comparing PP-1M/AOM | 28 weeks | 295 | PP dosages of 50–150 mg eq. received per month, or AOM 400 mg | • AOM-treated patients showed significantly greater improvements in the QLS total score (4.67 [95% CI: 0.32, 9.02], |
| McEvoy et al (2014) | RCT comparing PP-1M/haloperidol decanoate | 24 months | 311 | PP dosages received (deltoid) of 234 mg on day 1 and 156 mg on day 8, and 117 mg received (deltoid or gluteal) once-monthly thereafter. Haloperidol decanoate dose of 50 mg received (deltoid) on days 1 and 8, 75 mg on days 28 and 56, and 50 mg received (deltoid or gluteal) once-monthly thereafter | • There was no statistically significant difference in the rate of efficacy failure for PP-1M compared with haloperidol decanoate (adjusted hazard ratio: 0.98; 95% CI: 0.65, 1.47). |
| Rosenheck et al (2016) | Cost-effectiveness study conducted in the same cohort as McEvoy et al (2014) | • PP-1M was associated with 0.0297 greater quality-adjusted life years over 18 months ( | |||
| Schreiner et al (2015) | Rater-blinded RCT comparing PP-1M/OA | 24 months | 715 | PP doses of 150 mg eq. received (deltoid) on day 1, 100 mg eq. received (deltoid) on day 8, 75 mg eq. on day 38 (deltoid or gluteal), thereafter 25–150 mg eq. (deltoid or gluteal) or OA | • Time to relapse was significantly longer in the PP-1M (n=352) compared with the oral antipsychotics arm (n=363), with 85% relapse-free survival at 469 days for PP-1M patients vs 249 days for oral antipsychotics patients ( |
| Gopal et al (2017) | Pooled analysis of two RCTs (PP-1M and PP-3M) assessing predictors of caregiver burden | NA | 1,498 | NA | • Caregiver burden was significantly improved for patients on prior oral antipsychotics after switching to PP. |
Note:
Phase 3b study.
Abbreviations: eq., equivalent; RCT, randomized controlled trial; PP, paliperidone palmitate; PP-1M, paliperidone palmitate once-monthly; PP-3M, paliperidone palmitate 3-monthly; RLAI, risperidone long-acting injection; AOM, aripiprazole once-monthly; OA, oral antipsychotic; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; CGI, Clinical Global Impression Severity Scale; QLS, Heinrichs–Carpenter Quality-of-Life Scale; OL, open-label; OLE, open-label extension; NA, not applicable.
Summary of observational studies and uncontrolled pragmatic trials with once-monthly paliperidone palmitate
| Source (year) | Brief description of study | Follow-up period | Sample size, N | Treatment/intervention | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Attard et al (2014) | Naturalistic study focusing on factors predicting continuation with PP | 1 year | 200 | NA | • Initiation as an outpatient ( |
| Hargarter et al (2017) | Naturalistic study exploring efficacy, safety, and tolerability of PP-1M initiated shortly after hospital admission | 6 weeks | 367 | NA | • Significant improvements were observed in psychotic symptoms ( |
| Baser et al (2015) | Study comparing real-world health care costs and resource utilization between SZ patients treated with PP-1M and OA | NA | 335 | NA | • Patients treated with PP had lower inpatient costs and admission rates, although total health care costs were not significantly different. |
| Bressington et al (2015) | Retrospective mirror-image observational study assessing the effects of PP-1M on acute inpatient hospitalization rates | ≥1 year | 66 | • The mean number of acute admissions fell from 0.86 in the year before PP initiation to 0.23 in the following year ( | |
| Doshi et al (2015) | Observational, claims-based study examining frequency and duration of concurrent oral prescriptions in patients receiving long-acting injectable formulations of antipsychotics (first and second generation) with a recent history of nonadherence and hospitalization for SZ | NA | 340 | NA | • The lowest rate of concurrent oral prescribing (58.8%) was found with PP, whereas the highest rate was with RLAI (88.9%). |
| Schreiner et al (2014) | OL study assessing tolerability, safety, and efficacy of flexible doses of PP-1M in a subset of nonacute but symptomatic SZ patients previously unsuccessfully treated with OA | 6 months | 593 | PP dose received (deltoid) of 150 mg eq. on day 1 and 100 mg eq. on day 8. Thereafter, patients received (either deltoid or gluteal) PP dose of 50–150 mg eq. on days 38, 68, 98, 128, and 158. | • PANSS total scores decreased from 71.5 (14.6) at baseline to 59.7 (18.1) at end point ( |
| Schreiner et al (2015) | In subset of Schreiner et al (2014) | 231 | • Significant reductions in PANSS total score were observed after switching ( | ||
| Hargarter et al (2015) | In subset of Schreiner et al (2014) | 212 | • Significant improvements in PANSS total score were observed from day 8 onwards ( | ||
| Zhao et al (2017) | OL study evaluating safety and efficacy of PP-1M | 25 weeks | 353 | PP dose of 150 mg eq. received (deltoid) on day 1 and 100 mg eq. received (deltoid) on day 8. Thereafter, patients received (either deltoid or gluteal) flexi doses of 75, 100, or 150 mg eq. | • PANSS total scores improved significantly ( |
| Lafeuille et al (2015) | A retrospective study comparing data on re-hospitalization patterns and associated institutional costs after inpatient treatment with PP-1M or OA | 6–12 months | 45 625 | NA | • In the first 12 months after hospital discharge, the risk of rehospitalization and emergency room use was significantly lower in the PP-1M cohort than in the oral antipsychotic cohort ( |
| Montalvo et al (2013) | Prospective observational study assessing effect of switching from RLAI to PP-1M on sexual function and prolactin levels in patients with psychosis who developed hyperprolactinemia on RLAI and who were then switched to PP | 3 months | 11 | NA | • There was a significant decrease in serum prolactin levels ( |
| Morrato et al (2015) | Retrospective, observational cohort study using patient claims data comparing effectiveness evidence for PP-1M vs atypical OA | NA | NA | NA | • Emergency room visits and hospitalization rates were lower in PP-1M patients, although hospitalizations did not achieve statistical significance. |
| Taylor and Olofinjana (2014) | Observational study patients prescribed PP in normal practice were followed up | 1 year | 200 | NA | • After 1 year, 65% of patients were still receiving PP. |
| Taylor et al (2016) | Observational study of patients treated with PP-1M | 2 years | 300 | NA | • About 38.7% completed 2 years of continuous treatment and a further 7.6% patients discontinued PP but restarted after >2 months. |
| Taylor et al (2016) | A part-prospective mirror-image study examining outcomes of patients receiving PP-1M | 2 years prior to PP-1M initiation and 2 years after initiation | 225 | NA | • At study end point, 41.8% of patients were still receiving PP-1M. |
| Voss et al (2015) | Study assessing elapse risk following switch from RLAI to PP-1M vs a switch from RLAI to OA | NA | 319 | NA | • Patients who switched from RLAI to PP had fewer events (hospitalization or emergency room visit) (26 vs 32), longer time to an event (mean 70 vs 47 days), and lower risk of relapse ( |
| Whale et al (2015) | Naturalistic study assessing patients who initiated PP-1M | 12 months | 179 | NA | • About 60% of patients continued PP-1M beyond 12 months. |
| Zhang et al (2015) | OL noncomparative study assessing patients with recent-onset SZ who were unsatisfactorily treated with previous OA switched to flexible doses of PP-1M | 18 months | 521 | NA | • PANSS total scores improved significantly ( |
| Pesa et al (2017) | Retrospective claims-based analysis of Medicaid patients with SZ comparing all-cause health care utilization and costs between patients treated with PP-1M vs atypical OA | 12 months | 1,444 | NA | • PP-1M patients vs patients assigned to the atypical OA cohort, were less likely to discontinue treatment (30.6% vs 39.5%, |
| Pilon et al (2017) | Study comparing patients with recent-onset SZ on PP-1M vs OA in terms of adherence, health care resource utilization, and Medical aid spending | NA | 24,300 | NA | • Patients treated with PP-1M had better adherence ( |
| Emsley et al (2017) | Multicenter, retrospective chart review of medical records of adult patients who were newly diagnosed with SZ who had received continuous treatment with PP-1M in naturalistic clinical settings | ≥12 months | 84 | NA | • Of the patients, 79.2% had ≥20% improvement and 47.2% had a ≥50% improvement in PANSS total scores. PSP score improved significantly in 53.3%. |
Note:
Phase IV study.
Abbreviations: eq., equivalent; PP, paliperidone palmitate; PP-1M, paliperidone palmitate once-monthly; RLAI, risperidone long-acting injection; OA, oral antipsychotic; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; EPS, emergent extrapyramidal symptoms; OL, open-label; SZ, schizophrenia; NA, not applicable; PSP, Personal and Social Performance Scale.
Summary of studies with 3-monthly paliperidone palmitate
| Source (year) | Brief description of study | Follow-up period | Sample size, N | Treatment/intervention | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Berwaerts et al (2015) | RCT comparing PP-3M/placebo | Phase I (3 weeks screening) | 506 | NA | • In the preplanned interim analysis, time to relapse was significantly longer in the PP-3M group vs the placebo group ( |
| Savitz et al (2016) | RCT comparing PP-3M/PP-1M | Phase I (17 weeks screening) | 1,016 | After Phase I, clinically stable patients were randomized to PP-3M fixed dose of 175, 263, 350, or 525 mg eq. received (deltoid or gluteal), or PP-1M fixed dose of 50, 75, 100, or 150 mg eq. received (deltoid or gluteal) during Phase II | • PP-3M was noninferior to PP-1M insofar as relapse rates were similar in both groups (8% vs 9%), as were PANSS total score changes and PSP score changes. |
| Savitz et al (2017) | Post hoc analysis assessing rates of symptomatic and functional remission achieved following PP-3M vs PP-1M treatment in the same sample as Savitz et al (2016). | Phase II (48 weeks DB) | NA | • In the PP-3M group, 50.3% achieved symptomatic remission vs 50.8% in the PP-1M group. | |
| Savitz et al (2017) | Post hoc analysis conducted in subset of sample from Savitz et al (2016). | 510 | • The percentage of patients who relapsed was similar for PP-3M (10.2%) and PP-1M (11.8%) groups, as was symptom reduction. | ||
| Weiden et al (2017) | Post hoc study evaluating time to relapse following treatment discontinuation with oral paliperidone, PP-1M, and PP-3M | NA | 449 | NA | • Median days to relapse were 58 days for oral paliperidone, 172 days for PP-1M, and 395 days for PP-3M ( |
Note:
Data were drawn from three similarly designed relapse prevention, placebo-controlled RCTs.
Abbreviations: eq., equivalent; RCT, randomized controlled trial; PP-1M, paliperidone palmitate once-monthly; PP-3M, paliperidone palmitate 3-monthly; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; PSP, Personal and Social Performance Scale; OL, open-label; DB, double-blind; NA, not applicable.