| Literature DB >> 30172595 |
Willie Earley1, Hua Guo2, David Daniel3, Henry Nasrallah4, Suresh Durgam2, Yan Zhong2, Mehul Patel2, Ágota Barabássy5, Balázs Szatmári5, György Németh5.
Abstract
Although currently approved antipsychotics exert efficacy on positive symptoms of schizophrenia, treatments for negative symptoms remain a major unmet need. Post hoc analyses were used to investigate the possible efficacy of cariprazine in patients with moderate/severe negative symptoms of schizophrenia and no predominance of positive symptoms. Data were pooled from 2 randomized, double-blind, placebo- and active-controlled cariprazine studies in patients with acute schizophrenia (NCT00694707, NCT01104766). Analyses included data from a subset of patients with a Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale factor score for negative symptoms (PANSS-FSNS) ≥24, PANSS factor score for positive symptoms (PANSS-FSPS) ≤19, and scores of ≥4 on ≥2 of 3 PANSS items (blunted affect [N1], passive/apathetic social withdrawal [N4], lack of spontaneity/flow of conversation [N6]). Changes from baseline to week 6 in PANSS-FSNS were evaluated in the following treatment groups: placebo (n = 79), cariprazine 1.5-3 (n = 94) and 4.5-6 mg/d (n = 66), risperidone 4 mg/d (n = 34), or aripiprazole 10 mg/d (n = 44). Significant differences were observed versus placebo for cariprazine (1.5-3 mg/d, P = .0179; 4.5-6 mg/d, P = .0002) and risperidone (P = .0149), but not aripiprazole (P = .3265), and versus aripiprazole for cariprazine 4.5-6 mg/d (P = .0197). After adjusting for positive symptom changes, differences versus placebo remained statistically significant for cariprazine (1.5-3 mg/d, P = .0322; 4.5-6 mg/d, P = .0038) but not for risperidone (P = .2204). PANSS-FSNS response (≥20% reduction from baseline) rates were significantly higher with cariprazine (1.5-3 mg/d = 54.3%, P = .0194; 4.5-6 mg/d = 69.7%, P = .0001) than placebo (35.4%). In patients with acute schizophrenia and moderate/severe negative symptoms, cariprazine was associated with significantly greater improvement in negative symptoms compared with placebo and aripiprazole, warranting further exploration of the efficacy of cariprazine on negative symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: Aripiprazole; Cariprazine; Negative symptoms; Risperidone; Schizophrenia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30172595 DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2018.08.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Schizophr Res ISSN: 0920-9964 Impact factor: 4.939