| Literature DB >> 33228575 |
Ya-Wen Jen1, Tzung-Jeng Hwang2, Hung-Yu Chan2,3, Ming H Hsieh2, Chen-Chung Liu2, Chih-Min Liu2, Hai-Gwo Hwu2, Ching-Hua Kuo4, Yi-Ting Lin2, Yi-Ling Chien2, Wei J Chen5,6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Switching to aripiprazole from other antipsychotics can avoid antipsychotic-induced hyperprolactinemia but may result in an abnormally low prolactin level. This study aimed to assess whether the aripiprazole-induced abnormally low prolactin level was a biomarker for subsequent rebound of positive symptoms in schizophrenia patients.Entities:
Keywords: Aripiprazole; Biomarker; Prolactin; Psychotic rebound; Schizophrenia
Year: 2020 PMID: 33228575 PMCID: PMC7686669 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-020-02957-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1CONSORT flow diagram for the study
Demographic and baseline clinical characteristics of participants in the trial of switching to aripiprazole by the grouping of prolactin levels at follow up
| Characteristic | Total ( | Normal prolactin level at follow up ( | Abnormally low prolactin level at follow up ( | Pa |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male, n (%) | 26 (41.27) | 10 (26.32) | 16 (64.00) | 0.003** |
| Age, years, (SD) | 38.7 (11.29) | 37.7 (12.25) | 40.2 (9.69) | 0.38 |
| Body height, cm, mean (SD) | 162.3 (8.83) | 159.5 (7.77) | 166.6 (8.78) | 0.003** |
| Body weight, kg, mean (SD) | 66.6 (11.96) | 63.5 (12.53) | 71.4 (9.36) | 0.008** |
| Age of onset, years, mean (SD)b | 27.7 (8.81) | 28.8 (9.73) | 26.1 (7.14) | 0.44 |
| Early age of onset, n (%) b | 8 (12.70) | 6 (15.79) | 2 (8.00) | 0.46 |
| Late dropout, n (%) | 10 (15.87) | 7 (18.42) | 3 (12.00) | 0.23 |
| Prolactin level, ng/dL, mean (SD) | ||||
| Baseline | 53.9 (61.38) | 74.0 (69.94) | 20.8 (20.35) | 0.001** |
| 14th Day | 23.5 (35.15) | 31.7 (38.81) | 11.0 (24.51) | < 0.001** |
| 56th Dayc | 6.9 (6.03) | 10.0 (6.05) | 2.4 (1.18) | < 0.001** |
| Positive subscore in PANSS at baseline, mean (SD)d | 10.3 (4.48) | 10.7 (4.54) | 9.8 (4.43) | 0.45 |
| Switching strategy in previous trial, n (%) | 0.88 | |||
| Fast strategy | 32 (50.79) | 19 (50.00) | 13 (52.00) | |
| Slow strategy | 31 (49.21) | 19 (50.00) | 12 (48.00) | |
| Preswitching antipsychoticse | 0.32 | |||
| High risk of prolactin elevation (RIS or AMI), n (%) | 16 (25.39) | 12 (31.00) | 4 (16.00) | |
| Medium risk of prolactin elevation (FGA or ZOT), n (%) | 18 (28.57) | 9 (24.00) | 9 (36.00) | |
| Low risk (OLA or ZIP or QUE), n (%) | 29 (46.03) | 17 (45.00) | 12 (48.00) | |
| Chlorpromazine equivalent dose, mean (SD) | 289.0 (231.80) | 289.1 (260.80) | 288.9 (184.30) | 0.71 |
Abbreviation: RSI Risperidone, AMI Amisulpride, FGA First generation antipsychotics, ZOT Zotepine, OLA Olanzapine, ZIP Ziprasidone, QUE Quetiapine
aFisher’s exact test (for categorical variables) or Mann-Whitney test (for continuous variables) in comparing the 2 groups. ** p < .01
bData missing for 1 patient
cData missing for 10 patients; i.e., including only patients completing the trial (n = 52)
dIncluding delusions (p1), hallucinations (p3), grandiosity (p5), suspiciousness (p6), and unusual thought content (g9)
eFollowing the classification by Buchanan et al. (2010) [28]
Comparison of demographic and baseline clinical characteristics of patients with schizophrenia in the trial of switching to aripiprazole between rebound and no rebound in positive subscores (N = 63)
| Characteristic | Rebound in positive subscores ( | No rebound in positive subscores ( | Pa |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male, n (%) | 9 (42.86) | 17 (40.48) | 0.86 |
| Age, years, (SD) | 41.8 (10.60) | 37.1 (11.44) | 0.14 |
| Body height, cm, mean (SD) | 161.5 (7.19) | 162.7 (9.61) | 0.70 |
| Body weight, kg, mean (SD) | 68.4 (11.35) | 65.8 (12.29) | 0.52 |
| Age of onset, years, mean (SD)b | 26.6 (9.04) | 28.2 (8.75) | 0.30 |
| Early age of onset, n (%) b | 2 (9.52) | 6 (14.29) | 0.71 |
| Late dropout, n (%) | 4 (19.05) | 6 (14.29) | 0.25 |
| Prolactin level at baseline, ng/dL, mean (SD) | 47.6 (69.48) | 55.6 (57.63) | 0.15 |
| Positive subscore in PANSS at baseline, mean (SD)c | 12.2 (4.41) | 9.4 (4.26) | 0.01* |
| Switching strategy in a previous trial, n (%) | 0.72 | ||
| Fast strategy | 10 (47.62) | 22 (52.38) | |
| Slow strategy | 11 (52.38) | 20 (47.62) | |
| Preswitching medication | 0.04* | ||
| First generation antipsychotics, n (%) | 12 (57.14) | 13 (30.95) | |
| Second generation antipsychotics, n (%) | 9 (42.86) | 29 (69.05) | |
| Chlorpromazine equivalent dose, mean (SD) | 321.4 (198.20) | 272.8 (247.60) | 0.27 |
*p < .05
aFisher’s exact test (for categorical variables) or Mann-Whitney test (for continuous variables) in comparing the 2 groups
bData missing for 1 patient
cIncluding delusions (p1), hallucinations (p3), grandiosity (p5), suspiciousness (p6), and unusual thought content (g9)
Multivariable logistic regression analysis of rebound in positive subscores on the abnormally low prolactin levels among schizophrenia patients participating in the trial of switching to aripiprazole (N = 63)
| Variables | Rebound in | No rebound in positive subscores ( | Multivariate-adjusted | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1 | Model 2 | |||
| Male, n (%), (ref. female) | 9 (42.90) | 17 (40.50) | 0.57 (0.16–2.06) | 0.42 (0.09–2.01) |
| Early age of onset, n (%), (ref. late age of onset)a | 2 (9.52) | 6 (14.29) | 0.62 (0.10–3.94) | 0.41 (0.06–2.82) |
| Preswitching medication | ||||
| First generation antipsychotics, n (%) | 12 (57.10) | 13 (31.00) | 1.00 (reference) | 1.00 (reference) |
| Second generation antipsychotics, n (%) | 9 (42.90) | 29 (69.00) | 0.31 (0.10–0.98) | 0.22 (0.06–0.82) |
| Prolactin level at baseline, ng/dL, mean (SD) | 47.6 (69.48) | 55.6 (57.63) | ˍ | 1.00 (0.99–1.01) |
| Positive subscore in PANSS at baseline, mean (SD)b | 12.2 (4.41) | 9.4 (4.26) | ˍ | 1.25* (1.07–1.46) |
| Abnormally low prolactin levels at follow up, n (%) | 12 (57.10) | 13 (31.00) | 3.55* (1.02–12.5) | 4.95* (1.08–22.7) |
| Interaction term, abnormally low prolactin levels × sex | 0.66 (0.05–9.23) | 0.38 (0.02–7.24) | ||
Model 1: adjustment for sex, early age of onset, and preswitching medication
Model 2: Model 1 plus an adjustment for prolactin level and positive subscore in PANSS at baseline
*p < .05
a ≤ 18 years old defined as early age of onset; One observation was deleted due to a missing value
bIncluding delusions (p1), hallucinations (p3), grandiosity (p5), suspiciousness (p6), and unusual thought content (g9)
Fig. 2The cumulative proportion of patients with rebound in PANSS positive symptoms (▲) at follow-up measured time points, which are the 14th Day, 28th Day, and 56th Day, and of patients with abnormally low prolactin levels (●) at follow-up measured time points, which are the 14th Day and 56th Day. Concurrency of the two trends over time in the cumulative proportions is shown in a whole samples, N = 63, b male patients, N = 26, and c female patients, N = 37. The β coefficient presents the slope of the cumulated line. P value is from testing whether the β coefficient of positive rebound is different from that of low prolactin levels