The purpose of this study is to investigate whether a long-acting injectable formulation of risperidone provides better effectiveness over 2 years, as measured by the time to relapse, compared with quetiapine tablets in a routine psychiatric care setting. Aripiprazole will be investigated in a descriptive manner.
Although many schizophrenia patients currently take oral antipsychotic medications, it is estimated that up to 75% of them have difficulty adhering to the daily oral regimen. Long-acting injectable formulations may eliminate the need for daily medication and enhance patient compliance with the treatment regimen. This is an open-label (all people involved know the identity of the intervention), randomized (study drug assigned by chance) study of a formulation of risperidone (coated microspheres) injected into the muscle at 2 week intervals over 104 weeks in stable patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, who are being treated with oral risperidone, olanzapine, or other conventional antipsychotic agents. A comparator group will receive tablets of quetiapine to be taken 2 or 3 times daily, depending on the optimal dosage. In countries where aripiprazole is available, aripiprazole was also included in a descriptive manner. Reasons for switching symptomatically stable patients from their current antipsychotic treatment include insufficient effectiveness of the medication on symptoms, adverse events, or a patient's request. The principal measure of effectiveness of the drug is the time to relapse. Assessments of effectiveness also include: Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS), which measures the symptoms of schizophrenia; overall severity of illness measured by the Clinical Global Impression subscale (CGI-S); patient's condition measured by the Clinical Global Impression condition subscale (CGI-C); quality of life assessed by the SF-12 survey. Safety evaluations include incidence of adverse events, Extrapyramidal Symptoms Rating Scale (ESRS), clinical laboratory tests (biochemistry, haematology, and urinalysis), and vital signs (pulse, blood pressure). The study hypothesis is that treatment with long-acting risperidone injected intramuscularly every 2 weeks provides better effectiveness than quetiapine, as measured by time to relapse, in patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. Risperidone injections 25mg biweekly for 104 weeks, increasing or decreasing (increments of 12.5mg) at investigator's discretion. Risperidone tablets (2mg daily for 2 days) for patients starting on risperidone. Quetiapine and Aripiprazole used according to package insert.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
10-30 mg oral once daily for 104 weeks
25 mg injection every 2 weeks until week 104. Dosage may be increased or decreased in steps of 12.5 mg. Additional oral risperidone can be administered as required until a dose increase becomes effective.
Oral tablets are titrated from 50 mg daily to 300-400 mg daily in first 4 days. Subsequently treatment is maintained for 104 weeks and dosage can be adjusted with increments or decrements of 25 to 50 mg.
Mean Relapse Free Period(Risperidone LAI Versus Quetiapine)
Relapse was defined as meeting any of the predefined criteria (adapted from Csernansky et al., 2002) on 2 consecutive evaluations during treatment, 3 to 5 days apart. The relapse rate in each treatment arm was estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method.
Time frame: Assessed at each visit from the moment the subject was randomized to a treatment arm (baseline visit) until the end of treatment (Week 104 or earlier)
Mean Relapse Free Period (Exploratory/Aripiprazole)
As for risperidone and quetiapine, relapse was defined as meeting any of the predefined criteria (adapted from Csernansky et al., 2002) on 2 consecutive evaluations during treatment, 3 to 5 days apart. Since aripiprazole was new on the market at the time the study was conducted, this aripiprazole analysis was exploratory.
Time frame: Assessed at each visit from the moment the subject was randomized to a treatment arm (baseline visit) until the end of treatment (Week 104 or earlier)
Change From Baseline to Endpoint in Total Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) Score
The neuropsychiatric symptoms of schizophrenia were assessed by means of the 30-item PANSS scale. The PANSS scale provides a total score (sum of the scores of all 30 items) and scores for 3 subscales, i.e., the positive subscale (7 items), the negative subscale (7 items), and the general psychopathology subscale (16 items). Each item of the scale is to be scored on a scale of 1 (absent) to 7 (extreme).
Time frame: Assessed at each visit from the moment the subject was randomized to a treatment arm (baseline visit) until the end of treatment (Week 104 or earlier)
Change From Baseline to Endpoint in Clinical Global Impression Scale (CGI) Score
The 7-point CGI scale of Severity (CGI-S) was used to assess the severity of a subject's psychotic condition (0= normal, not at all ill, 1= borderline, etc. and 6= among the most extremely ill subjects).
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Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
753
Unnamed facility
Hall in Tirol, Austria
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Linz, Austria
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Neunkirchen, Austria
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Pleven, Bulgaria
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Sofia, Bulgaria
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Sofia Sofia, Bulgaria
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Osijek, Croatia
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Rijeka, Croatia
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Split, Croatia
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Zagreb, Croatia
...and 86 more locations
Time frame: Assessed at each visit from the moment the subject was randomized to a treatment arm (baseline visit) until the end of treatment (Month 24 or earlier)
Change From Baseline to Endpoint in Short-Form Health Survey 12 (SF-12) Scores
Quality of life was assessed by means of the 12-item SF-12® survey. Two parameters, i.e., PCS (physical component summary) and MCS (mental component summary) were calculated. Both components scores range from 0 to 100 with higher scores indicating better QOL.
Time frame: Assessed at the moment the subject was randomized to a treatment arm (baseline visit) and after 1, 3, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months of treatment