Hypothesis: Continuation of an atypical antipsychotic medication in combination with a Mood Stabilizer, following remission from an acute manic episode, lowers the rates of relapse and recurrence of mood episodes compared to discontinuing the antipsychotics within days of resolution of manic symptoms.
This is a randomised, double-blind, placebo controlled trial over 52 weeks. Patients will be on one of four combinations of medications at the time of entry into the study: a) lithium and risperidone, b) lithium and olanzapine, c) valproate and risperidone, or d) valproate and olanzapine. After obtaining informed consent, patients will be randomised to one of three groups 1)"0" week group: patients will receive lithium or valproate plus placebo for 52 weeks (risperidone or olanzapine tapering will begin on the day of randomisation with discontinuation of the drug within 2 weeks), 2) continuation of the same atypical antipsychotic, risperidone or olanzapine, plus lithium or valproate for 24 weeks (tapering of the antipsychotic begins at the end of 24 weeks and completed within 2 weeks) followed by the same mood stabilizer plus placebo for another 28 weeks, and 3) continuation of the atypical antipsychotic, risperidone or olanzapine, plus lithium or valproate for 52 weeks. The duration of the double-blind phase of the study will be 52 weeks and all patients will continue on the mood stabilizer, lithium or valproate, they had been on during the acute mania for the full duration of the study. The serum level of the mood stabilizer will be maintained within the therapeutic range (0.6 to 1.2 mmol/L for lithium and 50 to 125 ug/L for valproate) throughout the 52 weeks as determined by blood tests. The dose and the type of atypical antipsychotic (ie risperidone or olanzapine) each patient will receive during the double-blind period will be the same that the patient had been on at the time of entry into the double-blind phase. All patients, irrespective of which treatment arm they are in, will receive active psychoeducation and counselling regarding sleep hygiene, healthy daily routines and rhythms, alcohol and substance abuse, anxiety management, conflict resolution and problem solving as clinically indicated in routine clinical practice. Patients who withdraw from or meet a primary end point of the study will be treated actively as done in regular clinical practice. Patients will not be allowed to receive any other psychotropic medication with the exception of benzodiazepines for sedation and anti-parkinsonian medication for extrapyramidal side effects. The doses of these will be recorded.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
159
serum level of 50 to 125 ug/L
serum levels of 0.6 to 1.2 mmol/L
1 to 6 mg/day
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
The primary outcome measure is the time to any mood episode (depressive or manic episode).
A mood episode is defined as 1) Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) score of 15 or greater 2)Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HAM-D) 21-item score of 15 or greater or a HAM-D suicide item score of 3 or greater 3)A Clinical Global Impression -Severity (CGI-S) score of 3 or greater 4) a patient requiring hospitalization for treatment of mood symptoms or 5) a patient who makes a suicide attempt or commits suicide during the study.
Time frame: 52 weeks
Time to manic episode.
Time to occurrence of a manic episode measured by Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) score of 15 or greater .
Time frame: 52 weeks
Time to depressive episode
Time to occurrence of a depressive episode measured by Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HAM-D) 21-item score of 15 or greater or a HAM-D suicide item score of 3 or greater.
Time frame: 52 weeks
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5 to 25 mg/day
manufactured to mimic risperidone and olanzapine