The purpose of this study is to evaluate the factors affecting the occurrence of adverse drug reactions (glucose and lipid metabolism abnormality, changes in liver function index and sleeping tendency) and clinical effects in schizophrenia patients with clozapine treatment
1. The baseline tests (sleeping tendency assessment, clinical symptom and cognitive assessments, clinical laboratory tests, genotyping, exploratory biomarker tests, etc.) are conducted to the schizophrenia patients before initiation of the clozapine dosing. 2. On day 15 and 57, the changes from baseline clinical symptom and cognitive function are assessed after clozapine treatment. Also, the occurrence of adverse drug reactions are evaluated. In addition, blood sample collections are performed for the assessment of clozapine and its metabolite levels.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
100
Clozapine is administered orally according to individual prescribed dosing regimens.
Seoul National University Bundang Hospital
Seongnam, South Korea
RECRUITINGGlucose and lipid metabolism abnormality
Change from baseline glucose and lipid profiles after clozapine administration
Time frame: Change from baseline glucose and lipid profiles on Day 15, and 57
Liver function abnormality
Change from baseline liver function test
Time frame: Change from baseline liver function test on Day 15, and 57
Sleeping tendency assessment
Epworth sleepiness scale (ESS). * ESS is comprised of eight questions, each asking about the subject's likelihood of dozing off or falling asleep in a particular situation that is commonly met in daily life. * Each ESS item score measures a particular "situational sleep propensity", and respondents use a four-point scale from 0 (no chance of dozing/falling asleep) to 3 (high chance of dozing/falling asleep) for each of the eight questions. * The sum of eight item scores (the total ESS score) measures the subject's average sleep propensity across those different situations in daily life. A total ESS score of 16-24 points indicates severe excessive daytime sleepiness.
Time frame: Change from baseline sleeping tendency assessment on Day 15, and 57
Cognitive function assessment
MCCB (MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery).
Time frame: Change from baseline MCCB on Day 57, and 127
Clinical symptom assessment
Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS). * BPRS is a 24-item scale that measures psychiatric symptoms such as depression, anxiety, hallucinations and unusual behaviour. * Each symptom is rated on a scale from 1(not present) to 7(extremely severe). * The sum of all 24 items is then calculated to a maximum score of 168. The higher the score, the more psychiatrically impaired the patient is.
Time frame: Change from baseline BPRS on Day 15, and 57
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