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Effectiveness of Lurasidone for Patients With Schizophrenia Following 6 Weeks of Acute Treatment With Lurasidone, Olanzapine, or Placebo

Authors :
Jay Hsu
Josephine Cucchiaro
Doreen Simonelli
Stephen M. Stahl
Antony Loebel
Andrei Pikalov
Source :
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. 74:507-515
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc, 2013.

Abstract

Objective: The primary objective was to evaluate the safety and tolerability of lurasidone, a new atypical antipsychotic agent, in the longer-term treatment of schizophrenia (DSM-IV). Persistence of symptom improvement was assessed as a secondary outcome. Method: Patients who completed a 6-week, doubleblind, placebo-controlled study evaluating the efficacy of fixed doses of once-daily lurasidone (40 or 120 mg) or olanzapine 15 mg (to confirm assay sensitivity) were eligible to receive flexibly dosed lurasidone 40 to 120 mg/d in this 6-month, open-label extension study (conducted from March 2008 to December 2009). Assessments of safety and tolerability were conducted at open-label baseline, at day 10, and monthly thereafter. Results: Of 254 enrolled patients, 113 (44.5%) completed 6 months of open-label treatment. During the open-label study (month 6 observed cases), small decreases were observed in mean weight (−0.1 kg) and median lipid levels (total cholesterol, −6.5 mg/dL; lowdensity lipoprotein, 0.0 mg/dL; high-density lipoprotein, 0.0 mg/dL; triglycerides, −8.5 mg/dL). Patients previously treated with olanzapine (n = 69) experienced decrease in weight and improvement in lipid levels, whereas patients previously treated with lurasidone (n = 115) or placebo (n = 62) experienced minimal changes. No clinically meaningful changes were observed in median prolactin levels. The 2 most commonly reported adverse events were akathisia (13.0%) and insomnia (11.0%). Persistent antipsychotic efficacy of lurasidone was shown for patients who had previously received lurasidone, olanzapine, or placebo; further reductions from open-label baseline to final visit were observed in mean PANSS total score (−8.7) for all patients. Conclusions: Open-label treatment with flexibly dosed lurasidone (40–120 mg/d) was generally safe, well tolerated, and effective over a 6-month period in patients who had completed a preceding 6-week, double-blind study. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00615433

Details

ISSN :
01606689
Volume :
74
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6005e5ef2c9d1c0e53a8cfe9a801e577
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4088/jcp.12m08084