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Longitudinal trajectory analysis of antipsychotic response in patients with schizophrenia: 6-week, randomised, open-label, multicentre clinical trial

Authors :
Minhan Dai
Yulu Wu
Yiguo Tang
Weihua Yue
Hao Yan
Yamin Zhang
Liwen Tan
Wei Deng
Qi Chen
Guigang Yang
Tianlan Lu
Lifang Wang
Fude Yang
Fuquan Zhang
Jianli Yang
Keqing Li
Luxian Lv
Qingrong Tan
Hongyan Zhang
Xin Ma
Lingjiang Li
Chuanyue Wang
Xiaohong Ma
Dai Zhang
Hao Yu
Liansheng Zhao
Hongyan Ren
Yingcheng Wang
Xun Hu
Guangya Zhang
Xiaodong Du
Qiang Wang
Tao Li
Source :
BJPsych Open, Vol 6 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2020.

Abstract

Background Understanding the patterns of treatment response is critical for the treatment of patients with schizophrenia; one way to achieve this is through using a longitudinal dynamic process study design. Aims This study aims to explore the response trajectory of antipsychotics and compare the treatment responses of seven different antipsychotics over 6 weeks in patients with schizoprenia (trial registration: Chinese Clinical Trials Registry Identifier: ChiCTR-TRC-10000934). Method Data were collected from a multicentre, randomised open-label clinical trial. Patients were evaluated with the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) at baseline and follow-up at weeks 2, 4 and 6. Trajectory groups were classified by the method of k-means cluster modelling for longitudinal data. Trajectory analyses were also employed for the seven antipsychotic groups. Results The early treatment response trajectories were classified into a high-trajectory group of better responders and a low-trajectory group of worse responders. The results of trajectory analysis showed differences compared with the classification method characterised by a 50% reduction in PANSS scores at week 6. A total of 349 patients were inconsistently grouped by the two methods, with a significant difference in the composition ratio of treatment response groups using these two methods (χ2 = 43.37, P < 0.001). There was no differential contribution of high- and low trajectories to different drugs (χ2 = 12.52, P = 0.051); olanzapine and risperidone, which had a larger proportion in the >50% reduction at week 6, performed better than aripiprazole, quetiapine, ziprasidone and perphenazine. Conclusions The trajectory analysis of treatment response to schizophrenia revealed two distinct trajectories. Comparing the treatment responses to different antipsychotics through longitudinal analysis may offer a new perspective for evaluating antipsychotics.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20564724
Volume :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BJPsych Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3d80979428d4eea9143014ea604dce7
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2020.105