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Off-label long acting injectable antipsychotics in real-world clinical practice: a cross-sectional analysis of prescriptive patterns from the STAR Network DEPOT study

Authors :
D'Agostino, A
Aguglia, A
Barbui, C
Bartoli, F
Carra, G
Cavallotti, S
Chirico, M
Ostinelli, E
Zangani, C
Martinotti, G
Ostuzzi, G
D'Agostino A.
Aguglia A.
Barbui C.
Bartoli F.
Carra G.
Cavallotti S.
Chirico M.
Ostinelli E. G.
Zangani C.
Martinotti G.
Ostuzzi G.
D'Agostino, A
Aguglia, A
Barbui, C
Bartoli, F
Carra, G
Cavallotti, S
Chirico, M
Ostinelli, E
Zangani, C
Martinotti, G
Ostuzzi, G
D'Agostino A.
Aguglia A.
Barbui C.
Bartoli F.
Carra G.
Cavallotti S.
Chirico M.
Ostinelli E. G.
Zangani C.
Martinotti G.
Ostuzzi G.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Information on the off-label use of Long-Acting Injectable (LAI) antipsychotics in the real world is lacking. In this study, we aimed to identify the sociodemographic and clinical features of patients treated with on- vs off-label LAIs and predictors of off-label First- or Second-Generation Antipsychotic (FGA vs. SGA) LAI choice in everyday clinical practice. METHOD: In a naturalistic national cohort of 449 patients who initiated LAI treatment in the STAR Network Depot Study, two groups were identified based on off- or on-label prescriptions. A multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to test several clinically relevant variables and identify those associated with the choice of FGA vs SGA prescription in the off-label group. RESULTS: SGA LAIs were more commonly prescribed in everyday practice, without significant differences in their on- and off-label use. Approximately 1 in 4 patients received an off-label prescription. In the off-label group, the most frequent diagnoses were bipolar disorder (67.5%) or any personality disorder (23.7%). FGA vs SGA LAI choice was significantly associated with BPRS thought disorder (OR = 1.22, CI95% 1.04 to 1.43, p = 0.015) and hostility/suspiciousness (OR = 0.83, CI95% 0.71 to 0.97, p = 0.017) dimensions. The likelihood of receiving an SGA LAI grew steadily with the increase of the BPRS thought disturbance score. Conversely, a preference towards prescribing an FGA was observed with higher scores at the BPRS hostility/suspiciousness subscale. CONCLUSION: Our study is the first to identify predictors of FGA vs SGA choice in patients treated with off-label LAI antipsychotics. Demographic characteristics, i.e. age, sex, and substance/alcohol use co-morbidities did not appear to influence the choice towards FGAs or SGAs. Despite a lack of evidence, clinicians tend to favour FGA over SGA LAIs in bipolar or personality disorder patients with relevant hostility. Further research is needed to evaluate treatment adhere

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
ELETTRONICO, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1343244416
Document Type :
Electronic Resource