Petros Drosos, Erik Johnsen, Christoffer Andreas Bartz-Johannessen, Tor Ketil Larsen, Solveig Klæbo Reitan, Maria Rettenbacher, Rune Andreas Kroken
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Schizophrenia is a serious mental disorder, and monitoring remission is a widely used measure of effectiveness of the treatment provided. It is very important to identify possible factors correlating with remission. In our substudy of BeSt InTro, a randomized controlled trial of three antipsychotic drugs, 126 patients with ICD-10 diagnoses F20-29 (F23 excluded) were randomized to one of the second-generation antipsychotic drugs amisulpride, aripiprazole or olanzapine. Remission rate was calculated at seven assessment points, with and without using the time criterion of six months included in the consensus remission criteria. Because of drop-out (n = 77), we had data for 49 patients at one-year follow-up. These data were used to calculate the one-year remission rate to 55 % (27/49), without taking into consideration the 6-month time criterion. When we applied the consensus remission criteria with the 6-month time criterion included, the one-year remission rate was calculated for 59 patients: 29 % (17/59). Antipsychotic drug naivety and low negative symptom load at baseline correlated highly with belonging to the remission group. Use of amisulpride was more probable to lead to remission than that of aripiprazole, but it was not more probable than the use of olanzapine (in per-protocol analyses). Negative symptoms showed the largest resistance to treatment. The lack of remission for the majority of the participants in this closely monitored antipsychotic drug trial is alarming and could act as a reminder that novel treatment principles are needed, especially targeted towards the negative symptoms in schizophrenia.
期刊介绍:
As official journal of the Schizophrenia International Research Society (SIRS) Schizophrenia Research is THE journal of choice for international researchers and clinicians to share their work with the global schizophrenia research community. More than 6000 institutes have online or print (or both) access to this journal - the largest specialist journal in the field, with the largest readership!
Schizophrenia Research''s time to first decision is as fast as 6 weeks and its publishing speed is as fast as 4 weeks until online publication (corrected proof/Article in Press) after acceptance and 14 weeks from acceptance until publication in a printed issue.
The journal publishes novel papers that really contribute to understanding the biology and treatment of schizophrenic disorders; Schizophrenia Research brings together biological, clinical and psychological research in order to stimulate the synthesis of findings from all disciplines involved in improving patient outcomes in schizophrenia.