Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00246246

A Randomized, Open-label Trial of Long-acting Injectable Risperidone Versus Oral Antipsychotic Medication in Patients With Bipolar Disorder

A Randomized, Open-label Trial of RISPERDAL® CONSTA™ Versus Oral Antipsychotic Care in Subjects With Bipolar Disorder

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
48 (actual)
Sponsor
Janssen-Ortho Inc., Canada · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine the safety and effectiveness of a long-acting injectable formulation of risperidone in stable bipolar patients randomly switched from their current add-on oral antipsychotic (olanzapine, risperidone, or quetiapine) therapy to long-acting injectable risperidone. The patients switched to long-acting injectable risperidone will be compared to patients who continue on their oral antipsychotic treatment regimen

Detailed description

This an open-label, randomized study. Approximately 40 stable bipolar patients who are on an atypical antipsychotic (olanzapine, risperidone, quetiapine) plus adjunct bipolar treatment consisting of (a maximum or two of lithium, valproate or lamotrigine, and, if applicable, one antidepressant) will be randomized to two arms. In one arm, 25 milligrams of long-acting injectable risperidone will replace the oral atypical antipsychotic as adjunct therapy and in the other arm, patients will continue with their current atypical antipsychotic therapy. Trial duration is 6 months. In the long-acting injectable risperidone arm, the oral atypical antipsychotic will be continued (as supplementation) for 3 weeks after the first injection of long-acting risperidone and then discontinued. Investigators, based upon the patient's response, may increase the dose of injectable risperidone to 37.5 mg after 6 weeks on the 25-mg dose and to 50 mg after at least 4 weeks on the 37.5-mg dose. Risperidone oral supplementation is allowed. In the oral antipsychotic only arm, the oral atypical antipsychotic dose can also be increased as required. The primary efficacy outcome will be measured by changes in the Clinical Global Impression - Severity of Illness subscale (CGI-S), from baseline to endpoint, and will be compared between the treatment groups. Safety will be monitored throughout the study. The primary hypothesis is that patients switched to long-acting injectable risperidone will be able to tolerate this formulation of risperidone and maintain or even improve their reduction in bipolar symptomatology compared with baseline, and compared with subjects who continue in the oral antipsychotic arm. The secondary hypothesis is that patients switched to long-acting injectable risperidone will have a longer time to intervention for a mood episode (either mania or depression) as compared with subjects who continue in the oral antipsychotic arm. Risperidone, formulated for intramuscular injection, 25 mg every 2 weeks. Patients treated with injectable risperidone continue their original oral atypical antipsychotic (AAP) dose for 3 weeks. Investigators, at their discretion, may increase the dose of injectable risperidone to 37.5 mg after 6 weeks on the 25-mg dose and to 50 mg after at least 4 weeks on the 37.5-mg dose. Study duration is 6 months.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGrisperidone

Timeline

Start date
2004-01-01
Completion
2006-04-01
First posted
2005-10-31
Last updated
2011-02-11

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00246246. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.