Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00294008

A Study to Evaluate Treatment Adherence in Schizophrenia With Long Acting Risperidone Microspheres (e-STAR)

Electronic Schizophrenia Treatment Adherence Registry(e-STAR): An Observational, International Study to Evaluate Treatment Adherence in Schizophrenia With Long Acting Risperidone Microspheres

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
230 (actual)
Sponsor
Janssen Korea, Ltd., Korea · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study is a non-interventional web based registry designed to assess demographic, treatment and outcomes data in patients receiving treatment with long-acting injectable risperidone. One year retrospective data and 2 year prospective data will be collected.

Detailed description

This study is a multicentre, retrospective and prospective observational, cohort design, determining aggregate drug usage patterns and commonly used clinical outcomes associated with the use of long-acting injectable risperidone. The objectives of this study are to collect sufficient retrospective outcome data to allow the evaluation of treatment outcomes with long acting medication compared to previous treatments and to document clinical effectiveness and long-term treatment outcomes in actual practice. Additional objectives are to prospectively assess medication usage patterns and to evaluate reasons for initiation and/or discontinuation of new antipsychotic medications. The study design is a non-interventional, single-arm, observational survey on the use of long-acting injectable risperidone and other long-acting (depot) or oral atypical antipsychotics, with the aim to assess patient outcomes by existing risk or disease factors, patient characteristics, or previous medication. Having reached agreement with the patient on starting treatment with long-acting injectable risperidone, physicians have the opportunity to document the patient's clinical data in the Registry. At baseline, data will be collected retrospectively over a minimum period of 12-months per patient. Data will be collected prospectively over a 24-month period per patient at approximately 3-month intervals after starting treatment. This study will document data of patients for whom treatment with the new antipsychotic medication is indicated, and who are being treated according to the local label. The start date for collecting data is the date the new antipsychotic treatment is initiated, whether as inpatient or outpatient. The preceding 12 months and the next 2 years are respectively for each patient the retrospective and prospective periods of interest. All patients starting with a new antipsychotic medication, decided after agreement between the physician and the patient, in accordance with the local label, are eligible for inclusion in this survey. While patients participating in randomized clinical trials are not excluded, their participation will be noted. Data will be entered by the treating physician. All data collected must be the result of the normal medical care of the patient. No intervention on treatment decisions permitted. The patient's baseline data will be collected within the first week following initiation of the new antipsychotic treatment. Prospective data collection has to occur 3 months, 6 months, 9 months, 12 months, 15 months, 18 months, 21 months and 24 months after initiation of the new antipsychotic treatment. If a patient stops the newly initiated antipsychotic treatment the reason for discontinuation has to be reported. Patients discontinuing newly initiated antipsychotic treatment will continue to be followed for up to 24 months. In retrospective period the following treatment outcomes will be assessed: patient characteristics, treatment history with antipsychotics and other concomitant medication, hospitalization history, reason for initiating the new antipsychotic treatment, treatment satisfaction, remission, clinical global impression (CGI-severity), global assessment of functioning (GAF) and clinical deterioration. In prospective period clinical effectiveness will be assessing the following: employment status, remission, treatment satisfaction, CGI-severity, GAF, clinical deterioration, hospitalization, treatment adherence and (serious) adverse events. Long-acting injectable risperidone is flexible dose (25mg to 75mg), intramuscular injection given into gluteus for 24 months

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGRisperdal Constaflexible dosage for 24 months

Timeline

Start date
2004-12-01
Primary completion
2009-06-01
Completion
2009-06-01
First posted
2006-02-20
Last updated
2014-04-03

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00294008. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.