Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00378183

A Study Comparing Three Strategies to Switch Patients With Schizophrenia or Schizoaffective Disorder to Risperidone After Unsuccessful Treatment With Olanzapine.

A Randomized Open-Label, Rater Blinded Assessment of Optimal Treatment Change Strategy to Risperidone for Patients Intolerant of Olanzapine

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
120 (actual)
Sponsor
Janssen, LP · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to compare three strategies for switching patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder to the atypical antipsychotic, risperdone, after they have been unsuccessfully treated with another atypical antipsychotic, olanzapine. In the second phase of this study, investigators will assess the effectiveness of behavioral therapy in reducing body weight in risperdone-treated patients who are overweight or have problems with diabetes or blood sugar.

Detailed description

Data regarding the safety and effectiveness of different strategies for switching subjects with schizophrenia from one antipsychotic medication to another are very rare. Studies that have examined various switching designs, especially with regard to the newer atypical antipsychotic agents, suggest that either abrupt or gradual discontinuation does not inevitably lead to worsening of symptoms. This study is randomized (patients are assigned different treatments based on chance), open-label, with a parallel group design to assess the safety and effectiveness of each of three strategies of discontinuing olanzapine and starting risperidone. The first strategy is the discontinuation of olanzapine on the day risperidone is started. The second strategy involves a reduction in the dose of olanzapine to one half of the study entry dose on the day risperidone is started. The reduced dose of olanzapine is to be given for one week and then discontinued. In the third strategy, the dose of olanzapine remains unchanged for the first week, then is reduced by one half of the study entry dose, and at the end of the second week is discontinued. In all three strategies, patients take the same dose of risperidone: 1 mg by mouth twice a day for 3 days, then 2 mg twice a day for the next 4 days. Further increase or decrease of risperidone dose and/or changing to a single daily dose can be carried out at the end of the first week. Additionally, after 6 weeks of risperidone therapy, patients who are overweight or have problems with diabetes or blood sugar may enter a second phase of the study that examines weight loss. In this phase, patients are randomized to receive routine clinical care or training on weight management behavioral techniques while continuing to take risperidone for an additional 14 weeks. At the end of 14 weeks, total weight loss, changes in lipids, cholesterol and other laboratory measures will be compared between the two groups. The study hypothesis is that symptom improvement or worsening at week 14, as measured by total score on the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS), should not differ depending on the method of switching from olanzapine to risperidone. Safety evaluations incude collection of adverse events, clinical laboratory tests and assessment of vital signs. The patients will receive oral tablets of risperidone 1 to 2 milligram\[mg\] twice a day (higher or lower dose and/or changing to single daily dose allowed at end of the first week) for the duration of 6 weeks in phase 1, and then for 14 more weeks in phase 2 of the study. Olanzapine: none; or half of the study entry dose for 1 week; or study entry dose for 1 week, then half of the study entry dose for an additional week.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGrisperidone

Timeline

Start date
2001-02-01
Completion
2002-05-01
First posted
2006-09-19
Last updated
2010-04-27

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00378183. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.