Calendar

<<  September 2010  >>
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
303112345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930123
45678910

View posts in large calendar

New bipolar treatment 'as effective as olanzapine'

From Healthcare Republic:

A new atypical antipsychotic is an effective long-term treatment for patients with bipolar mania, according to recently released data.

The findings of an extension study presented at the 18th European Congress of Psychiatry in Munich on 28 February suggest that asenapine has comparable efficacy and tolerability to olanzapine (Zyprexa).

Asenapine is currently awaiting European approval for the treatment of schizophrenia and manic episodes associated with bipolar disorder. It has antagonist activity at a range of serotonin, alpha-adrenergic, dopamine and histamine receptors.

Schering-Plough (now Merck) applied in May 2009 for European approval to market asenapine, under the trade name Sycrest. The drug is already available in the US as Saphris.

Posted: 4/20/2010 11:43:00 AM

Currently rated 5.0 by 1 people

  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags: , , ,

More Antipsychotics Approved for Pediatric Use

From Psychiatric News:

Days before a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) advisory committee reviewed the safety concerns about antipsychotic drug use in pediatric patients, two additional antipsychotics, quetiapine and olanzapine, were approved by the agency for treating youth with schizophrenia and those with bipolar I disorder.

With these additions, four second-generation antipsychotics (SGAs) have been approved by the FDA for use in patients under age 18: risperidone, aripiprazole, quetiapine, and olanzapine. Indications are for the acute treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar I manic or mixed episodes based on three- to six-week clinical trials in pediatric and adolescent patients. Risperidone and aripiprazole have also been approved by the FDA to treat irritability associated with autistic disorders.

Other SGAs, including ziprasidone and paliperidone, and recently approved iloperidone and asenapine, are not approved for pediatric use but are sometimes prescribed off-label for children and adolescents.

In the past decade, mounting research evidence has linked SGAs to significant weight gain, increased blood glucose and cholesterol levels, and endocrine abnormalities in adult and underage patients.
At a public meeting held last December 8, representatives from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Antipsychotics Safety Therapeutic Working Group told the FDA's Pediatric Advisory Committee that the lack of knowledge about these drugs in the pediatric population is worrisome. A number of published epidemiological studies suggest that children may experience more dramatic weight gain and worse metabolic effects on SGAs compared with adults, the working group reported. Most recently, a study in the October 28, 2009, Journal of the American Medical Association showed that first-time SGA use was associated with a large increase in cardiometabolic risks in patients aged 4 to 19. The study found that average weight gain in youth taking SGAs ranged from 4.4 kg (aripiprazole) to 8.5 kg (olanzapine) after a median of 10.8 weeks.

The working group urged the FDA and National Institutes of Health to fund and conduct postmarketing studies, both retrospective and prospective, to clarify the long-term effectiveness and safety of SGAs in children and adolescents.

Posted: 2/24/2010 9:22:00 AM

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags: , , , , , ,

Big Weight Gain For Kids on Psych Drugs

From TIME:

Children on widely used psychiatric drugs can quickly gain an alarming amount of weight; many pack on nearly 20 pounds and become obese within just 11 weeks, a study found.

Weight gain is a known possible side effect of the anti-psychotic drugs which are prescribed for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, but also increasingly for autism, attention deficit disorders and other behavior problems. The new study in mostly older children and teens suggests they may be more vulnerable to weight gain than adults.

The study also linked some of these drugs with worrisome increases in blood fats including cholesterol, also seen in adults. Researchers tie these changes to weight gain and worry that both may make children more prone to heart problems in adulthood.

The study authors said their results show that children on the drugs should be closely monitored for weight gain and other side effects, and that when possible, other medicines should be tried first.

The study appears in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association. It involved 205 New York City-area children from 4 to 19 years old who had recently been prescribed one of the drugs; the average age was 14.

Depending on which of four study drugs children used, they gained between about 10 and 20 pounds on average in almost 11 weeks; from 10 percent to 36 percent became obese.

The drugs are Abilify, Risperdal, Seroquel and Zyprexa. Of the four, Seroquel and Zyprexa are not yet approved for children, and they had the worst effects on weight and cholesterol. However, a government advisory panel recently voted in favor of pediatric use for the two drugs, and the Food and Drug Administration often follows its advisers' recommendations.

The drugs' makers said these problems are known side effects but emphasized the drugs' benefits in helping patients cope with serious mental illness.

The four drugs have been considered safer than older anti-psychotic drugs, which can cause sometimes permanent involuntary muscle twitches and tics. That has contributed to widespread use of the newer drugs, including for less severe behavior problems, a JAMA editorial said.

The number of children using these drugs has soared to more than 2 million annually, according to one estimate.

Why these drugs cause weight gain is uncertain but there's some evidence that they increase appetite and they may affect how the body metabolizes sugar, said Jeff Bishop, a psychiatric pharmacist at the University of Illinois at Chicago. The drugs also can have a sedation effect that can make users less active.

Posted: 10/28/2009 9:17:00 AM

Currently rated 5.0 by 1 people

  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Older schizophrenia drug safer than more widely prescribed ones

From Los Angeles Times:

Schizophrenics taking the first -- and cheapest -- of a new generation of antipsychotic medications, clozapine, were less likely to suffer premature death than patients taking the newer, costlier and more widely prescribed antipsychotic drugs Seroquel, Risperdal and Zyprexa, says a study published in the British medical journal Lancet.

Researchers in Finland, where clozapine is still widely prescribed for schizophrenia patients, found that users of the drug were less likely to die than those who took any one of three other second-generation (also called "atypical") antipsychotics -- Seroquel, Risperdal and Zyprexa -- or those who took the first generation schizophrenia medication pherphenazine (once marketed as Trilafon).

Clozapine, sold now as a generic medication but also marketed as Clozaril, is currently recommended for use only when a patient's schizophrenia symptoms -- most notably hallucinations, confused thinking and emotional reactions -- fail to improve with use oftwo other antipsychotic medications. Clozapine was briefly taken off the European market -- and has been the subject of strong warnings in the United States -- because its use raises a patient's risk of a potentially deadly blood disorder called agranulocytosis. Patients taking Clozaril are to undergo routine blood checks to ensure they do not develop the decrease in white blood cells.

Finnish researchers reviewed the 1996-2006 death records of 66,881 patients who had taken one of the studied antipsychotic drugs, and compared them withpatients taking pherphenazine, an older drug considered one of the safest of the first generation. Patients taking Seroquel (also known as quetiapine) were 41% more likely to die prematurely; those taking Risperdal (risperidone) were 34% more likely to die early; those taking Zyprexa (olanzapine) were 13% more likely to die early.

Patients on Clozaril were 26% less likely than those on pherphenazine to die an early death. That finding led the researchers to urge that physicians and drug-safety agencies reconsider their warnings against Clozaril's use as a first-line drug.

Sufferers of schizophrenia have long been known to die earlier than the general population, markedly more often by suicide and by complications of diabetes. They are far more likely to engage in behaviors that lead to earlier death as well, including tobacco use, substance abuse and sedentary lifestyles. The Lancet article found that a schizophrenia patient who took any of the studied medications for seven to 11 years was less likely to die prematurely. And the longer she took it, the less likely she was to die an early death.

American physicians have largely abandoned Clozaril, which has been on the U.S. market since 1989, in favor of Zyprexa, Seroquel, Risperdal and Abilify -- all newer drugs that have been aggressively marketed to doctors and patients as safer and more effective than the first-generation of antipsychotic drugs, including pherphenazine and haliperidol (better known by its commercial name, Haldol).

In 2008, 50 million prescriptions for antipsychotic drugs -- overwhelmingly the newer ones -- were filled. The FDA is now considering whether to allow Seroquel to be prescribed for treatment-resistant depression, and to older children diagnosed with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. 

Posted: 7/15/2009 12:03:00 PM

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags: , , , , ,

Olanzapine Long-Acting Injection (LAI) Shown to Maintain Treatment Benefit in Schizophrenia for up to Six Months

From MarketWatch:

Final results from a 24-week study presented today at a major medical meeting in Barcelona suggest that investigational olanzapine long-acting injection (LAI) therapeutic doses showed a maintenance of treatment benefit for up to six months. A review of pooled safety data from all olanzapine LAI clinical trials was also presented at the meeting.

Olanzapine LAI is an investigational formulation that combines Zyprexa(R) (olanzapine), an atypical antipsychotic, with pamoic acid resulting in a salt that sustains the delivery of olanzapine for a period of up to four weeks. Long-acting injectable antipsychotics have been associated with improved treatment of schizophrenia in patients who have difficulty adhering to daily treatment regimens.

"These studies offer insight into the role olanzapine LAI may play in the treatment of patients with schizophrenia who have benefited from olanzapine but continue to struggle with adherence," said David McDonnell, M.D., clinical research physician at Lilly. "If approved, olanzapine LAI could be a valuable treatment option due to the chronic and severe nature of schizophrenia, persistent challenges with adherence and the limited number of available depot formulations."

Independent regulatory reviews of olanzapine LAI applications are ongoing in the European Union, Canada, Australia and United States. Olanzapine LAI is currently being reviewed by CHMP and submission to regulators to obtain country-specific marketing approval is dependent upon a CHMP opinion.

Posted: 9/2/2008 12:41:00 PM

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags: , ,

Estrogen may ease schizophrenia in women: study

From Reuters:

Adding estrogen to routine medication helped reduce the number of psychotic symptoms in women with schizophrenia, researchers said on Monday.

Women given an estrogen patch in addition to their other drugs had fewer delusions and hallucinations than those who got a placebo, they said.

"Estrogen treatment is a promising new area for future treatment of schizophrenia and potentially for other severe mental illnesses," Jayashri Kulkarni of The Alfred and Monash University in Melbourne, Australia and colleagues wrote in the journal Archives of General Psychiatry.

Schizophrenia affects about 1.1 percent of the population age 18 and older in any given year, according to the National Institutes of Mental Health.

The disorder is far more common in men than in women and is usually diagnosed in late adolescence or early adulthood. Women with schizophrenia typically have their first episode about five years later than men.

Kulkarni and colleagues wanted to see if estrogen offered a kind of protective effect in women vulnerable to the disease.

They studied the effects of estradiol, a form of estrogen, in 102 women of childbearing age with schizophrenia.

They gave 56 women 100 mg of estradiol each day for 28 days via skin patches; 46 women got placebo skin patches. All took their regular medications, which most commonly included an atypical antipsychotic agent, such as Eli Lilly's Zyprexa, also known as olanzapine.

At the end of the study, the researchers found that women given estradiol had more improvement in their psychotic symptoms compared with the group that got a placebo.

They also experienced a decline in so-called positive symptoms of the disease, which include things like distorted thinking. But there was no change in negative symptoms, such as social or emotional withdrawal.

The researchers said negative symptoms tend to be more difficult to treat, and a longer study would be needed to show a benefit there.

If given over short periods, they said estrogen therapy may be useful in women with schizophrenia after childbirth or menopause, when women with the disease are more prone to relapse.

Posted: 8/5/2008 8:57:00 AM

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags: , ,