Litcius/Paper detail

Persistence and adherence to second-generation antipsychotic long-acting injectable medications for schizophrenia: A comparative study in the Australian context

Nagesh Pai, Andrew B. McGeachie, Andrea Puig, Tom Huang, Prachi Brahmbhatt

2022Australasian Psychiatry10 citationsDOI

Abstract

Objective To examine patient characteristics, persistence and adherence to treatment associated with use of second-generation antipsychotic long-acting injectable (SGA LAI) medications in the Australian real-world setting. Method Five SGA LAIs were compared using a retrospective 10% sample of prescriptions in Australian Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) data: paliperidone palmitate 1-monthly (PP1M), paliperidone palmitate 3-monthly (PP3M), aripiprazole monohydrate (ARI), risperidone (RLAI) and olanzapine pamoate (OLAI). Results Patients in the PP3M cohort were more persistent with treatment ( p < 0.001). Median months of persistence: PP3M (36 months); ARI (18 months); PP1M (11 months); OLAI (8 months); RLAI (4 months). Patients in the PP3M cohort were more adherent to treatment ( p < 0.001): PP3M (78%); ARI (51%); PP1M (46%); OLAI (35%); RLAI (33%). Conclusions Patients on PP3M treatment showed comparatively longer persistence and better adherence. Treatments for schizophrenia with longer dosing intervals may provide patients with symptomatic stability that could allow for reduced hospitalisations/relapse and increased focus on functional recovery.

Topics & Concepts

Paliperidone PalmitateRisperidoneMedicinePaliperidoneContext (archaeology)AntipsychoticSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)OlanzapineAripiprazoleCohortPersistence (discontinuity)Internal medicineRetrospective cohort studyPsychiatryBiologyGeotechnical engineeringEngineeringPaleontologySchizophrenia research and treatmentHealthcare Decision-Making and RestraintsFamily Caregiving in Mental Illness