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Discontinuation and remission rates and social functioning in patients with schizophrenia receiving second‐generation antipsychotics: 52‐week evaluation of <scp>JUMPs</scp>, a randomized, open‐label study

Jun Ishigooka, Kazuyuki Nakagome, Tetsuro Ohmori, Nakao Iwata, Ken Inada, Jun‐ichi Iga, Taro Kishi, Kiyoshi Fujita, Yuka Kikuchi, Toshiaki Shichijo, Hideaki Tabuse, Shotatsu Koretsune, Hiroshi Terada, Haruko Terada, Taishiro Kishimoto, Yuichiro Tsutsumi, Yoshiki Kanda, Kazutaka Ohi, Kanji Sekiyama

2021Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIM: Globally, evidence from short-term studies is insufficient for the guidelines to uniformly recommend a particular antipsychotic(s) for the maintenance treatment of schizophrenia. Therefore, long-term comprehensive evaluation of antipsychotics is required from a social rehabilitation perspective, especially for drugs that have not yet been studied. The Japan Useful Medication Program for Schizophrenia (JUMPs) is a large-scale, long-term naturalistic study to present pivotal 52-week data on the continuity of second-generation antipsychotics (SGA: aripiprazole, blonanserin, and paliperidone). METHODS: JUMPs was an open-label, three-arm, randomized, parallel-group, 52-week study. Enrolled patients had schizophrenia, were ≥20 years old, and required antipsychotic treatment or switched from previous therapy. The primary endpoint was treatment discontinuation rate over 52 weeks. Secondary outcomes included remission rate, social functioning, and quality-of-life scores [Personal and Social Performance Scale (PSP) and EuroQol-5 dimensions], and safety. RESULTS: In total, 251 patients received aripiprazole (n = 82), blonanserin (n = 85), or paliperidone (n = 84). The discontinuation rate (P = 0.9771) and remission rates (P > 0.05) over 52 weeks did not differ significantly between the three treatment groups. The discontinuation rates were 68.3%, 68.2%, and 65.5% in the aripiprazole, blonanserin, and paliperidone groups, respectively. Significant improvements (all P < 0.05) from baseline in PSP scores were observed at start of monotherapy, week 26, and week 52 in the overall cohort and blonanserin group and at week 26 in the aripiprazole group. The adverse event profile favored blonanserin. CONCLUSION: All three SGAs evaluated in this study showed similar treatment discontinuation rates in patients with chronic schizophrenia in Japan.

Topics & Concepts

AripiprazoleDiscontinuationPaliperidonePositive and Negative Syndrome ScaleSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)AntipsychoticRandomized controlled trialMedicineInternal medicineAtypical antipsychoticAdverse effectPsychologyPsychiatryQuality of life (healthcare)Physical therapyPediatricsPsychosisPsychotherapistSchizophrenia research and treatmentHealthcare Decision-Making and RestraintsMental Health and Psychiatry
Discontinuation and remission rates and social functioning in patients with schizophrenia receiving second‐generation antipsychotics: 52‐week evaluation of <scp>JUMPs</scp>, a randomized, open‐label study | Litcius