Factors Associated With Relapse In Schizophrenia Despite Adherence To Long-Acting Injectable Antipsychotic Therapy

INTERNATIONAL CLINICAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY(2016)

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Abstract
Many patients with schizophrenia will relapse despite uninterrupted antipsychotic (AP) long-acting therapy (LAT). This exploratory analysis examined variables associated with relapse despite ensured adherence to LAT. This was a post-hoc exploratory analysis of a 1-year study of risperidone long-acting injection in patients with stable schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder (NCT00297388; N = 323). Patients were discontinued from previous oral APs and randomly assigned to biweekly intramuscular injections of risperidone long-acting injectable 50 (n = 163) or 25 mg (n = 161) for 52 weeks. Cox proportional hazards regression models examined variables putatively associated with relapse. A total of 59/323 (18.3%) patients relapsed over 12 months despite continuous AP LAT. Variables associated with the risk of relapse included illness duration (6.0% increase each year; P=0.0003) and country (Canada vs. USA, 4.7-fold risk increase; P=0.0008). When illness duration was further categorized as <= 5, 6-10, and > 10 years, patients with an illness duration of > 10 versus = 5 years were at greatest risk of relapse (> 10 vs. = 5 years associated with a 4.4-fold increase in the risk of relapse; P=0.0181). Findings suggest that patients with more chronic illness have a greater risk of relapse despite ensured treatment adherence, supporting the need for early intervention to prevent the deleterious effects of chronicity. Copyright (C) 2016 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Key words
antipsychotic agents, recurrence, schizophrenia
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