|
The
following is a brief Article that appeared in the
Los Angeles Times recently:
No
option improves thought process or is tolerated
well, federal researchers report.
Despite the development of numerous modern drugs to
treat schizophrenia, the older, less expensive
option, clozapine, is still the most effective
treatment, according to a new study released today.
The study found that clozapine was able to control
some of the symptoms of schizophrenia and that a
higher percentage of patients could take it for
extended periods.
But even clozapine’s side affects was so serious
that only 40% of patients in the trial could stay on
the drug.
“None of the medications are sufficient for
treatment of this disorder,” said Dr. Thomas R.
Insel, Director of the National Institute of Mental
Health which funded the study. “We have to find a
new generation of medicine’s.”
The findings, reported in the American Journal of
Psychiatry, came from a major federal study designed
to outline the best protocols for treating reading
the estimated 3.2 million Americans suffering from
one of the most severely debilitating mental
disorders.
People with schizophrenia suffer from hallucinations
and delusions, often hearing voices in their heads.
They also felt thought impairments – they are often
unable to hold a thought for more than a few
seconds, for example. Patients often say they have
“a poverty of thought, as if they’re brain has
stopped working and they are dead inside,” Insel
said.
All of the drugs now in use can minimize or
eliminate the hallucinations and delusions, but none
improved thought processes.
Only about 10% of schizophrenics are able to hold a
job, and fewer than 10% are married Insel said.
The $45 million clinical Anti-psychotics trials of
intervention effectiveness were designed to compare
various drugs for treatment and to determine which
drugs were best if the first one failed. Eventually,
the researchers hope to find the best treatment path
for patients.
First, researchers enrolled 1,493 stations with
long-standing schizophrenia and randomly assigned
them either to receive one of four so-called
second-generation anti-psychotics-Olanzapine (trade
named Zyprexa), Quetiapine (Seroquel), Risperidone (Risperdal)
or Ziprasidone (Geodon) – or to receive an older
drug, Perphanazine.
The results from that phase, released in September,
were “sobering,” said Dr. Carol A Tamminga of the
University of Texas Southwestern medical school, who
wrote an editorial accompanying the today’s studies.
Only 26% of the patients were able to stay on their
drug for the full 18 months of the study. The rest
quit because they didn’t think the drug helped or
they couldn’t tolerate the side effects.
“All the drugs are helpful, but they are helpful
only if people stay on them, Insels said.
None of the drugs stood out in the study. Olanzapine
was slightly better, but it also had a higher level
of side effects, including weight gain, and diabetes
and other problems.
In the second phase reported today, patients for
whom the first drugs didn’t work were randomly
assigned a different drug.
This time the researchers included clozapine, a drug
that is rarely used now because intensive medical
monitoring is required to prevent potentially
life-threatening side effects.
Dr. Joseph P. McEvoy of DukeUniversity medical
Center and his colleagues reported the Clozapine was
substantially more effective than the others.
Twenty out of 45 patients who received it were able
to stay on Clozapine for the length of the study,
compared with only eight of 45 who received one of
the other drugs.
These patients were seriously ill, McEvoy said, “40%
(success with clozapine) isn’t but the other agents
really don’t offer much from us for patients.
Added Tamminga: “the evidence, clearer than many
clinicians might have believed, is that clozapine is
the only rational alternative” if one of the new
drugs doesn’t work.
In a separate part of the trial patients who could
not tolerate the side effects with their first drug
and who were not willing to take clozapine were
randomly assigned to receive a different
second-generation drug.”
Dr. T. Scott Stroup of the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill and his colleagues reported
that 74% of the patients stop taking their drugs
before the end of the study.
About 35% of the patients who took Olanzapine or
Risperidone were able to tolerate the drugs,
compared with 23% of those who took Ziprasidone and
16% of those who received Quetiapine.
“This is a very serious illness, and the medications
all have substantial limitations", Stroup concluded.
The Anne Sippi Foundation believes that without
psychotherapy and psycho-social rehabilitation,
medication will always be limited.
Back to Top
|