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PW01-60 - Similar Short- And Long-Term Efficacy Results Of Aripiprazole In Post-Pubertal Adolescents (Ages 15-17) And Adults With Schizophrenia

Authors :
N. Jin
Christoph U. Correll
W. Landsberg
Margaretta Nyilas
Robert A. Forbes
William H. Carson
J.-Y. Loze
Source :
European Psychiatry. 25:1-1
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2010.

Abstract

IntroductionAvailable data suggest that sex hormone levels during puberty may affect symptom onset and expression, treatment responsiveness and outcomes in schizophrenia, whereas post-pubertal adolescents may have a similar clinical presentation and treatment response compared to adults with schizophrenia.ObjectivesPost-hoc analyses were conducted to assess the similarity of short- and long-term efficacy between post-pubertal adolescents and adults with schizophrenia treated with aripiprazole.MethodsBased on available European epidemiologic data, a cut-off age of 15 years was used to isolate a subgroup of mostly post-pubertal adolescents with schizophrenia in aripiprazole clinical studies. Outcome measures from this subgroup (ages 15-17; n=147) were then compared to outcomes from one adult study (n=853) on short and long-term measures of efficacy, including PANSS scores, response rates, and remission rates.ResultsComparable short and long-term treatment effects were observed on the PANSS total and subscale scores, demonstrated by overlapping 95% confidence intervals (mean change from baseline in PANSS total score (OC dataset): at week 6 in adults: -27,7; in adolescents 15-17 yr: -29,6; at week 30 in adults: -39,2; in adolescents 15-17 yr: -36). Percent of adolescents achieving response (defined as ≥ 30% decrease in PANSS total score from baseline) at 32 weeks (80,2%) on open label treatment was similar to that in adult studies at week 34 (80%) on double blind treatment (OC dataset).ConclusionsAdolescents with schizophrenia (ages 15-17, mostly post-pubertal) demonstrate a positive treatment response in short-term and long-term studies which is similar to that observed in the adult patient population.

Details

ISSN :
17783585 and 09249338
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........50f4ae880f0002138ba18d2aadc1e0c5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0924-9338(10)71459-0