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Comparison of Risperidone and Olanzapine in the Control of Negative Symptoms of Chronic Schizophrenia and Related Psychotic Disorders in Patients Aged 50 to 65 Years

Authors :
Gary D. Tollefson
Virginia K. Sutton
Christopher Kaiser
Pierre V. Tran
John S. Kennedy
Peter D. Feldman
Fan Zhang
Alan Breier
Source :
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. 64:998-1004
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc, 2003.

Abstract

Background: This analysis compares the efficacy of risperidone and olanzapine in controlling negative and positive symptoms of chronic psychosis in older patients. Method: Post hoc assessments were made in a subset of risperidone-treated (N = 19) and olanzapine-treated (N = 20) older patients (aged 50 to 65 years) from a large international, multicenter, parallel, double-blind, 28-week study of patients aged 18 to 65 years (N = 339) randomly assigned to receive risperidone (4-12 mg/day) or olanzapine (10-20 mg/day). Assessments were made using repeated-measures analysis. Results: At both 8 weeks and 28 weeks, the magnitude of changes in Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) positive symptom subscale scores did not differ between treatment groups (8 weeks: risperidone, -6.5; olanzapine, -6.8, p = .866; 28 weeks: risperidone, -6.5; olanzapine, -7.0; p = .804). However, by the 8-week timepoint, olanzapine had reduced PANSS negative subscale scores significantly more than risperidone (-8.8 vs. -4.9, p = .032). By the 28-week endpoint, olanzapine had continued to maintain significantly greater reduction in baseline-to-endpoint PANSS negative scores (-8.1 vs. -3.5, p = .032) and led to significantly greater reduction in scores on the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms (SANS) dimensions of affective flattening (-5.2 vs. -0.6, p = .033) and alogia (-3.8 vs. -0.3, p = .007). Patients in the olanzapine treatment group also demonstrated numerically greater reduction of both SANS summary (-3.7 vs. -1.0, p = .078) and SANS composite scores (-14.1 vs. -4.1, p = .075). Conclusion: These data demonstrate that, in older patients with schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders, risperidone and olanzapine have approximately equal efficacy in controlling positive symptoms. However, olanzapine appears to be more efficacious in maintaining control over negative symptoms.

Details

ISSN :
01606689
Volume :
64
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....41e230d9ca790315f6f90d3790596189
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4088/jcp.v64n0904