The British Journal of Psychiatry 129: 476-481 (1976)
© 1976 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Comparison of antipsychotic depot injections in the maintenance treatment of schizophrenia
MW Carney and BF Sheffield
122 Schizophrenic patients treated with injections of fluphenazine
ethanate, 97 with fluphenazine decanoate and 199 with flupenthixol
decanoate were followed up for mean times of 41, 33 and 21 months
respectively. Their progress was compared by examining reasons for
discontinuing injections and outcome in three separate groups defined
according to first preparation given; relating the events causing patients
to discontinue injections or be readmitted to patient-months spent on each
drug; and analysing reasons for inter-drug transfers 43 per cent, 24 per
cent and 23 per cent respectively of these three groups of patients
discontinued the injections. Severe extrapyramidal effects were most
frequent with fluphenazine ethanate, intermediate with fluphenazine
decanote, and least frequent frequent with flupenthixol. Lack of
cooperation was rather more frequent with flupenthixol than with the other
drugs. Severe depression occurred with all three. More patients on
fluphenazine injections were transferred for any reason to flupenthixol
than vice-versa. A case of 'irreversible' movement disorder was seen with
each preparation. It is suggested that current maintenance doses of
flupenthixol decanoate are too low.