The British Journal of Psychiatry 140: 287-291 (1982)
© 1982 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
A controlled comparison of flupenthixol decanoate injections and oral amitriptyline in depressed out-patients
W Tam, JP Young, G John and MH Lader
Sixty-eight depressed out-patients were allocated to treatment with either
oral amitriptyline (75-225 mg/day) or intramuscular flupenthixol decanoate
(10-30 mg every 14 days) in flexible dosage for 12 weeks under double-blind
procedures. Various observer- and self-rating scales were applied before
and after 2, 4, 8 and 12 weeks of treatment. Twenty- four patients
completed the course of amitriptyline and 20 the course of flupenthixol.
All variables improved over time, but there were no significant differences
between the two drugs. The Newcastle scores pre- treatment were not related
to drug response suggesting that both drugs were similarly effective across
a wide spectrum of depressive disorders. Patients on amitriptyline tended
to complain of dry mouth; those on flupenthixol had a higher incidence of
extrapyramidal signs, the majority receiving anti-parkinsonian drugs at
some time during the treatment. Flupenthixol decanoate in low dose is a
useful anti- depressant, but should be restricted to short courses of
treatment, to patients refractory to other treatments, and to patients
suspected of poor compliance.