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The Royal London Hospital, London, UK
Correspondence: Dr John Cookson, The Royal London Hospital, St Clement's, 2a Bow Road, London E3 4LL, UK. Tel: +44 (0)20 7377 7957; fax: +44 (0)20 7377 7963; e-mail: cookson-psychiatry{at}mcmail.com
Declaration of interest J.C. has lectured and been a member of advisory panels for Janssen, Eli Lilly and Glaxo Wellcome. He has also run funded trials of risperidone, olanzapine and lamotrigine.
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ABSTRACT |
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Aims To review the efficacy and mode of action of antipsychotic drugs in mania, and to consider the differences between official guidelines and routine clinical practice in the use of these agents for mania.
Method Review of research, guideline-and practice-based literature.
Results Guidelines recommend lithium or valproate as first-line treatments for mania, and antipsychotic agents only as adjuncts for agitation, dangerous behaviour or psychosis. However, in routine practice, antipsychotic drugs are often prescribed. The effectiveness of these agents in mania has been established by several studies; newer atypical compounds demonstrate antimanic efficacy with a reduced incidence of neurological side-effects.
Conclusion Antipsychotic drugs are important in the treatment of bipolar disorder and mania. Future studies should evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety of newer atypical antipsychotic agents, and the place of anticonvulsants in combination with antipsychotics in bipolar disorder.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Fifty years later the use of bromides remained extensive, but barbiturates such as amylobarbitone (amobarbital) were in use, and paraldehyde remained popular (Sargant & Slater, 1946). Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) was also being used in mania, following its introduction in 1935.
The situation changed dramatically, first in 1949 when John Cade in Australia discovered the effects of lithium in mania (Cade, 1949), and in 1952 with the development of the first antipsychotic phenothiazine, chlorpromazine. It remained to Schou, working in Aarhus, Denmark, to establish the use of lithium in mania on the basis of a controlled study (Schou et al, 1954), and by 1968 the prophylactic efficacy of lithium in bipolar disorder was established. Cade's discovery can be regarded as the beginning of the modern era of effective drug treatment in psychiatry (Shorter, 1997).
By 1963, the use of lithium in mania was recommended for difficult cases, but haloperidol was considered particularly useful (Sargant & Slater, 1963). However, experience over the following 30 years indicated that lithium is far short of an ideal treatment, even when administered expertly to concordant patients. There is a striking difference between the results of early controlled trials and the outcome on lithium in open clinical practice, where a smaller proportion of patients appear to be lithium responders; some even doubt the validity of the clinical trials (Moncrieff, 1997).
The benefits of lithium therapy have to be balanced against the difficulties in its management with poor compliance in patients with bipolar disorder and the occurrence of withdrawal mania and the risks of side-effects and toxicity (Cookson, 1997). The latter includes the possibility of permanent neurological sequelae with cerebellar damage (Schou, 1984).
Since the 1970s anticonvulsant drugs, first carbamazepine and more recently valproate and, in open studies, lamotrigine and topiramate, have displayed antimanic effects in at least a proportion of patients (Dunn et al, 1998).
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MODE OF ACTION OF LITHIUM AND THE MOOD STABILISERS |
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RECENT PRACTICE |
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It was noted that while doses of antipsychotic drugs given to psychiatric inpatients in a private university centre did not increase from 1989 to 1993, there was a doubling (to 84%) in the proportion of cases prescribed adjunctive treatment with anticonvulsants and a rise to 70% in the number receiving adjunctive lithium (Baldessarini et al, 1995).
The preference of American (New York) psychiatrists for high-potency antipsychotics in mania was illustrated in a study by Chou et al (1996) of 528 patients with mania in New York state hospitals in 1990. Ninety-two per cent received antipsychotic medication, 61% lithium, 54% both and 22% benzodiazepines mainly lorazepam during the first 3 weeks of hospitalisation for mania. Eleven per cent received an anticonvulsant. Haloperidol (38% of prescriptions) was the most widely used antipsychotic drug, followed by fluphenazine (20%) and chlorpromazine (18%).
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SELECTION OF PATIENTS |
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The study also validated the concept of lithium non-responders, as patients identified as such before entry to the study showed less improvement on lithium than did other patients. Carbamazepine is licensed in the UK for use in patients with bipolar disorder for whom lithium is not suitable; valproate was licensed for use in bipolar illness in the UK in 2001, although widely prescribed before that.
Patients who respond to lithium tend to be those with classical mania rather than the mixed or schizoaffective form (Himmelhoch et al, 1976; Goodnick & Meltzer, 1984; Swann et al, 1986). Patients with elated-grandiose mania showed a better response than those with the destructive-paranoid form in one study (Murphy & Beigel, 1974), but not in another (Swann et al, 1986). Dysphoric mania was less likely to improve (Post et al, 1989). Overall, 36% of patients with mixed mania and 75% of patients with pure episodes responded well to lithium (McElroy et al, 1992). Patients with a rapid-cycling phase of illness are often less responsive to lithium (Dunner & Fieve, 1974; Dilsaver et al, 1993). Neurological signs predict a poor response to lithium (Himmelhoch et al, 1980).
For long-term prophylaxis it has been suggested that patients who have already experienced more than two mood episodes are less likely than others to benefit from lithium (Gelenberg et al, 1989). A history of more than 10 episodes has also been linked to a low probability of responding to lithium (Swann et al, 1999). However, some patients improve after multiple mood episodes. For instance, Robert Lowell's bipolar illness improved on lithium although he had experienced more than 20 episodes before commencing therapy (Jamison, 1994).
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OFFICIAL GUIDELINES |
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The guidelines appear to have been based upon four important principles:
The consensus panel of 61 experts, reporting from North Carolina in 1996, appeared to confirm that at least among expert opinion, lithium or valproate was regarded as the first-line treatment for mania (Frances et al, 1996). However, it seems that the questionnaire on which the consensus was based did not offer the option of antipsychotic drug therapy alone as a treatment for acute mania in any of its forms. Antipsychotic therapy was offered as an opinion only in addition to mood stabilisers, and was preferred by the panel over benzodiazepines to induce sleep and sedation in patients exhibiting mania with psychotic features. When asked to rate different types of antipsychotic drugs for use in mania (as adjuncts), 75% chose conventional high-potency drugs such as haloperidol as either the antipsychotic of choice, or as first-line treatment. This is surprising considering that the high-potency drugs are less sedative, having less affinity to block histamine receptors than the low-potency ones (such as chlorpromazine). Few (13%) favoured adding an antipsychotic to induce sleep; benzodiazepines were preferred for this by 82%.
More recent practice guidelines from the Department of Veterans Affairs recommend first-line treatment of mania with lithium for 3 weeks, followed by a change to a different mood stabiliser, if there is no response, or a combination with an anti-convulsant if there is a partial response (Bauer et al, 1999). If the patient also has psychotic features (delusions or hallucinations), antipsychotic drugs should be given if they are judged to be needed. It is acknowledged that mood stabilisers may take several weeks for a maximal response, and that during this time the patient with mania may require adjunctive antipsychotic medication for severe agitation. It is stated that antipsychotics may exacerbate post-manic depressive episodes or induce rapid cycling; but this is a matter requiring further study, as the evidence for it is slight.
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CURRENT PRACTICE |
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In Europe, psychiatrists view the above guidelines with scepticism. There, antipsychotic drugs are widely regarded as first-line treatment for acute mania (Licht, 1998); lithium is added for patients who are known to have responded to it in the past or as an adjunct for those who still have mania after about 2 weeks of adequate doses of an antipsychotic agent.
In view of the APA guidelines and the consensus panel report, it might be expected that American psychiatrists would use antipsychotic drugs sparingly, and less often than their counterparts in other countries. However, the difference in approach may be more theoretical than real (Cookson & Sachs, 2000). In centres in both the USA and Europe, surveys show that the majority of patients with mania are discharged from hospital still taking antipsychotic medication and remain on it after 6 months (Licht et al, 1994; Keck et al, 1996; McElroy et al, 1996).
Table 1 shows the proportions of patients receiving treatment with antipsychotic drugs, during the acute phase, at the time of discharge from hospital and at 3-6 months follow-up in centres in the USA and in Europe. Figures for manic episodes treated in East London are closely similar to those of Licht et al (1994) in Aarhus, where the use of lithium has been extensively investigated (further details available from the author upon request). Both in the acute phase and at 3-6 months, the proportion of patients in the USA on antipsychotic medication is at least as high as in European centres. This might mean that nearly all American in-patients with mania have psychosis, and therefore require treatment for agitation or dangerous behaviour. Alternatively, it may signify that the guidelines are more conservative about the use of antipsychotic medication than the clinical situation is judged to warrant.
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As further evidence of current practice, in a large cohort of in-patients with bipolar disorder in over 100 psychiatric units in the USA about half were not prescribed mood stabilisers (Edell et al, 1999). On the other hand, a survey of 102 patients with bipolar disorder (of whom 72 were in remission) in a private practice setting in Texas, found typical antipsychotic drugs in use in only seven patients, but clozapine in 19 (Tyler et al, 1999).
An important objection to the APA guidelines' advocacy of mood stabilisers as first-line treatment is that in practice therapy is commenced with two types of agent at the same time. This vitiates the principle of making one change in treatment at a time in order to be able to determine whether a particular intervention is effective a useful principle when only a proportion of patients are thought to be responders to lithium, carbamazepine or valproate. This might not matter if antipsychotic agents were effective only by virtue of their sedative effects; it should be possible to withdraw the drug once the manic state has settled. However, there is evidence that they may have a much broader effect in mania, independent of sedation.
It is possible that reluctance to use antipsychotic medication in bipolar disorder may restrict prescribers in a broader way. For example, the clinician may hesitate to use an antidepressant drug in case this leads to a manic phase that cannot be rapidly corrected without using an antipsychotic. Also, patients may be exposed to the adverse effects of clozapine in order to avoid extrapyramidal side-effects, even if these would be only short-term with typical antipsychotic agents.
How effective is chlorpromazine in acute mania?
The first antipsychotic drug, chlorpromazine, was effective in mania in a
placebo-controlled trial (Klein,
1967). It was also the first such agent to be widely compared with
lithium in randomised, double-blind controlled trials. A summary by Davis
et al (1993), of
trials in which categorical outcomes were given, showed a response rate in
four trials (145 patients) of 23% with chlorpromazine, compared with 63% for
lithium, an effect size or absolute difference in risk of 39%,
which would correspond to an NNT of 2.6. This difference appears impressive,
but the original studies had many shortcomings. They did not use rating scales
specific for mania, and lacked a clear definition of response
(remission or marked improvement). There was also potential for
unblinding because of the faster effects of chlorpromazine and its sedative
properties. The number of patients included was usually small by current
standards.
A much larger study by Prien et al (1972) enrolled 255 patients on either lithium or chlorpromazine. This study drew the influential conclusion that in the more highly active or psychotic cases, chlorpromazine was superior to lithium, both in reducing hyperactivity and in overall improvement. However, for the other group of mildly active patients, lithium was slightly superior to chlorpromazine in eventual effect, although equal with regard to improvement in mood and ideation. These findings may have been particularly influential in forming the opinion that antipsychotic drugs should be used for mania with psychosis, and be used to sedate (reduce hyperactivity) and to control dangerous behaviour. On the other hand, lithium did not appear to have more specific antimanic effects than chlorpromazine in the mildly active patients.
Is sedation required for antipsychotics to improve mania?
Chlorpromazine was the most widely investigated antipsychotic agent in
early comparative trials, but evidence has emerged that drugs with more
specific dopamine-receptor blocking actions have antimanic properties,
although these drugs such as pimozide and sulpride are less
sedative, being without blocking actions at histamine or noradrenalin
1 receptors. An open study in which pimozide was compared
with thioridazine or chlorpromazine, described antimanic actions
(Post et al, 1980).
In a comparative trial with pimozide, chlorpromazine produced a greater
initial improvement in ratings, with sedation reducing hyperactivity, but
pimozide brought about a similar degree of improvement to chlorpromazine at 2
weeks (Cookson et al,
1981). Patients on chlorpromazine tended to resist increases in
dosage, because they felt sedated.
Another group of non-sedative antipsychotic drugs, the benzamides, is selective for the D2 class of dopamine receptors as opposed to D1. The first of these, sulpiride, was reported to be effective in mania in an open study, in combination with lithium (Christie et al, 1989). In our own experience the benzamide drug, remoxipride, did not bring about sustained improvement in a series of 10 patients with mania in doses shown to be effective in schizophrenia (J. Cookson & M. Mitchell, presented at the Fourth Congress of Biological Psychiatry, Philadelphia, 1985; further details available from the author upon request). This is interesting in relation to the effects on prolactin; whereas sulpiride causes a greater rise in prolactin levels than does haloperidol, remoxipride causes a lesser rise than haloperidol. This suggests that the three drugs act to different extents on different subtypes of the D2 receptors in the pituitary and in the limbic system. However, others reported that remoxipride does have antimanic properties when used in combination with haloperidol (Chouinard & Steiner, 1986) and in AIDS-related secondary mania (Scurlock et al, 1995). Another benzamide drug reportedly effective in mania is sultopride (Rappard & Parr, 1981).
The efficacy of these non-sedative drugs highlights the importance of dopamine receptor blockade in the antimanic effects of antipsychotic drugs.
Haloperidol in mania
Since haloperidol is reportedly the most commonly prescribed antipsychotic
drug in mania (Chou et al,
1996), the study by Shopsin et al
(1975) is important. This
compared haloperidol (up to 36 mg per day) with chlorpromazine (up to 1800 mg
per day) and lithium in a 3-week study with only 10 patients in each treatment
group. Lithium produced a broader improvement in manic symptoms than the
antipsychotic therapy; seven patients were well enough to be discharged after
treatment with lithium compared with only one patient on chlorpromazine and
two patients on haloperidol. However, the clinical ratings (Clinical Global
Impression) showed almost identical levels of improvement at 3 weeks for
lithium and haloperidol, both of which were superior to chlorpromazine. The
authors described haloperidol as being more effective than lithium in reducing
hyperactivity, whereas lithium produced greater effects on mood and ideation;
however, the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale
(Overall & Gorham, 1962) did not show significant differences in individual items for the three
treatments. Haloperidol had a more pronounced antimanic effect than
chlorpromazine but this was not accompanied by sedation. The authors argued
that the control of symptoms by haloperidol was a suppressive
lid, as opposed to the more total normalisation of affect,
ideation and behaviour on lithium.
The high rate of remission within 3 weeks of lithium therapy in this study is in contrast to the study by Bowden et al (1994), described above. Conversely, the very low rate of remission on haloperidol contrasts with the dose-finding study of 47 severely ill patients with mania by Rifkin et al (1994), in which 45% of patients, treated with haloperidol, achieved remission within 6 weeks. The latter study was important in failing to show a significantly greater improvement with doses of haloperidol above 10 mg per day and up to 80 mg per day. However, the numbers involved were small and the confidence limits overlapped in all three dosage ranges. There was a distinct trend for patients on 30 mg per day or more to do better than those on only 10 mg per day. Further studies are needed to identify the optimal doses for haloperidol in mania, as opposed to schizophrenia.
In patients who remain disturbed on standard doses of haloperidol, additional sedation may be achieved by giving benzodiazepines, especially lorazepam, a practice that carries less risk of toxicity than using higher doses of antipsychotic drug (Busch et al, 1989; Lenox et al, 1992).
If, as Shopsin et al (1975) found, lithium is superior to haloperidol, and acts through different mechanisms to exert its antimanic effect, one would expect that patients treated with a combination of lithium and haloperidol would respond significantly better than patients treated with either drug alone. One small study (with seven patients in each group and therefore lacking sufficient power to explore the question conclusively) has addressed this comparison in mania (Garfinkel et al, 1980). Haloperidol appeared superior to lithium alone, and the combination gave no additional advantage during 3 weeks of treatment. Conversely, in a 3-week study with 136 patients, the addition of valproate to conventional antipsychotic therapy (mainly haloperidol) produced greater improvement than the addition of placebo (Muller-Oerlinghausen et al, 2000); 70% improved at least 50% reduction in Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) scores compared with 46% on antipsychotic drug plus placebo (NNT=5; 95% CI 3-13) (see Table 2).
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ENDOCRINE CORRELATES OF ANTIMANIC EFFECTS OF ANTIPSYCHOTIC AGENTS |
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1 receptors in humans
(Szabadi et al,
1981). Alpha-1-adrenoreceptors are known to be involved in the
control of cortisol secretion (Rees et
al, 1970), and blockade of these receptors is thought to
contribute to the sedative effects of antipsychotic drugs
(Peroutka & Snyder, 1980). It may account for the early transient sedative effects seen in mania with
haloperidol (Cookson et al,
1983). Levels of noradrenalin in the cerebrospinal fluid are
raised in mania (Post et al,
1978), and blockade of noradrenalin receptors by haloperidol may
be part of the mechanism of the drug's antimanic effect.
Prolactin
Dopamine (D2) receptors in the prolactin-secreting cells of the anterior
pituitary gland are blocked by classical antipsychotic agents. The resulting
elevation of serum prolactin levels provides a biological marker of this
dopamine receptor blockade. During treatment with haloperidol, prolactin
levels increase in the plasma over the course of 14 days, with a pattern of
rise similar to that of clinical improvement. However, more detailed analysis
using intravenous test doses of haloperidol shows an initial
rise in serum prolactin levels, which is partly transient after the first
intravenous dose and cannot be exceeded by giving larger doses of haloperidol
(Cookson et al,
1983). This is followed by a gradual rise during the following 2-4
weeks. Within 2 weeks, prolactin secretion by the pituitary gland becomes
sensitive over a wider range of doses of haloperidol than in the
drugnaïve patient. These compensatory changes,
in the control of prolactin secretion, are thought to include changes in the
level of dopamine in the portal pituitary blood supply during prolonged
treatment with haloperidol. If similar compensatory changes occur in the
dopamine pathways of the limbic system, doses of haloperidol that are
effective in the drug-naïve patient with mania
may not be sufficient to control patients in later stages of mania who have
received prolonged treatment with antipsychotic drugs.
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ANTIPSYCHOTICS AS MOOD STABILISERS |
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In the large clinics run by community psychiatric nurses for patients on
depot medication, most patients have a diagnosis of schizophrenia or paranoid
state; however, there is usually a proportion of patients with a diagnosis of
bipolar disorder. Two retrospective studies using a mirror image
design have examined the effects of depot treatment in those patients in
community clinics. One study reported an improvement in the frequency only of
manic episodes (White et al,
1993). The other study found an improvement in manic, depressive
and mixed episodes (Littlejohn et
al, 1994). These naturalistic studies suggest that long-term
treatment with antipsychotic drugs enables a proportion of patients with
bipolar disorder to experience periods of greater stability. The mechanisms
involved may be primarily antimanic, but result in less subsequent depression,
as is argued for lithium (Kukopoulos
et al, 1980). Most of the older antipsychotic drugs do
not have antidepressant properties, although they may be useful in combination
with monoamine reuptake inhibitors for agitated or psychotic depression. One
hope for the new atypical antipsychotic agents is that by virtue of their
action to block noradrenalin
2 receptors, they may exert
antidepressant effects; these drugs might lessen the post-manic phase of
depression and be more helpful than the older antipsychotic agents in patients
with mixed affective states.
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ANTIPSYCHOTICS, LITHIUM AND NEUROLOGICAL SIDE-EFFECTS |
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Combinations of high levels of lithium with high does of antipsychotic drugs, including haloperidol, have been associated with severe neurological symptoms, hyperthermia, impaired consciousness and irreversible brain damage (Cohen & Cohen, 1974; Loudon & Waring, 1976). The conditions resemble both lithium toxicity (Schou, 1984) and neuroleptic malignant syndrome. However, the severity of lithium neurotoxicity bears little relationship to serum lithium levels (Hanson & Amdisen, 1978), and it can occur with serum levels in the usual therapeutic range (West & Meltzer, 1979). Antipsychotic drugs can increase intracellular lithium levels, suggesting a possible mechanism for this interaction (von Knorring, 1990).
Subsequent studies have demonstrated the safety of combining haloperidol (up to 30 mg per day) with lithium at levels of up to 1 mmol/l (see Batchelor & Lowe, 1990). When combining lithium with antipsychotic medication, blood levels should generally be maintained below 1 mmol/l. Staff should be advised to observe and report the development of neurological symptoms. Lithium toxicity should be assumed in patients taking lithium who have vomiting, severe nausea, cerebellar signs or disorientation. The diagnosis of lithium toxicity should be based upon clinical judgement and not upon the blood level. Lithium should be temporarily discontinued if such symptoms develop and should only be restarted (at an adjusted dose) when the patient's condition has improved or an alternative cause of the symptoms has been found.
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TARDIVE DYSKINESIA |
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ATYPICAL ANTIPSYCHOTIC DRUGS IN MANIA |
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Many of the new atypical antipsychotic drugs developed in the wake of clozapine have potent activity for blocking 5-HT2 receptors. This is thought to protect against Parkinsonian side-effects by an interaction on dopamine neurons to enhance dopamine release, while the drugs also block subtypes of D2 receptors post-synaptically. Since dopamine agonists are able to trigger mania in predisposed individuals (Gerner et al, 1976; Turner et al, 1984), these atypical antipsychotic drugs carry a theoretical risk of triggering mania. Therefore, controlled trials are essential to explore their value in bipolar disorder.
For olanzapine there is evidence of antimanic efficacy from a placebo-controlled trial with 134 patients (Tohen et al, 1999). It produced a 50% reduction in the YMRS score in 3 weeks in 49% compared with 24% on placebo, an absolute risk reduction of 25% and an NNT of 4 (95% CI 3-10) (Table 2). The high placebo response rates of 25% in this study and that of Bowden et al (1994) are in the context of clinical trials, in which placebos are used to take account of non-specific factors including nursing interventions, the use of night sedation and rescue medication with lorazepam in the first 10 days, and the discontinuation of previous medication. Also, a proportion of patients in these studies had rapid-cycling conditions and some improvement in mania could be expected as the disorder progressed.
Olanzapine has also been found to be useful in mixed episodes of bipolar disorder (Zullino & Baumann, 1999). In contrast to haloperidol and risperidone, it does not produce a sustained elevation of plasma prolactin levels. Further studies are needed to explore the efficacy of this drug in comparison to haloperidol in mania.
Ziprasidone (80-160 mg daily) has also been found to be effective in mania in comparison with placebo in a 3-week study of 195 patients (Keck & Ice, 2000).
Further data are also needed to define the efficacy of risperidone in mania. In a comparative trial, in which additional lorazepam was permitted, risperidone was of similar efficacy to haloperidol or lithium (Segal et al, 1998). Risperidone improves mania in patients with AIDS, who are particularly prone to developing extrapyramidal side-effects with typical antipsychotics (Singh et al, 1997).
Two more recent studies of risperidone (1-6 mg daily) added for 3 weeks to treatment with lithium or valporate (or carbamazepine in one study) have demonstrated an advantage of risperidone over placebo (Sachs & Ghaemi, 2000; Yatham, 2000). These large studies included 158 and 150 patients, respectively, and the former study included a group on haloperidol. In the latter study improvement rates (50% reduction in YMRS) were 59% for risperidone compared with 42% for placebo added to a mood stabiliser (Table 2). These figures indicate an absolute risk reduction of 17%, and an NNT of approximately 6 (95% CI 4-82). Risperidone was effective in patients with or without features of psychosis (Petty et al, 2000). A 6-week study with even greater power compared olanzapine (5-20 mg daily) with placebo, in combination with a mood stabiliser (lithium or valproate) in 344 patients with mania or mixed bipolar episodes (Tohen et al, 2000). The rates of improvement (YMRS score reduction of 50% or more) were 68% on olanzapine and 45% on placebo. This absolute risk reduction of 23% corresponds to an NNT of 5 (95% CI 3-9). The effect was more significant in patients on valproate than in those on lithium. Interestingly, patients with mixed states showed markedly greater rates of improvement on olanzapine than placebo in combination with mood stabiliser, 43% compared with 9.5%, with an NNT of approximately 3 (95% CI 2-6).
Both risperidone, possibly in a dose-related manner (Lane et al, 1998), and olanzapine (Lindenmayer & Klebanov, 1998) but not clozapine have been described as worsening or precipitating mania in predisposed patients, mainly those with schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder or organic brain disease. No evidence of such exacerbation of mania was found in the placebo-controlled trials of either risperidone or olanzapine described above, but patients were already receiving mood stabilisers in some studies.
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FUTURE PROSPECTS |
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Important topics for further investigation are the efficacy and safety of new atypical antipsychotic drugs in comparison with the conventional antipsychotics in longer-term treatment, and the place of newer anticonvulsants in combination with antipsychotics in bipolar disorder.
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Clinical Implications and Limitations |
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LIMITATIONS
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REFERENCES |
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