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Patients value the lower incidence of extrapyramidial side effects
An infectious optimism has infused the field of
schizophrenia with the availability of the new "atypical"
antipsychotics. However, an article by Geddes et al in this issue
provides sobering evidence which questions this (p 1371).1
By pooling data from 52 controlled studies comparing atypical
antipsychotics with the old typical antipsychotics in 12 000
patients, Geddes et al. failed to find any clinically significant
evidence of superiority in efficacy, or for that matter tolerability,
for atypical antipsychotics as a group, once the inappropriately high
doses of the comparator were taken into account.
The results are even more sobering given the fact that most of these
trials were conducted in patients who had already had a history of
partial response to typical antipsychotics Schizophrenia has long been neglected, by society and by pharmaceutical
companies. For most patients partial remission of symptoms is the best
that they can hope for. As a result, patients and their caregivers are
always searching for something new. Any new medication, whether
substantially better or not, is embraced with great enthusiasm, so it
is not surprising that even before all the facts are in, atypical
antipsychotics have become synonymous with progress and hope for
patients with schizophrenia.
However, that is not the entire story. The data from Geddes et al
clearly show a much lower incidence of motor side effects with all the
atypical agents, and so do other meta-analyses.2 Extrapyramidal side effects are not just incidental "side" effects. For many patients extrapyramidal effects are the central
factor in their treatment. Extrapyramidal effects by themselves have been related to a poor outcome, a compromised compliance, secondary negative symptoms, cognitive parkinsonism, and depression as well as
long term risk of tardive dyskinesia.3 While the gain on extrapyramidal effects is unequivocal, the mechanism by which the
atypical drugs achieve this is not. It was originally thought that the
reduction in extrapyramidal side effects reflected a special
multireceptor profile of the newer drugs.4 This concept has been questioned recently.5 Improvement in
extrapyramidal side effects may result mainly from a more
physiologically appropriate level of blockade on the dopamine
D2 receptors at a system level, rather than a new
therapeutic principle. While a scientific explanation of the mechanism
is a matter for debate, there is no doubt that the improvement in
extrapyramidal effects is an important advance for patients.
Meta-regression analysis (and such data pooling techniques) often miss
in precision what they gain in perspective. For example, carefully
controlled clinical trials, designed to specifically look at the issue
of enhanced efficacy, have clearly shown the superiority of clozapine
in well selected, homogenous populations of patients with seriously
refractory disease.6 A meta- analysis that lumps
together different trials, diverse populations, and different
drugs can miss such a "niche" effect. Also, it may well turn out
that the real superiority of atypical antipsychotics is not in their
antipsychotic abilities but in their ability to control ancillary
symptoms related to mood, cognition, hostility, and a higher level of
compliance. If so, these drugs may turn out to be much more effective
in the real world, even though their efficacy in controlled trials is
not that different. While this real world outcome remains a fervent
hope, there are as yet few, well controlled trials that unequivocally
support this position. Moreover, the new atypical agents also have
their own new side effects (weight gain, diabetes) which will have to
be taken into account in any balanced reckoning.
7 8
How much is the improvement in extrapyramidal side effects really
worth? There is no one answer to such a question. The answer depends on
who you ask and what else is at stake. We can only share our experience
in our setting. We practice in an environment where the new atypical
agents are available to patients at no cost to them, the cost being
borne by the public purse. We make patients aware of the relative risks
and benefits of low dose typical versus atypical
antipsychotics (skapur{at}camhpet.on.ca) Schizophrenia Program and PET Centre, Clarke Division of the
CAMH, Toronto, ON, Canada M5T 1R8 (Gary_Remington{at}camh.net)
thus having an inherent
bias against the older typical antipsychotics. On the other hand,
prescription data suggest that atypical antipsychotics account for
nearly three out of four new prescriptions for antipsychotics in North
America. So, how can we reconcile this large shift in prescribing
practices (at least in North America) with the sobering evidence
provided by Geddes et al? Is this shift largely a victory of clinical
hope and marketing hype over hard evidence, or, is there a truth that
is missed in the meta-analysis. The answer lies somewhere in between.
almost all patients choose atypical drugs. Their
choice is mainly influenced by the chance of lower extrapyramidal
effects, and the novelty of the atypical antipsychotic drugs. Our
impression is that if costs were borne personally the decisions would
be different. Which atypical drug to start with is largely a tradeoff
between expected side effects; there is little reason to believe there
are significant differences in efficacy between the atypical drugs. If
one atypical drug fails, we try another or suggest a typical
antipsychotic in low doses or as a depot. If all these efforts are
unsatisfactory, as they often are, we always suggest a trial of
clozapine, for it is as yet unequalled in refractory cases. Thus, the
paper by Geddes et al and our thoughts leave the clinician on a
tightrope act between the persuasiveness of the marketing claims, the
precise but somewhat myopic results of idealised clinical trials, and the complex realities of clinical practice.
Gary Remington
| 1. |
Geddes J, Freemantle N, Harrison P, Bebbington P, for the National Schizophrenia Guideline Development Group.
Atypical antipsychotics in the treatment of schizophrenia: systematic overview and meta-regression analysis.
BMJ
2000;
321:
1371-1376 |
| 2. | Leucht S, Pitschel-Walz G, Abraham D, Kissling W. Efficacy and extrapyramidal side-effects of the new antipsychotics olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone, and sertindole compared to conventional antipsychotics and placebo. A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Schizophr Res 1999; 35: 51-68[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 3. | Casey DE. Motor and mental aspects of extrapyramidal syndromes. Int Clin Psychopharmacol 1995; 10(suppl 3): 105-114. |
| 4. | Meltzer HY. The role of serotonin in schizophrenia and the place of serotonin-dopamine antagonist antipsychotics. J Clin Psychopharmacol 1995; 15(suppl 1, Feb): 2S-23[Medline]. |
| 5. | Kapur S, Seeman P. Fast dissociation from the dopamine D2
receptors explains atypical antipsychotic action a new hypothesis.
Am J Psychiatry (in press).
|
| 6. | Kane J, Honigfeld G, Singer J, Meltzer H. Clozapine for the treatment-resistant schizophrenic. A double-blind comparison with chlorpromazine. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1988; 45: 789-796[Abstract]. |
| 7. |
Allison DB, Mentore JL, Heo M, Chandler LP, Cappelleri JC, Infante MC, et al.
Antipsychotic-induced weight gain: a comprehensive research synthesis.
Am J Psychiatry
1999;
156:
1686-1696 |
| 8. |
Henderson DC, Cagliero E, Gray C, Nasrallah RA, Hayden DL, Schoenfeld DA, et al.
Clozapine, diabetes mellitus, weight gain, and lipid abnormalities: A five-year naturalistic study.
Am J Psychiatry
2000;
157:
975-981 |
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