Title of article :
Characterizing relapse prevention in bipolar disorder with adjunctive ziprasidone: Clinical and methodological implications
Author/Authors :
Bowden، نويسنده , , Charles L. and Karayal، نويسنده , , Onur N. and Schwartz، نويسنده , , Jeffrey H. and Gundapaneni، نويسنده , , Balarama K. and OʹGorman، نويسنده , , Cedric، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
Background
idone, adjunctive to either lithium or valproate, has previously been shown to be associated with a significantly lower risk of relapse in bipolar disorder compared with lithium or valproate treatment alone.
s
lacebo-controlled outpatient trial with ziprasidone adjunctive to lithium or valproate or lithium and valproate alone, for subjects with a recent or current manic or mixed episode of bipolar I disorder, comprised a 2.5- to 4-month, open-label stabilization period, followed by a 6-month, double-blind maintenance period. These post hoc analyses characterize the relapse outcomes by dose, relapse types and timing as well as all-reason discontinuations during the maintenance period.
s
o relapse and all-reason discontinuation were both statistically significant in favor of the ziprasidone 120 mg/day group compared with placebo (p=0.004 and 0.001, respectively) during the 6-month double-blind period. There was no difference in time to relapse in the 80 and 160 mg/day dose groups compared with placebo (p=0.16 and 0.40, respectively) and, likewise, for time to all-reason discontinuation (p=0.20 for both doses). The majority of relapses in each group occurred prior to week 8, and most were depressive in nature.
tions
imary study was not designed to compare relapse rates by dose groups.
sions
analyses confirm the effectiveness of ziprasidone (80–160 mg/day) in preventing relapses in subjects with bipolar disorder, with the 120 mg/day dosage appearing to have the highest relapse prevention rate.
Keywords :
Ziprasidone , Bipolar disease , Relapse prevention
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders