Study Suggests Risperidone Long-Acting Injection Combined with Standard Treatment Helped Delay Time to Relapse in Patients with Bipolar Disorder
(February 4, 2008) -- MONTREUX, Switzerland, Feb 04, 2008 /PRNewswire via
COMTEX/ -- Patients with frequently relapsing
bipolar disorder had a
significant delay in the time to an initial relapse when
risperidone
long-acting injection (RLAI) was combined with standard treatment, according
to a new study. The study compared patients who received RLAI and standard
treatment to those who received standard treatment combined with placebo.
The study was presented yesterday at the 14th Biennial Winter Workshop on
Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorders in Montreux, Switzerland.(1) This
one-year, phase 3, trial is the first placebo-controlled study to explore
the use of a long-acting injection medication in the maintenance treatment
of frequently relapsing bipolar disorder (FRBD). FRBD, defined as four or
more manic or depressive episodes in the previous year that require a
doctor's care, may affect 20% of the 27 million people with bipolar disorder
worldwide(2,3).
The study compared the time to the next mood episode, also known as a
relapse, in FRBD patients receiving RLAI plus standard treatment vs.
patients receiving placebo plus standard treatment. For most patients,
standard treatment consisted of mood stabilizers,
antidepressants, anxiolytics or combinations thereof. The trial showed that time to relapse
was significantly longer in patients receiving RLAI compared with placebo
(p=0.004) and the relative risk of relapse was 2.4 times higher with
placebo. The relapse rates were 47.8% with placebo and 22.2% with RLAI.
"Patients with frequently relapsing bipolar disorder require more
healthcare interventions than patients with fewer episodes, and there is a
huge unmet need for new treatments," said Dr. Joseph Calabrese, Co-Director
of the Bipolar Disorders Research Center, University Hospitals Case Medical
Center, Case Western Reserve University. Dr. Calabrese is a consultant to
the study sponsors, Ortho-McNeil Janssen Scientific Affairs, L.L.C. "Risperidone
long-acting injection is administered once every two weeks by a healthcare
professional and avoids the need for patients to remember to take daily
antipsychotic medications. "
In the study, 139 patients were randomized to receive either RLAI 25-50mg
intramuscular injection (n=72), or placebo injections (n=67) adjunctive to
standard treatment. Patients receiving RLAI plus standard treatment were
eligible to enter the double blind phase of the trial if they met predefined
criteria(a) for being stable the last four weeks of the 16-week open-label
stabilization phase.
In the study, Frequently Relapsing Bipolar Disorder: Evidence for an
Effective Treatment Using Adjunctive Risperidone Long-Acting Injectable, 67%
of patients randomized received a 25 mg dose of RLAI, 29% received a 37.5 mg
dose and 4% received a 50 mg dose, administered once every two weeks.
The primary efficacy endpoint in the double-blind phase of the trial was
the time from randomization to relapse, where relapse was defined as the
first occurrence of a mood episode as determined by an independent Relapse
Monitoring Board (RMB).(b)
The results showed a significant difference in time to relapse (p=0.004),
with a more than two-fold higher risk of relapse in the placebo group
(47.8%) than the RLAI group (22.2%). In addition, scores on the Clinical
Global Impression-Bipolar-Severity (CGI-BP-S) scale for overall bipolar
disorder and the Clinical Global Impression-Bipolar-Change (CGI-BP-C) scale
worsened significantly (p<0.05) in the placebo group compared with the RLAI
group.
Treatment-emergent adverse effects (TEAEs) occurred more frequently in
the group that received placebo and standard treatment (76.1%) than in the
group that received RLAI and standard treatment (70.8%), as did serious
adverse effects (placebo=19.4%; RLAI = 13.9%). The most common TEAEs
(greater than 5%) in the double-blind phase were tremor (RLAI = 23.6%;
placebo = 16.4%), insomnia (RLAI = 19.4%; placebo = 23.9%), muscle rigidity
(RLAI = 11.1%; placebo = 6%); weight gain (RLAI = 6.9%; placebo = 1.5%) and
hypokinesia (RLAI = 6.9%; placebo = 0%). A total of 5 patients discontinued
due to adverse events in the double-blind phase (3 in the RLAI group and 2
in the placebo group).
Risperidone long-acting injection is marketed in the U.S. by Janssen,
Division of Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc. The formulation is
manufactured by Alkermes, Inc. Ortho-McNeil Janssen Scientific Affairs, LLC,
funded the study.
About Bipolar Disorder
It is estimated that 27 million people worldwide(2) suffer from bipolar
disorder, also known as manic-depressive disorder. It is characterized by
debilitating
mood swings, from extreme highs (mania) to extreme lows
(depression). Signs of mania include euphoria, extreme irritability or rage,
accelerated or disorganized thinking and an increase in risky behaviors.
Signs of depression include intense sadness or despair, loss of energy,
insomnia and suicidal thoughts.
A classification of patients identified as "rapid-cycling" and also
having four or more episodes during the previous 12 months, is estimated to
occur in approximately 10-20% of patients with bipolar disorder seen in mood
disorder clinics. The types of mood episodes (manic, depressed, mixed) seen
in these patients can occur in any pattern. The course of their illness is
characterized by a requirement for more health care resources, more
concomitant medications and poorer outcomes.(4)
About Risperidone Long-Acting Injection
Risperidone long-acting injection is the first and only long-acting,
atypical antipsychotic to be approved by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration and now is approved in more than 70 countries worldwide. The
treatment uses Alkermes proprietary Medisorb technology to deliver and
maintain therapeutic medication levels in the body through just one
injection every two weeks. Janssen markets Risperidone long-acting injection
in the United States. The formulation is manufactured by Alkermes, Inc.
Available in 12.5 mg, 25 mg, 37.5 mg and 50 mg dose units, it is approved
for the treatment of schizophrenia. For more information about RISPERDAL
CONSTA, visit
http://www.risperdalconsta.com.
Janssen, Division of Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., is based
in Titusville, N.J. and is the only large pharmaceutical company in the U.S.
dedicated solely to mental health. As the company celebrates its 50th year
in mental health, it currently markets prescription medications for the
treatment of schizophrenia, bipolar mania and the treatment of symptoms
associated with autistic disorder. For more information about Janssen, visit
http://www.janssen.com.
Alkermes, Inc. is a biotechnology company that uses proprietary
technologies and know-how to create innovative medicines designed to yield
better therapeutic outcomes for patients with serious disease. Alkermes
manufactures RISPERDAL CONSTA, marketed by Janssen, Division of
Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc. in the U.S. and Janssen-Cilag, a
subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson, outside of the U.S. Alkermes also developed
and manufactures VIVITROL, marketed in the U.S. primarily by Cephalon, Inc.
The company's pipeline includes extended-release injectable, pulmonary and
oral products for the treatment of prevalent, chronic diseases, such as
central nervous system disorders, addiction and diabetes. Alkermes is
headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with research and manufacturing
facilities in Massachusetts and Ohio. For more information about Alkermes,
visit
http://www.alkermes.com.
(a) Stable remission was achieved if, during the last 4 weeks of the
16-week OL stabilization phase the subject had not met DSM-IV-TR criteria
for active mood disorder; the subject had no crisis interventions; the
subject's Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) and Montgomery-Asberg Depression
Rating Scale (MADRS) total scores both remained less than or equal to 10 and
the Clinical Global Impression -- bipolar severity (CGI-BP-S) score remained
less than or equal to 3 and the subject's medications and doses of other
psychotropic medications remained unchanged.
(b) RMB = a fully independent, blinded, international board of 3
psychiatrists considered experts in the treatment of bipolar disorder. They
reviewed all clinical data and determined whether the patient met relapse
criteria.
References
(1) Aphs L, Kujawa M, Macfadden W et al., Frequently relapsing bipolar
disorder: evidence for an effective treatment using adjunctive risperidone
long-acting injectable, presented at the 14th Biennial Winter Workshop on
Schizophrenia, Montreux, Switzerland, February 2008.
(2) The Global Burden of Disease. World Health Organization, 2003.
Available at
http://www.who.int/mip/2003/other_documents/en/globalburdenofdisease.pdf,
accessed January 18, 2008
(3) DSM-IV-TR, American Psychiatric Association, 2000.
(4) DSM-IV, American Psychiatric Association, 2000.
Source: Jansen
Last updated: 02/08
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