Artigo Revisado por pares

Generalizability of the Results of Efficacy Trials in First-Episode Schizophrenia

2009; Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.; Volume: 71; Issue: 01 Linguagem: Inglês

10.4088/jcp.08m04506yel

ISSN

1555-2101

Autores

Han Boter, Eske M. Derks, W. Wolfgang Fleischhacker, Michael Davidson, René S. Kahn,

Tópico(s)

Bipolar Disorder and Treatment

Resumo

Article Abstract Objective: Most randomized drug trials in schizophrenia exclude patients with comorbidities such as suicidality or substance use, which may limit the generalizability of the results. We aimed to evaluate the generalizability of the results of these trials in participants of a randomized clinical trial with broad inclusion criteria. Method: In 50 sites in 14 countries, 498 patients with first-episode psychosis (DSM-IV schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or schizophreniform disorder) were recruited between December 2002 and January 2006 in an open, randomized clinical drug trial with 12 months of follow-up. Baseline characteristics and follow-up data were compared between patients with versus patients without baseline suicidality and/or substance use. Results: Of the 489 participants with data on baseline suicidality and substance use, 153 (31%) patients were suicidal and/or using substances. Groups differed on only a few of the many baseline characteristics tested: comorbid patients were younger (25.1 vs 26.5 years of age; P†‰<†‰.01), less often female (25% vs 47%; P†‰<†‰.001) or married (4% vs 17%; P†‰<†‰.001), had fewer years of education (11.8 vs 12.8; P†‰<†‰.001), and experienced lower levels of overall psychosocial functioning (Global Assessment of Functioning; 38.4 vs 40.8; P†‰≤†‰.05) and higher levels of depression (Calgary Depression Scale for Schizophrenia; 6.1 vs 4.6; P†‰<†‰.001). At follow-up, comorbid patients showed shorter time to (re)hospitalization and reported higher levels of depression than patients without comorbidity (hazard ratio†‰=†‰2.02, P†‰=†‰.004; χ27†‰=†‰17.25, P†‰=†‰.016, respectively), without differences on other outcome measures. Conclusions: Although it appears that the generalizability of antipsychotic treatment trials in first-episode patients is not seriously affected by the exclusion of patients with suicidal symptoms and/or substance use, researchers should be cautious about the exclusion of such patients. Trial Registration: controlled-trials.com Identifier: ISRCTN68736636 Submitted: July 1, 2008; accepted Dec 1, 2008. Online ahead of print: October 20, 2009 Corresponding author: Han Boter, PhD, Department of Epidemiology (room FA 40), University Medical Centre Groningen, PO Box 30001, NL-9700 RB Groningen, The Netherlands (H.Boter@epi.umcg.nl).

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