Bipolar Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparative Efficacy and Acceptability of Lithium, Valproate, Oxcarbazepine, Quetiapine, Olanzapine, and Ziprasidone in Bipolar I Disorder, Manic or Mixed Phase
Background:
Bipolar disorder is one of the most common mental illnesses affecting 1%-4% of the
population, and one of the leading causes of worldwide disability. Mania is a condition of
excessively elevated mood, characterizes bipolar disorder, and usually is a main cause of
hospitalization. Mood stabilisers and antipsychotic drugs have long been the maintenance
treatment of acute mania with and without psychotic symptoms. Though clinical trails have
been demonstrated that these drugs are individually more effective than placebo in the
relatively long term (e.g 4, 8 weeks). However, in the pragmatic practice, patient at acute
mania urgently want to see the effectiveness, and psychiatrist under great pressure and are
in great need to evaluate the very short-term effectiveness (e.g one week). If the first
attempted antimanic drug fails, psychiatrist need the evidence that which medication should
be to added on or switch to.
Objectives:
one main aim is to rank the short-term ( e.g.one and two week) effectiveness and
acceptability of the common anti-mania drugs, including Lithium, Valproate, Oxcarbazepine,
Quetiapine, Olanzapine, or Ziprasidone. Secondary aim is to investigate which medication to
add on for non-responders or switch to.
Methods:
The study setting: it is expected that 120 subjects with a diagnose of DSM-IV bipolar I
disorder will be recruited from Guangzhou Psychiatric Hospital, the earliest psychiatric
hospital in the history of China established by Dr.J. G. Kerr in 1898.
Design:This study is a randomized, controlled trial. Participants with a Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) diagnosis of bipolar I
disorder, manic or mixed episode will be randomly assigned to a treatment of Lithium,
Valproate, Oxcarbazepine, Quetiapine, Olanzapine, or Ziprasidone. In the following
conditions, participants will take another antimanic drug as a combination medication: 1)
those who have a reduction in YMRS scores less than 25% after one week of treatment; 2)
those who have a reduction in YMRS scores less than 50% after two weeks of treatment; or 3)
those who have a increase in YMRS more than 30% at day 4. An antipsychotic (Quetiapine,
Olanzapine, and Ziprasidone) will be added on for those who use lithium, Valproate or
Oxcarbazepine as a first attempted medication; while Lithium, Valproate, or Oxcarbazepine
will be added on for those who use an antipsychotic as a first attempted medication. Those
participants who are recognized as non-response/partial response to two combined medications
after 6 weeks of treatment will switch to Modified Electroconvulsive Therapy (MECT).
Measures: Primary outcome measures are change scores on the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS)
and dropout rates. Secondary outcome measures include Clinical Global Impressions (CGI)
Scale, Global Assessment Scale (GAS), Treatment Emergent Symptom Scale (TESS), and Brief
Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS).
Response criteria: <25% reduction in YMRS scores or >=4 scores of CGI is defined as
non-response. 25-49% reduction in YMRS scores from baseline as well as <=3 scores of
Clinical General Impression (CGI) is recognized as partial response.>= 50% reduction in YMRS
as well as 1 (very much improved) or 2 scores (much improved) of CGI is recognized as
response. Remission is defined as a YMRS score <=12 and CGI score equal to 1 or 2.
Background:
Bipolar disorder is one of the most common mental illnesses affecting 1%-4% of the
population, and one of the leading causes of worldwide disability. Mania is a condition of
excessively elevated mood, characterizes bipolar disorder, and usually is a main cause of
hospitalization. Mood stabilisers and antipsychotic drugs have long been the maintenance
treatment of acute mania with and without psychotic symptoms. Though clinical trails have
been demonstrated that these drugs are individually more effective than placebo.However, in
the pragmatic practice, patient at acute mania urgently want to see the effectiveness, and
psychiatrist under great pressure and are in great need to evaluate the very short-term
effectiveness (e.g one week). If the first attempted antimanic drug fails, psychiatrist need
the evidence that which medication should be to added on or switch to.
Objectives:
one main aim is to rank the short-term ( e.g.one and two week) effectiveness and
acceptability of the common anti-mania drugs, including Lithium, Valproate, Oxcarbazepine,
Quetiapine, Olanzapine, or Ziprasidone. Secondary aim is to investigate which medication to
add on for non-responders or switch to.
Methods:
The study setting: it is expected that 120 subjects with a diagnose of DSM-IV bipolar
disorder will be recruited from Guangzhou Psychiatric Hospital, the earliest psychiatric
hospital in the history of China established by Dr.J. G. Kerr in 1898.
Design:This study is a randomized, controlled trial, consisting two phase. 120 participants
with a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV)
diagnosis of bipolar I disorder, manic or mixed phase will be randomly assigned to a
treatment of Lithium, Valproate, Oxcarbazepine, Quetiapine, Olanzapine, or Ziprasidone. The
period from starting dose to effective dose for each drug is within 2 days, and the
effective doses for these drugs are described as follow: Lithium, 750mg—2000mg/d, serum Li
level: 0.6mmol—1.2mmol/L; Valproate, 800mg-- 1200mg/d, serum Valproate level: 70-120ug/ml;
Oxcarbazepine, 600-1200mg/d; Quetiapine, 600mg--800mg/d; Olanzapine, 10mg-- 20mg/d;
Ziprasidone, 80mg—160mmg/d.
In the following conditions, participants will take a another antimanic drug as a
combination medication: 1) those who have a reduction in YMRS scores less than 25% after one
week of treatment; 2) those who have a reduction in YMRS scores less than 50% after two
weeks of treatment; or 3) those who have a increase in YMRS more than 30% at day 4. An
antipsychotic (Quetiapine, Olanzapine, and Ziprasidone) will be added on for those who use
lithium, Valproate or Oxcarbazepine as a first attempted medication; while Lithium,
Valproate, or Oxcarbazepine will be added on for those who use an antipsychotic as a first
attempted medication. Those participants who are recognized as non-response/partial response
to two combined medications after 6 weeks of treatment will switch to Modified
Electroconvulsive Therapy (MECT).
Measures: Primary outcome measures are change scores on the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS)
and dropout rates. Secondary outcome measures include Clinical Global Impressions (CGI)
Scale, Global Assessment Scale (GAS), Treatment Emergent Symptom Scale (TESS), and Brief
Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS).
Response criteria: <25% reduction in YMRS scores or >=4 scores of CGI is defined as
non-response. 25-49% reduction in YMRS scores from baseline as well as <=3 scores of
Clinical General Impression (CGI) is recognized as partial response.>= 50% reduction in YMRS
as well as 1 (very much improved) or 2 scores (much improved) of CGI is recognized as
response. Remission is defined as a YMRS score <=12 and CGI score equal to 1 or 2.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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