Drug-induced Extrapyramidal Side Effects Clinical Trial
Official title:
Extrapyramidal Side-Effects in Antipsychotic Drug Therapeutics
Verified date | June 2024 |
Source | University of Edinburgh |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The project is aimed at addressing the fundamental issue in antipsychotic therapeutics -the balance between mental state benefits and neurological risks.The latter cannot be overestimated and clinical skills in themselves are inadequately sensitive to refine practice. With all current and "pipeline" antipsychotics based on central dopamine blockade, there is little prospect that therapeutics can be improved by advances in pharmacology alone. The project uses, for the first time, technology that is not only simple, real-life and user-friendly but "modern" and socially held in high regards. The proposal depends on patients receiving antipsychotic medication where clinically indicated. At all times, subjects will receive clinically-indicated therapy. The major ethical issue will relate to the issue of informed consent in those suffering from major psychiatric disorder. This is a routine consideration in psychiatric practice and the investigators will seek guidance on this from the Consultant Psychiatrist responsible for potential participants and would not proceed with initial approaches in cases of doubt or absence of capacity. This is a pilot/feasibility study with no intention to utilise the data for commercialisation of the device or to expand the CE (Conformité Européenne) marking.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 21 |
Est. completion date | June 30, 2018 |
Est. primary completion date | June 30, 2018 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 50 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Patients with an acute psychotic illness requiring admission to hospital - Medications are deemed necessary for appropriate clinical management - English as a first language - Under the age of 50 years (to reduce the likelihood of idiopathic Parkinson's disease) - Right-handed - Mixed, balanced genders - Basic writing competence - No previous neurological disease Exclusion Criteria: - Lack of capacity as deemed by their Consultant Psychiatrist - Under 18 years of age - Over 50 years of age - Recent use of psychostimulant drugs - Previous neurological disease - English not a first language - Left handed - Previous neurological condition - For Stage 2: antipsychotic medication orally in the previous 3 months or by depot injection in the previous 6 months |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | NHS Lothian | Edinburgh |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Edinburgh |
United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Acceptability to patients with acute psychotic illnesses using the Likert scale of satisfaction, assessing the test situation as 'easy/difficult: 'pleasurable/non-pleasurable':'acceptable/non-acceptable' | Stage 1 - One assessment for each patient, allow up to 4 weeks to recruit | ||
Primary | Earlier onset (by >1 week) of parkinsonism assessed by micrographic changes compared to standard clinical examination as detected by the Manus sensor pen | Stage 2 - each patient shall be in the study for 6 weeks. Allow up to 6 months to recruit. | ||
Secondary | Sensitivity: prevalence of parkinsonism at different criteria from rating scale parameters as detailed in "description" section below. | A standardised assessment of mental state (Positive and Negative Symptom Scale - PANSS); a standard clinical evaluation of extrapyramidal neurological status (the Extrapyramidal Symptom Rating Scale - ESRS); a standard questionnaire of subjective state (the Subjective Well-Being on Neuroleptics Scale - SWNS - designed to pick up later potential medication effects) | Stage 2 - each patient shall be in the study for 6 weeks. Allow up to 6 months to recruit. |