Preventive effect of aripiprazole once monthly on rehospitalization for bipolar disorder: A multicenter 1‐year retrospective mirror image study

Author:

Goto Junichi1ORCID,Shono Masahiro1,Abe Yasuhisa2,Fujita Yasutaka3,Ueda Keishi4,Yoshida Binchi5,Nabeshima Yoshihiro1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Yuge Neuropsychiatric Hospital Kumamoto Japan

2. Yatsushiro Kosei Hospital Kumamoto Japan

3. Kusatsu Hospital Hiroshima Japan

4. Kumamoto Seimei Hospital Kumamoto Japan

5. Hitoyoshi Mental Hospital Kumamoto Japan

Abstract

AbstractAimWe conducted a 1‐year retrospective mirror‐image study to investigate the effect of aripiprazole once monthly (AOM) on rehospitalization for bipolar disorder.MethodsParticipants were recruited from psychiatric emergency and acute care hospitals in western Japan. We included 39 participants with bipolar disorder who had been administered AOM for at least 1 year with no missing medical records during the observational period. The primary outcomes were rehospitalization rate, number of rehospitalizations, total hospitalization days, and time to rehospitalization in the context of overall psychiatric readmissions. The significance level was set at p < 0.05.ResultsAOM significantly reduced the rehospitalization rate from 23/39 (59%) to 7/39 (18%) (p = 0.001). The number of rehospitalizations decreased significantly from a mean of 0.85 per person‐year to 0.41 per person‐year (p = 0.048). The total hospitalization days significantly decreased from a mean of 34.9 days to 14.4 days (p = 0.008). AOM significantly prolonged the time to rehospitalization (p < 0.001).ConclusionThis study found that AOM reduces overall psychiatric rehospitalization for bipolar disorder based on data from 1 year before and after AOM administration in the real‐world setting. Future studies should examine the robustness and persistence of the rehospitalization preventive effect of AOM with larger sample sizes and longer observation periods beyond 1 year.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Psychiatry and Mental health,Pharmacology,Clinical Psychology

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