Predictors of Lack of Relapse After Random Discontinuation of Oral and Long-acting Injectable Antipsychotics in Clinically Stabilized Patients with Schizophrenia: A Re-analysis of Individual Participant Data

Author:

Schoretsanitis Georgios12ORCID,Kane John M234,Correll Christoph U2345,Rubio Jose M234

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, Hospital of Psychiatry, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

2. Department of Psychiatry, Northwell Health, The Zucker Hillside Hospital, Glen Oaks, NY, USA

3. Department of Psychiatry and Molecular Medicine, Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, Hempstead, NY, USA

4. Center for Psychiatric Neuroscience, Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, Manhasset, NY, USA

5. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Objective To quantify the risk and predictors of relapse among individuals with schizophrenia randomly withdrawn from antipsychotic maintenance treatment. Methods We re-analyzed time-to-event and baseline predictors from placebo arms in five placebo-controlled randomized trials of antipsychotics (n = 688 individuals; 173 stabilized on oral antipsychotic [OAP] and 515 on long-acting injectables [LAI]) for relapse-prevention available in the Yale Open Data Access repository. Using a survival and Cox-proportional hazards regression analyses, we estimated survival rates of “relapse-free” individuals by the end of follow-up (median = 118 days, IQR = 52.0–208.0), the rate of study-confirmed relapse, and adjusted hazard ratios (aHR, 95% confidence intervals [CI]) associated with baseline predictors. We also estimated these parameters for individuals followed for >5 half-lives of the stabilizing antipsychotic, and studied predictors of “rebound psychosis” in OAP-stabilized participants, defined as occurring within 30 days of antipsychotic withdrawal. Results 29.9% (95%CI = 23.2–38.5) remained relapse-free by the end of follow-up, 11.1% (95%CI = 5.65–21.9) among those OAP-stabilized, 36.4% (95%CI = 28.4–46.7) among those LAI-stabilized. The study-confirmed relapse rate was 45.2%, 62.4% among those OAP-stabilized and 39.4% among those LAI-stabilized. Predictors of relapse included smoking (aHR = 1.54, 95%CI = 1.19–2.00), female sex (aHR = 1.37, 95%CI = 1.08–1.79), and having been stabilized on OAPs vs LAIs (aHR = 3.56, 95%CI = 2.68–4.72). Greater risk of relapse on OAP persisted even after sufficient time had elapsed to clear antipsychotic plasma level among LAI-stabilized (aHR = 5.0, 95%CI = 3.5–7.1). “Rebound psychosis” did not show predictors. Conclusions and relevance Our results corroborate the high relapse risk following antipsychotic withdrawal after symptom stabilization with limited patient-related predictors of safe treatment discontinuation. Stabilization with LAIs reduces the short-/medium-term relapse risk.

Funder

Northwell Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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