Published: 20-02-2019 17:00 | Updated: 20-02-2019 18:17

Combination therapy might be beneficial in schizophrenia

Combining certain types of two antipsychotic agents in the maintenance treatment of schizophrenia is associated with a lower risk of relapse than using monotherapy. This is suggested in a paper published by researchers at Karolinska Institutet in the journal JAMA Psychiatry. The current treatment guidelines should modify their categorical recommendations discouraging all antipsychotic polypharmacy, according to the researchers.

The effectiveness of antipsychotic combination therapy in schizophrenia relapse prevention is controversial, and use of multiple agents is generally believed to impair physical well-being. But the evidence for this is weak and antipsychotic polypharmacy is widely used.

Now researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have conducted a large registry based study to see if there is any difference in the risk of relapse in schizophrenia when patients use antipsychotic polypharmacy compared to monotherapy.

Studied 62,000 patients

The study was based on more than 62,000 patients; all persons with schizophrenia treated in the inpatient setting during 1972-2014 in Finland. The researchers then followed the patients to see to what extent they were rehospitalised for psychiatric care, which was used as a marker for relapse. The median follow-up time was 14.1 years and to avoid bias each patient was used as his or her own control (so called within-individual analysis).

The results show that antipsychotic polypharmacy in general was associated with a slightly lower risk of psychiatric rehospitalisation than monotherapy. They do however not indicate that all types of polypharmacy are beneficial. Combining aripiprazole with clozapine was associated with the best outcome, with a 14-23 per cent lower risk of rehospitalisation compared to clozapine alone; which was the monotherapy associated with the best outcomes.

Possible update of treatment guidelines

Current treatment guidelines state that antipsychotic monotherapy should be preferred and polypharmacy should be avoided if possible. This study should change that view, according to first author of the study, Jari Tiihonen, specialist doctor and professor at Karolinska Institutet’s Department of Clinical Neuroscience.

”Our results indicate that the current treatment guidelines should tone down their categorical recommendations discouraging all antipsychotic polypharmacy. The evidence of superiority of polypharmacy might be sparse, and should be replicated in other countries, but there is no evidence at all on superiority of monotherapy over polypharmacy in the maintenance treatment of schizophrenia”, says Jari Tiihonen.

Researchers affiliated to the University of Eastern Finland, Niuvanniemi Hospital, EPID research Oy, Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine, The Zucker Hillside Hospital, Charité Universitätsmedizin and National Institute for Health and Welfare, Finland, also contributed to the study.

The study was funded by the Finnish Ministry of Social Affairs and the Academy of Finland. No company has financed this study, but several of the authors have previously received funding/fees from pharmaceutical companies in different contexts. Two of the authors are employed by the contract research organisation EPID Research. The scientific article provides more detailed information about potential conflicts of interest.

Publication

Association of Antipsychotic Polypharmacy vs Monotherapy With Psychiatric Rehospitalization Among Adults With Schizophrenia
Jari Tiihonen, Heidi Taipale, Juha Mehtälä, Pia Vattulainen, Christoph U. Correll and Antti Tanskanen
JAMA Psychiatry, online Februari 20, 2019, doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2018.4320