Depot antipsychotics: Where do we stand?

Ann Clin Psychiatry

Armor Correctional Health Services, Inc., Oklahoma City, OK USA, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences, Saint Louis University, St. Louis, MO USA. E-mail:

Published: November 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Nonadherence to medication is a significant challenge for patients with schizophrenia, prompting the development of depot antipsychotics, which are long-acting injectable medications intended to improve adherence.
  • - A systematic review of four major studies on schizophrenia treatment highlighted high discontinuation rates of oral antipsychotics, with findings showing that nearly three-quarters of patients stop taking them within six months.
  • - The review concluded that depot antipsychotics can be an effective first-line treatment option for schizophrenia, as evidence indicates better adherence and lower rates of hospitalization compared to oral medication.

Article Abstract

Background: Nonadherence to medication is a major problem for patients with schizophrenia. To counter this problem, pharmaceutical companies began developing depot antipsychotics. Although there are currently 5 first-generation and 6 second-generation depot antipsychotics available worldwide, many physicians are still reluctant to use this category of drug initially. This review provides the latest information about the use of depot antipsychotics in schizophrenia treatment as well as several studies in support of depot antipsychotic use as first-line treatment for patients with schizophrenia.

Methods: A systematic review of 4 milestone schizophrenia studies was performed to provide an aggregate analysis of the history and use of depot antipsychotics. Results and findings from several clinical trials--the Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE), European First Episode Schizophrenia Trial (EUFEST), A Comparison of Long-Acting Injectable Medications for Schizophrenia (ACLAIMS), and Paliperidone Palmitate Research in Demonstrating Effectiveness (PRIDE)--were summarized to provide more information on the development and evolution of depot antipsychotics, common factors that contribute to nonadherence, and guidelines for each long-acting injectable currently available.

Results: The CATIE schizophrenia study revealed a 74% rate of discontinuation of oral antipsychotics within 6 months of use. Similar findings from the EUFEST study indicated that 42% of participants discontinued oral medications after 12 months of use. The ACLAIMS study reported no statistically significant difference in efficacy failure rate between haloperidol decanoate and paliperidone palmitate. The PRIDE study found that first hospitalization or arrest was 43% higher among patients in the oral antipsychotic group vs the depot group during the study.

Conclusions: This review provides clinical evidence to support the use of depot formulations as first-line treatment for patients with schizophrenia, which may improve adherence and thereby lower risk of relapse, suicide, rehospitalization, and incarceration.

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