AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the effects of a 2011 trial comparing the effectiveness of the long-acting injectable antipsychotic Risperidone Consta® with oral treatments in veterans diagnosed with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, but found no positive results for either effectiveness or cost-effectiveness.
  • Following the trial, there was a significant decline in the initiation of new patients on LAI risperidone, alongside a decrease in total annual users and expenditures on the drug.
  • The decline in LAI risperidone usage was largely due to the emergence of a newer treatment, LAI paliperidone, which gained popularity two years prior to the trial, suggesting that the results of the CSP#555 study may have further

Article Abstract

Background: Multisite practical clinical trials evaluate treatments in real-world practice. A multisite randomized Veterans Health Administration (VHA) cooperative study (CSP#555) published in 2011 compared the first long-acting injectable (LAI) second-generation antipsychotic (SGA), Risperidone Consta®, in veterans with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, to oral antipsychotics, with unexpected null results for effectiveness and cost-effectiveness. Whether null results of this type could change VHA practice has not been studied.

Methods: A longitudinal observational analysis was used to evaluate the impact of the trial findings on VHA clinical practices. National administrative data compared new starts on LAI risperidone during the 4 years before the publication of CSP#555 in 2011 to new starts on LAI risperidone during the 4 years after.

Results: Among 119,565 Veterans with the indicated diagnoses treated with antipsychotics from 2007 to 2015, the number and proportion of new starts on LAI risperidone declined significantly following the study publication, as did the total number of annual users and drug expenditures. However, data from 2007 to 2010 showed the decline in new starts actually preceded the publication of CSP#555. This change was likely explained by the increase in new starts, total use, and expenditures on a newer medicine, LAI paliperidone, a 4-week LAI treatment, in the 2 years prior to the publication of CSP#555.

Conclusions: The declining use of LAI risperidone likely primarily reflects the substitution of a longer-acting LAI SGA, paliperidone, that came to market 2 years before the study publication, a substitution that may have been reinforced by null CSP#555 study results for LAI risperidone.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9900548PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13063-023-07094-6DOI Listing

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