Atypical antipsychotics in bipolar disorder: systematic review of randomised trials
Open Access
- 16 August 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in BMC Psychiatry
- Vol. 7 (1) , 40
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-244x-7-40
Abstract
Atypical antipsychotics are increasingly used for treatment of mental illnesses like schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and considered to have fewer extrapyramidal effects than older antipsychotics. We examined efficacy in randomised trials of bipolar disorder where the presenting episode was either depression, or manic/mixed, comparing atypical antipsychotic with placebo or active comparator, examined withdrawals for any cause, or due to lack of efficacy or adverse events, and combined all phases for adverse event analysis. Studies were found through systematic search (PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library), and data combined for analysis where there was clinical homogeneity, with especial reference to trial duration. In five trials (2,206 patients) participants presented with a depressive episode, and in 25 trials (6,174 patients) the presenting episode was manic or mixed. In 8-week studies presenting with depression, quetiapine and olanzapine produced significantly better rates of response and symptomatic remission than placebo, with NNTs of 5–6, but more adverse event withdrawals (NNH 12). With mania or mixed presentation atypical antipsychotics produced significantly better rates of response and symptomatic remission than placebo, with NNTs of about 5 up to six weeks, and 4 at 6–12 weeks, but more adverse event withdrawals (NNH of about 22) in studies of 6–12 weeks. In comparisons with established treatments, atypical antipsychotics had similar efficacy, but significantly fewer adverse event withdrawals (NNT to prevent one withdrawal about 10). In maintenance trials atypical antipsychotics had significantly fewer relapses to depression or mania than placebo or active comparator. In placebo-controlled trials, atypical antipsychotics were associated with higher rates of weight gain of ≥7% (mainly olanzapine trials), somnolence, and extrapyramidal symptoms. In active controlled trials, atypical antipsychotics were associated with lower rates of extrapyramidal symptoms, but higher rates of weight gain and somnolence. Atypical antipsychotics are effective in treating both phases of bipolar disorder compared with placebo, and as effective as established drug therapies. Atypical antipsychotics produce fewer extrapyramidal symptoms, but weight gain is more common (with olanzapine). There is insufficient data confidently to distinguish between different atypical antipsychotics.Keywords
This publication has 67 references indexed in Scilit:
- Acute bipolar mania: a systematic review and meta‐analysis of co‐therapy vs. monotherapyActa Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 2006
- Risperidone alone or in combination for acute maniaCochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 2006
- Effectiveness of aripiprazole v. Haloperidol in acute bipolar maniaThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 2005
- Why Most Published Research Findings Are FalsePLoS Medicine, 2005
- Acute and continuation risperidone monotherapy in bipolar mania: a 3-week placebo-controlled trial followed by a 9-week double-blind trial of risperidone and haloperidolEuropean Neuropsychopharmacology, 2004
- Risperidone alone or in combination for acute maniaPublished by Wiley ,2003
- Olanzapine alone or in combination for acute maniaCochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 2003
- An evaluation of homogeneity tests in meta-analyses in pain using simulations of individual patient dataPain, 2000
- Does quality of reports of randomised trials affect estimates of intervention efficacy reported in meta-analyses?Published by Elsevier ,1998
- Assessing the quality of reports of randomized clinical trials: Is blinding necessary?Controlled Clinical Trials, 1996