Comparative efficacy and tolerability of 15 antipsychotic drugs in schizophrenia: a multiple-treatments meta-analysis

被引:1816
|
作者
Leucht, Stefan [1 ]
Cipriani, Andrea [2 ,5 ]
Spineli, Loukia [3 ]
Mavridis, Dimitris [3 ]
Oerey, Deniz [1 ]
Richter, Franziska [1 ]
Samara, Myrto [1 ]
Barbui, Corrado [2 ]
Engel, Rolf R. [4 ]
Geddes, John R. [5 ]
Kissling, Werner [1 ]
Stapf, Marko Paul [1 ]
Laessig, Bettina [1 ]
Salanti, Georgia [3 ]
Davis, John M. [6 ,7 ]
机构
[1] Tech Univ Munich, Klinikum Rechts Isar, Dept Psychiat & Psychotherapy, D-81675 Munich, Germany
[2] Univ Verona, Dept Med & Publ Hlth, Sect Psychiat, I-37100 Verona, Italy
[3] Univ Ioannina, Sch Med, Dept Hyg & Epidemiol, GR-45110 Ioannina, Greece
[4] Univ Munich, Psychiat Klin, Munich, Germany
[5] Univ Oxford, Warneford Hosp, Dept Psychiat, Oxford, England
[6] Univ Illinois, Inst Psychiat, Chicago, IL USA
[7] Maryland Psychiat Res Ctr, Baltimore, MD 21228 USA
来源
LANCET | 2013年 / 382卷 / 9896期
关键词
2ND-GENERATION; TRIALS; 1ST-GENERATION; PALIPERIDONE; MEDICATIONS; BLIND;
D O I
10.1016/S0140-6736(13)60733-3
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background The question of which antipsychotic drug should be preferred for the treatment of schizophrenia is controversial, and conventional pairwise meta-analyses cannot provide a hierarchy based on the randomised evidence. We aimed to integrate the available evidence to create hierarchies of the comparative efficacy, risk of all-cause discontinuation, and major side-effects of antipsychotic drugs. Methods We did a Bayesian-framework, multiple-treatments meta-analysis (which uses both direct and indirect comparisons) of randomised controlled trials to compare 15 antipsychotic drugs and placebo in the acute treatment of schizophrenia. We searched the Cochrane Schizophrenia Group's specialised register, Medline, Embase, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and ClinicalTrials.gov for reports published up to Sept 1, 2012. Search results were supplemented by reports from the US Food and Drug Administration website and by data requested from pharmaceutical companies. Blinded, randomised controlled trials of patients with schizophrenia or related disorders were eligible. We excluded trials done in patients with predominant negative symptoms, concomitant medical illness, or treatment resistance, and those done in stable patients. Data for seven outcomes were independently extracted by two reviewers. The primary outcome was efficacy, as measured by mean overall change in symptoms. We also examined all-cause discontinuation, weight gain, extrapyramidal side-effects, prolactin increase, QTc prolongation, and sedation. Findings We identified 212 suitable trials, with data for 43 049 participants. All drugs were significantly more effective than placebo. The standardised mean differences with 95% credible intervals were: clozapine 0.88, 0.73-1.03; amisulpride 0.66, 0.53-0.78; olanzapine 0.59, 0.53-0.65; risperidone 0.56, 0.50-0.63; paliperidone 0.50, 0.39-0.60; zotepine 0.49, 0.31-0.66; haloperidol 0.45, 0.39-0.51; quetiapine 0.44, 0.35-0.52; aripiprazole 0.43, 0.34-0.52; sertindole 0.39, 0.26-0.52; ziprasidone 0.39, 0.30-0.49; chlorpromazine 0.38, 0.23-0.54; asenapine 0.38, 0.25-0.51; lurasidone 0.33, 0.21-0.45; and iloperidone 0.33, 0.22-0.43. Odds ratios compared with placebo for all-cause discontinuation ranged from 0.43 for the best drug (amisulpride) to 0.80 for the worst drug (haloperidol); for extrapyramidal side-effects 0.30 (clozapine) to 4.76 (haloperidol); and for sedation 1.42 (amisulpride) to 8.82 (clozapine). Standardised mean differences compared with placebo for weight gain varied from -0.09 for the best drug (haloperidol) to -0.74 for the worst drug (olanzapine), for prolactin increase 0.22 (aripiprazole) to -1.30 (paliperidone), and for QTc prolongation 0.10 (lurasidone) to -0.90 (sertindole). Efficacy outcomes did not change substantially after removal of placebo or haloperidol groups, or when dose, percentage of withdrawals, extent of blinding, pharmaceutical industry sponsorship, study duration, chronicity, and year of publication were accounted for in meta-regressions and sensitivity analyses. Interpretation Antipsychotics differed substantially in side-effects, and small but robust differences were seen in efficacy. Our findings challenge the straightforward classification of antipsychotics into first-generation and second-generation groupings. Rather, hierarchies in the different domains should help clinicians to adapt the choice of antipsychotic drug to the needs of individual patients. These findings should be considered by mental health policy makers and in the revision of clinical practice guidelines.
引用
收藏
页码:951 / 962
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Bias in multiple-treatments meta-analysis: a case on comparative efficacy and tolerability of 15 antipsychotic drugs for schizophrenia
    Li Nan
    Zhan Siyan
    Si Tianmei
    中华医学杂志(英文版), 2014, (21) : 3829 - 3831
  • [2] Bias in multiple-treatments meta-analysis: a case on comparative efficacy and tolerability of 15 antipsychotic drugs for schizophrenia
    Li Nan
    Zhan Siyan
    Si Tianmei
    CHINESE MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2014, 127 (21) : 3829 - 3831
  • [3] Comparative efficacy and tolerability of 15 antipsychotic drugs in schizophrenia: a multiple-treatments meta-analysis (vol 382, pg 951, 2013)
    Leucht, S.
    Cipriani, A.
    Spineli, L.
    LANCET, 2013, 382 (9896): : 940 - 940
  • [4] MULTIPLE-TREATMENTS META-ANALYSIS ON THE EFFICACY, ACCEPTABILITY AND TOLERABILITY OF 15 ANTIPSYCHOTICS DRUGS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
    Leucht, Stefan
    Cipriani, Andrea
    Salanti, Georgia
    Spineli, Loukia
    Richter, Franziska
    Oerey, Deniz
    Leucht, Claudia
    Geddes, John
    Higgins, Julian
    Barbui, Corrado
    Davis, John
    SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH, 2012, 136 : S75 - S75
  • [5] Comparative efficacy and acceptability of antimanic drugs in acute mania: a multiple-treatments meta-analysis
    Cipriani, Andrea
    Barbui, Corrado
    Salanti, Georgia
    Rendell, Jennifer
    Brown, Rachel
    Stockton, Sarah
    Purgato, Marianna
    Spineli, Loukia M.
    Goodwin, Guy M.
    Geddes, John R.
    LANCET, 2011, 378 (9799): : 1306 - 1315
  • [6] Comparative efficacy and acceptability of drug treatments for bipolar depression: a multiple-treatments meta-analysis
    Taylor, D. M.
    Cornelius, V.
    Smith, L.
    Young, A. H.
    ACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA, 2014, 130 (06) : 452 - 469
  • [7] COMPARATIVE TOLERABILITY OF NEW ANTIPSYCHOTIC DRUGS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS
    Tonin, F. S.
    Piazza, T.
    Wiens, A.
    Pontarolo, R.
    VALUE IN HEALTH, 2015, 18 (07) : A837 - A837
  • [8] Comparative efficacy and acceptability of antidepressant treatment in poststroke depression: a multiple-treatments meta-analysis
    Sun, Yefei
    Liang, Yifan
    Jiao, Yang
    Lin, Jueying
    Qu, Huiling
    Xu, Junjie
    Zhao, Chuansheng
    BMJ OPEN, 2017, 7 (08):
  • [9] Comparative efficacy and acceptability of 12 new-generation antidepressants: a multiple-treatments meta-analysis
    Cipriani, Andrea
    Furukawa, Toshiaki A.
    Salanti, Georgia
    Geddes, John R.
    Higgins, Julian P. T.
    Churchill, Rachel
    Watanabe, Norio
    Nakagawa, Atsuo
    Omori, Ichiro M.
    McGuire, Hugh
    Tansella, Michele
    Barbui, Corrado
    LANCET, 2009, 373 (9665): : 746 - 758
  • [10] Comparative efficacy and safety of biologics in moderate to severe plaque psoriasis: a multiple-treatments meta-analysis
    Xu, Shanshan
    Gao, Xing
    Deng, Jixiang
    Yang, Jiajia
    Pan, Faming
    JOURNAL DER DEUTSCHEN DERMATOLOGISCHEN GESELLSCHAFT, 2021, 19 (01): : 47 - 56