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Maudsley Hospital, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8AF
Institute of Psychiatry, De Crespigny Park, London SE5 8AF
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Introduction |
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Development and pharmacology |
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It is recommended that patients who are candidates for depot medication should first be stabilised on the oral form of the medication. Plasma concentrations have been used to justify the use of loading doses to achieve earlier steady states after initiation of depot treatment (Ershefsky et al, 1990) but there is wide inter-patient variability in plasma concentration after depot administration. There is little convincing support from controlled studies for therapeutic drug monitoring of plasma concentration during treatments. Depot antipsychotic adverse effects are related to the active antipsychotic agent and are therefore comparable to oral agents. One significant difference, however, relates specifically to the long half-life associated with depot medication; an adverse event such as neuroleptic malignant syndrome, although rare (Addonizio & Susman, 1991), may be much more difficult to manage in a patient receiving a depot medication with an extended elimination time. The literature review by Gerlach (1995) does not support the view that depot antipsychotics are associated with a greater risk of major side-effects than the oral equivalent.
Concerns have been raised (particularly during the first 10 years of use) about the ethics of depot use; critics have associated administering medication in this form with coercive or forced treatment. Certain patients may indeed have persistent feelings of loss of control over their treatment, necessitating the change to oral medication. Others may develop a more positive outlook if lowest effective dose strategies are used early in treatment, allowing symptom control and insight improvement to take place while minimising distressing side-effects. The subjective experience of side-effects to medication is a critical factor in the development of negative feelings towards antipsychotic medication (Gerlach & Larsen, 1999). A systematic review of patient attitude to depot antipsychotic medication by Walburn et al (2001) indicates that patients on depot antipsychotics prefer this route of administration. However, the authors acknowledge that the evidence base for this finding is limited.
Differing approaches to these concerns may partly explain some of the wide variations in depot antipsychotic use between countries: it has been consistently lower in the US and France than in some northern European countries (UK, Sweden and Denmark) (Dencker & Axelsson, 1996), although this may also be related to the relatively limited selection of typical depots (haloperidol and fluphenazine) available in the US.
Particular management difficulties are presented by patients with a history of poor compliance who are sensitive to the extrapyramidal side-effects of conventional antipsychotics. This group would seem to be particularly suited to atypical depot preparations. There are, however, no clear indications at present as to when these new depots might become available (although more than one is expected to be launched within the next 3 years). Their exact place in therapy will only become clear when information about cost, dose intervals and relative efficacy are available.
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Efficacy |
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A major limitation of the mirror image design is that it is unclear how much of the detected benefit can be attributed to a pharmacological effect and how much may have been due to spontaneous improvement independent of treatment or to extra support and supervision provided by the staff in the clinic where the depot medication was administered. Controlled comparisons of oral and depot forms of antipsychotic medication have not shown a clear compliance benefit for depot forms (Rifkin et al, 1977; Schooler et al, 1980) but this has been linked to the assumption that patients with schizophrenia who enrol in clinical trials may have higher compliance rates than the general population with schizophrenia (Kane & Kissling, 1991).
It must also be borne in mind when attempting to critically evaluate these studies or other work looking at depot medication, that the very nature of the patient group who may benefit most from depot medication and depot clinics tends to contain uncooperative, poorly compliant patients. Research with such a group is fraught with difficulty but the patient sample studied must be representative of those attending depot clinics. Once the limitations of the early studies are acknowledged, there is still valuable information to be gleaned from them.
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Compliance and indications for depot use |
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The use of depot medication requires compliance on the part of the patient, although attending for administration of medication once every 2 or 3 weeks may be preferable to taking medication every day or several times a day. In a review of medication compliance in schizophrenia, Falloon (1984) reported 80% compliance with depot medication and 60% with oral antipsychotics. This is comparable to compliance rates among other medical out-patients. Increasing the complexity of the regime has been shown to cause decreased compliance (Hulka et al, 1976). The seriousness of the disorder (as perceived by the patient) is also linked to compliance and this has particular importance in the treatment of schizophrenia. Appointments can best be seen as part of an educative process using negotiation to develop and maintain compliance.
In order to reduce non-compliance associated with non-attendance at depot clinic, it is important to be able to identify the group of patients who are at risk of dropping out of clinic attendance. Heyscue et al (1998) looked at groups of patients attending urban and rural out-patient clinics to have depot antipsychotic medication administered. Clinic attendance was high in both groups, averaging 95%. This compliance rate is higher than that reported in previous depot medication studies and may be owing to reportedly thorough follow-up on missed appointments at both sites. The patient was understood to be compliant if the depot dose was administered within 4 days of the scheduled date. The only characteristic associated with a decreased compliance rate was a history of substance misuse. Substance misuse has previously been linked to poor compliance in other studies. Focusing on those with a history of substance misuse and reacting quickly to early signs of their defaulting from treatment may be important in increasing overall compliance rates at the depot clinic.
Although switching to a depot medication has been used as an attempt to increase compliance, it is important to recognise that there are other methods of helping to achieve this. Turner and Vernon (1976) reported on using telephone prompting to boost attendance at the first out-patient appointment after discharge. Considerable success was reported in this study in increasing the percentage of patients who attend a first appointment through the use of telephone prompting. The advantages of assigning staff to this prompting were stressed. A long waiting period was associated with non-attendance, as was chronic illness and poverty. Burgoyne et al (1983), however, were unable to replicate these results and concluded that earlier apparent improvement caused by telephone prompting may in fact have been related to socioeconomic factors (having a telephone). Better compliance with aftercare in general after admission to a psychiatric unit is associated with an increased number of previous hospitalisations, a longer stay and less denial of need for medication and other treatments.
Patients not meeting these criteria, especially those with a history of substance misuse, may be best served at discharge with a referral to a depot medication clinic. Increasingly, however, patients are receiving oral atypical antipsychotic medication as first-line treatment. Is there a case to be made for greater use of depot typical medication in patients at higher risk of non-compliance or is the non-compliance associated with troublesome side-effects and cognitive deficits that may respond better to atypical medication?
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Cost-benefit analysis |
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Running a depot clinic |
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Conclusions |
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References |
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RIFKIN, A., QUITKIN, F., RABINER, C. J., et al (1997) Fluphenazine decanoate, fluphenazine hydrochloride given orally, and placebo in remitted schizophrenics. I. Relapse rates after one year. Archives of General Psychiatry, 34, 43-47.
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