Objective: While 65%-80% occupancy of dopamine D2 receptors with antipsychotics has been proposed to achieve optimal therapeutic response during acute treatment of schizophrenia, it remains unclear as to whether it is also necessary to maintain D2 receptor occupancy within this “safe” window for ongoing maintenance treatment. The data are especially scarce for long-acting antipsychotic formulations.
Method: Clinically stable patients with schizophrenia (DSM-IV) receiving a stable dose of risperidone long-acting injectable (LAI) as antipsychotic monotherapy for at least 3 months and free of any psychiatric hospitalization over the past 6 months were included. Dopamine D2 receptor occupancy levels at trough were estimated from plasma concentrations of risperidone plus 9-hydroxyrisperidone immediately before the intramuscular injection of risperidone LAI, using a 1-site binding model derived from our previous positron emission tomography data. This study was conducted from October to December 2011.
Results: 36 patients were included in this study (mean±SD age, 49.3±14.0 years; mean±SD dose and interval of injections, 38.2±11.6 mg and 16.5±14.0 days, respectively). Mean±SD D2 receptor occupancy was 62.1%±15.4%; 52.8% of the subjects (n=19) did not demonstrate an occupancy of ≥65%. On the other hand, 13.9% (n=5) showed a D2 occupancy as high as over 80% at the estimated trough.
Conclusions: More than half of patients taking risperidone LAI maintained clinical stability without achieving continuous blockade of dopamine D2 receptors ≥65% in real-world clinical settings. Results suggest that sustained dopamine D2 receptor occupancy levels of ≥65% may not be necessary for maintenance treatment with risperidone LAI in schizophrenia.
J Clin Psychiatry 2012;73(8):1147-1152
© Copyright 2012 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.
Submitted: January 6, 2012; accepted April 9, 2012 (doi:10.4088/JCP.12m07638).
Corresponding author: Hiroyuki Uchida, MD, PhD, Department of Neuropsychiatry, Keio University School of Medicine, 35 Shinanomachi, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, 160-8582, Japan ([email protected]).
Continue Reading...
Did you know members enjoy unlimited free PDF downloads as part of their subscription? Subscribe today for instant access to this article and our entire library in your preferred format. Alternatively, you can purchase the PDF of this article individually.
Members enjoy free PDF downloads on all articles.
Save
Cite
Already a member? Login
Advertisement
GAM ID: sidebar-top