Background: Although risperidone has been shown to be an effective antipsychotic medication in schizophrenia, the clinical studies performed for the Food and Drug Administration’s approval process focused on only a mixed group of schizophrenic patients. Most of these studies did not directly address the efficacy of risperidone in chronic nonresponding schizophrenics. To better evaluate whether risperidone has a substantial degree of efficacy in schizophrenic nonresponders, we conducted an open prospective study of risperidone in a sample of chronically hospitalized schizophrenic patients.
Method: Twenty-five patients who met DSMIII- R criteria for schizophrenia or schizoaffective psychosis, who were chronically hospitalized at a tertiary care state facility, and who had not responded to conventional neuroleptics were evaluated before and during treatment with risperidone by using several standard rating scales and adjunctive assessments.
Results: Endpoint analysis showed that 36% (N = 9) of the patients were classified as responders on the basis of at least a 20% decrease in total Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale score at final evaluation. A higher percentage of patients were classified as responders when other rating scale criteria were used. Reductions in psychopathology scores were seen in scales reflecting positive symptoms but not in scores of negative symptoms. High baseline negative symptom scores were correlated with poorer response to risperidone as indicated by the decrease in positive symptom scores.
Conclusion: This study offers evidence that risperidone may reduce positive symptoms of schizophrenia for a subgroup of chronically hospitalized schizophrenic patients who have not responded to conventional neuroleptics. The comparative evaluation of the efficacy of risperidone versus that of clozapine in these types of patients requires further study.
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