Safety and Effectiveness of Long-Term Treatment with Lurasidone in Older Adults with Bipolar Depression: Post-Hoc Analysis of a 6-Month, Open-Label Study.

Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; McLean Hospital, Belmont, MA. Electronic address: bforester@partners.org. Departments of Psychiatry and Neurology, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH. Psychiatry Clinical Development, Sunovion Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Marlborough, MA. Global Medical Affairs, Sunovion Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Marlborough, MA. Global Clinical Operations, Sunovion Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Marlborough, MA. Executive Vice President and Chief Medical Officer, Sunovion Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Marlborough, MA.

The American journal of geriatric psychiatry : official journal of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry. 2018;(2):150-159
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of 6 months of treatment with lurasidone in older adults with a diagnosis of bipolar I depression. DESIGN Post-hoc analysis of a multicenter, 6-month, open-label extension study. SETTING Outpatient. PARTICIPANTS Patients aged 55 to 75 years with a DSM-IV-TR diagnosis of bipolar I depression who had completed 6 weeks of double-blind, placebo-controlled treatment with either lurasidone monotherapy (1 study) or adjunctive therapy with lithium or valproate (2 studies). INTERVENTION Flexible doses of lurasidone, 20 to 120 mg/day, either as monotherapy, or adjunctive with lithium or valproate. MEASUREMENTS Effectiveness was assessed using the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS; change from open-label-baseline to month-6, observed case analysis). RESULTS A total of 141 older adults entered the extension study (monotherapy, N = 55; 39%; adjunctive therapy, N = 86; 61%). At the end of 6 months of open-label treatment with lurasidone, as monotherapy or adjunctive therapy, minimal changes were observed in the older adult sample in mean weight (-1.0 kg and -0.4 kg, respectively); and median total cholesterol (-2.0 mg/dL and +6.0 md/dL, respectively), triglycerides (+2.5 mg/dL and +6.0 mg/dL, respectively), and HbA1c (0.0% and -0.1%, respectively). Patients treated with 6 months of lurasidone showed a mean improvement on the MADRS in both the monotherapy (-6.2) and adjunctive therapy (-6.7) groups. CONCLUSIONS Results of these post-hoc analyses found that up to 7.5 months of lurasidone treatment for bipolar depression in older adults was associated with minimal effects on weight and metabolic parameters, with low rates of switching to hypomania or mania, and was well tolerated. The antidepressant effectiveness of lurasidone in this age group was maintained over the 6-month treatment period.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Clinical Study ; Multicenter Study

Metadata

MeSH terms : Bipolar Disorder