For many patients with schizophrenia, the clinical course of the disorder is characterized by recurrent relapse, which can have devastating consequences. One factor that can contribute to relapse and can be challenging for clinicians to identify is nonadherence. Long-acting injectable (LAI) therapies help prevent relapse and may help remove the uncertainty around nonadherence. In fact, the American Psychiatric Association (APA) suggests that patients receive treatment with an LAI if they prefer such treatment or if they have a history of poor or uncertain adherence.
LAI antipsychotic therapies offer greater assurance that patients will receive medication continuously because there are fewer opportunities to miss a dose. Additionally, clinicians will be aware of a missed visit or injection, yielding time to intervene prior to a relapse.
Let's take a look at a case study of a patient living with schizophrenia, review their preferences and individual needs, and follow their journey toward finding an LAI that can help prevent relapse.
No clinical studies have been conducted to show that UZEDY affects nonadherence or the consequences of relapse discussed here.
Charles is a 32-year-old man living in a group home and working part-time as a messenger. He has been diagnosed with schizophrenia and was first hospitalized when he was 27 years old. In the 3 years following his diagnosis, Charles had 2 subsequent hospitalizations due to relapse. Though Charles receives reminders to take his medication in the group home, the provider at the hospital could not confirm that he actually took the medication as prescribed, which may have contributed to his relapse.
Following Charles’ last hospitalization 2 years ago, he has been taking an LAI and hasn’t had a relapse. However, he has missed appointments and, on these occasions, did not receive his regularly scheduled injection. The missed-dose guidance for his medication required a loading dose, which necessitated extra visits to his clinician to implement.
When Charles' psychiatry provider selected a new LAI, she reviewed the efficacy and safety data; however, she also considered other important factors, including time to reach steady-state levels, dosing options and dosing frequency, loading dose or oral supplementation requirements, coordination of missed doses, and patient concerns about needle size and injection site reactions.
Clinical discretion determines when switching is appropriate, based on factors that may include patient preference, scheduling convenience, and concerns about tolerability or symptom breakthrough.
Charles’ psychiatry provider decided to prescribe UZEDY® because it is an LAI antipsychotic with no oral supplementation or loading dose required, resulting in a streamlined initiation or reinitiation for patients who miss their regularly scheduled dose. UZEDY rapidly reaches therapeutic plasma levels within 6 to 24 hours after a single injection and sustains these levels for the duration of the dosing interval. Charles was started on UZEDY during a single office visit with one injection, without the need for a loading dose or oral supplementation. In addition, the syringe’s needle is short, and the subcutaneous injection can be administered in the back of the upper arm or abdomen, with flexible dosing options of either once every month or once every 2 months. Charles’ psychiatry provider started him on a 2-month dosing interval and counseled him on the importance of attending his appointments and the potential consequences of missed doses.
UZEDY was evaluated in RISE, a phase 3, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized relapse-prevention trial that compared UZEDY once-monthly or once-every-2-months versus placebo in adults with schizophrenia. The primary endpoint was time to impending relapse for patients taking UZEDY versus placebo, and the trial was concluded when 90 relapse events were seen across all study patients.
Patients treated with UZEDY experienced a statistically significant delay in time to relapse, with 29% of patients receiving placebo experiencing impending relapse compared with 7% of patients receiving UZEDY once-monthly. Results from the once-every-2-month dosing interval were also statistically significant compared with placebo. Risk of relapse was reduced by 80% and 62.5% with UZEDY once-monthly and once-every-2-months, respectively, compared with placebo.
The safety profile of UZEDY is expected to be similar to that of corresponding oral risperidone doses of 2 to 5 mg daily. In three 4- to 8-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials of oral risperidone, the most common adverse reactions occurring in more than 5% of patients and twice the rate of placebo were parkinsonism, akathisia, dystonia, tremor, sedation, dizziness, anxiety, blurred vision, nausea, vomiting, upper abdominal pain, stomach discomfort, dyspepsia, diarrhea, salivary hypersecretion, constipation, dry mouth, increased appetite, increased weight, fatigue, rash, nasal congestion, upper respiratory tract infection, nasopharyngitis, and pharyngolaryngeal pain.
In the RISE clinical trial in adults with schizophrenia, the adverse events occurring in 5% or more of patients taking UZEDY and more frequently than with placebo were nasopharyngitis, weight increase, and extrapyramidal disorder. The most common injection site reactions with UZEDY (≥5% and greater than placebo) were pruritus and nodule
The randomized withdrawal study design of RISE, in which patients were first stabilized on oral risperidone, may have reduced the observed rate of adverse reactions with UZEDY.
Please see additional Important Safety Information below.
Charles has been on UZEDY for the last 6 months, and his schizophrenia symptoms have remained stable. Although he missed his last appointment, it was rescheduled so that his doctor could administer the next dose of UZEDY as soon as possible. There was no necessity for a loading dose or oral supplementation, as UZEDY does not require either. The date of his next visit was adjusted accordingly.
He rated his injection site pain as mild and experienced light dizziness and somnolence. He is happy with the short needle and small injection volume.
Charles will continue to see his provider for management of his schizophrenia and monitoring of his treatment with UZEDY.
The APA guidelines state that with LAIs, there are fewer opportunities for patients to miss a dose, and clinicians will be aware of a missed visit or injection. Patients with schizophrenia may have complicated lives and may miss appointments for any number of reasons. In this case, Charles missed several appointments, and the LAI he was taking at the time required reinitiation with a loading dose.
Because of the number of missed doses and required loading doses upon reinitiation, Charles' psychiatry provider decided to switch him to a different therapy. She took into consideration efficacy and safety first, but she also thought about pharmacokinetic profile and missed-dose guidance. Charles’ psychiatry provider chose UZEDY because it rapidly reaches therapeutic plasma levels within 6 to 24 hours after a single injection. Also, after missing an injection, Charles could be restarted immediately without the need for a loading dose or oral supplementation. He has been treated with UZEDY for the last 6 months and his schizophrenia symptoms have remained stable.
Charles' psychiatry provider is also comfortable with the safety profile of UZEDY because it is expected to be similar to that of corresponding oral risperidone doses of 2 to 5 mg daily.
Please see additional Important Safety Information below
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