The Zucker Hillside Hospital
Department of Psychiatry
Christoph Correll is Professor of Psychiatry at the Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, New York, USA, and Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Charité–University Medicine, Berlin, Germany. Prof. Correll is both an adult and child and adolescent psychiatrist, having trained in Germany, UK, Chile and the USA. He has been working and conducting research in New York, USA for the past 25 years, working again also in Berlin, Germany since 2017. His research and clinical work focus on the early identification, characterization and treatment of youth and adults with severe mental illness, including psychotic and mood disorders, psychopharmacology, epidemiology, clinical trials, comparative effectiveness, meta-analyses, risk–benefit evaluation of psychotropic medications, and the interface between physical and mental health. Professor Correll has authored over 700 journal articles and received over 40 research awards. Since 2014, the year of inception of this metric, he has been listed annually by Thomson Reuters/Web of Science as one of the 100 “most influential scientific minds” and “top 1% cited scientists in the area of psychiatry”. Furthermore, since 2017 he has also been ranked consistently by Expertscape as the number one world expert in 9 different areas, including “psychopharmacology“, “schizophrenia”, “antipsychotics” and “weight gain”.

Presenter of 3 Presentations

Current Innovations in Psychopharmacology

Session Type
Pharmacology
Date
Tue, 07.06.2022
Session Time
16:15 - 17:00
Room
Hall A
Session Icon
Fully Live
Lecture Time
16:15 - 16:40

Pharmacotherapy Including and Beyond Newer Antipsychotics and Antidepressants

Session Type
Clinical/Therapeutic
Date
Sat, 04.06.2022
Session Time
15:30 - 17:00
Room
On Demand 1
Session Icon
On Demand
Lecture Time
16:10 - 16:30

Benzodiazepine Use During Cariprazine Treatment in Acute Schizophrenia

Session Type
Oral Communication
Date
Mon, 06.06.2022
Session Time
15:00 - 16:30
Room
Hall E
Session Icon
On Demand
Lecture Time
15:21 - 15:28

Abstract

Introduction

Although antipsychotics are first-line treatments for schizophrenia, benzodiazepines (BZDs) are often used as concomitant medications in acutely exacerbated patients due to their anxiolytic and sedative effects.

Cariprazine (CAR), a D3-preferring dopamine D2/D3 partial agonist antipsychotic, has been examined in many clinical studies for the treatment of acute schizophrenia, with and without benzodiazepines.

Objectives

To delineate the effects of benzodiazepine-use during cariprazine treatment in acute schizophrenia.

Methods

Pooled data of cariprazine-treated (1.5-6mg/day) and placebo-treated patients from four short-term, randomised, double-blind trials (NCT00404573, NCT01104766, NCT01104779, NCT00694707) were analysed. Baseline characteristics (age, duration of illness) and efficacy outcome parameters (Total and Hostility Factor Score of the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale [PANSS]) were compared in patients receiving benzodiazepines (for more ≥3 consecutive days) and not receiving benzodiazepines (<3 consecutive days).

Results

Altogether, 36.7% and 40.7% of the CAR-treated and PBO-treated patients required BZDs. BZD-taking was associated with a higher age in both the CAR-treated (p=0.0002) and PBO-treated (p<0.0001) patients, and with longer illness-duration in both treatment groups (p<0.0001). PANSS Total Score at baseline was similar for BZD users and non-users (CAR: LS Mean=96.36 and 96.27; PBO: LS Mean=95.55 and 96.66).

Change from baseline in the PANSS Total Score was greater for patients who did not use BZD vs those who did (CAR: LS Mean= -23.8 vs LS Mean -17.2, p<0.0001; PBO: LS Mean= -14.0 vs LS Mean -12.9, p=0.5776).

Conclusions

These findings may suggest that requiring benzodiazepines is a potential indicator of longer illness duration and poorer response in acute schizophrenia.

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