Study ObjectiveThis analysis assessed the relative efficacy and tolerability of lurasidone versus other atypical antipsychotics in the treatment of pediatricschizophrenia.
MethodsA systematic literature review identified 13 randomized-controlled trials for the treatment of pediatric schizophrenia. A Bayesian network meta-analysis compared the efficacy and tolerability of the following atypical antipsychotics: aripiprazole, asenapine, clozapine, lurasidone, olanzapine, paliperidone, quetiapine, risperidone, andziprasidone. Patients were 7-17 years old and trial duration ranged from 6-12 weeks. Outcomes included Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS), Clinical Global Impressions-Severity (CGI-S), weight gain, all-cause treatment discontinuation, and extrapyramidal symptoms. Results from the fixed effect models were reported as mean differences for continuous outcomes and odds ratios for binary outcomes; each with a 95% credible interval.
ResultsLurasidone had significantly greater improvement compared with placebo for PANSS (-7.95 [-11.76, -4.16]) and CGI-S (-0.44 [-0.67, -0.22]), but did not differ from comparators. The differences in weight gain for lurasidone relative to comparators were as follows: clozapine (-3.81kg [-8.03, 0.42]), olanzapine (-3.62kg [-4.84, -2.41]), quetiapine (-2.13kg [-3.20, -1.08]), risperidone (-1.16kg [-2.14, -0.17]), asenapine (-0.98kg [-1.71, -0.24]), paliperidone (-0.85kg [-1.57, -0.14]), aripiprazole (-0.15kg [-0.88, 0.58]), and ziprasidone (0.38kg [-0.49, 1.24]); all were statistically significant except for clozapine, aripiprazole, and ziprasidone. Rates of all-cause discontinuation andextrapyramidal symptoms were similar for lurasidone and comparators, except aripiprazole and paliperidone, which had higher rates of all-cause discontinuation.
ConclusionsIn this network meta-analysis of atypical antipsychotics for the treatment of adolescent schizophrenia, lurasidone was associated with similar efficacy, but less weight gain than active comparators.
Funding AcknowledgementsThis study was funded by Sunovion Pharmaceuticals Inc.