4.6 Article

Aripiprazole monotherapy in acute mania: 12-week randomised placebo- and haloperidol-controlled study

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY
Volume 194, Issue 1, Pages 40-48

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1192/bjp.bp.108.049965

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Background Well-tolerated and effective therapies for bipolar mania are required. Aims To evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of aripiprazole as acute and maintenance of effect therapy in patients with bipolar I disorder experiencing manic or mixed episodes. Method Patients were randomised to double-blind aripiprazole (15 or 30mg/day; n=167), placebo (n=153) or haloperidol (5-15mg/day, n=165) for 3 weeks (trial registration NCT00097266). Aripiprazole- and haloperidol-treated patients remained on masked treatment for 9 additional weeks. Results Mean change in Young Mania Rating Scale Total score (primary end-point) at week 3 was significantly greater with aripiprazole (-12.0; P<0.05) and haloperidol (-12.8; P<0.01) than with placebo (-9.7). improvements were maintained to week 12 for aripiprazole (-17.2) and haloperidol (-17.8). Aripiprazole was well tolerated. Extrapyramidal adverse events were more frequent with haloperidol than aripiprazole (53.3% v. 23.5%). Conclusions Clinical improvements with aripiprazole were sustained to week 12. Aripiprazole was generally well tolerated.

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