Title

Efficacy and Tolerability of Switching to Ziprasidone From Other Antipsychotics
Evaluation of Efficacy and Tolerability of Switching to Ziprasidone From Other Antipsychotic Medications
  • Phase

    Phase 4
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Study Participants

    40
Because ziprasidone has not been extensively studied and is not widely accepted in the severely mentally ill in State hospitals this study aims to demonstrate its effectiveness and relative lack of side effects. 75 patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder who need a change of medication because of ineffectiveness or side effects will be changed to ziprasidone and followed with detailed assessments for eight weeks.

The hypothesis is that they will improve and have fewer side effects.
Ziprasidone has been found in studies and practice to be efficacious and tolerated well but has not been well studied or well accepted in the very severely ill in State Hospitals. This study aims to fill that gap by examining 75 patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder who require a change of medication because of poor response or unacceptable side effects.

After signing consent and having a baseline assessment they will, if necessary, be reduced to one antipsychotic then started on ziprasidone, increasing to 160mg the second day. The one antipsychotic they had been on will be reduced over a week and stopped. The ziprasidone can be increased to 240mg after three weeks if necessary.

The study will last eight weeks with efficacy assessed by Clinical Global Impressions (CGI), Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) every two weeks and Brief Assessment of Cognition, Calgary Depression Scale for Schizophrenia, Personal Evaluation of Transitions in Treatment and Medical Outcomes Study Cognitive Questions at the beginning and end. Side effects will be measured by movement disorder scales (Simpson-Angus scale for Parkinsonism (SANRS), Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) and Barnes Akathisia Scale (BAS)), ECG and weight and blood metabolic measures.

The hypothesis is that ziprasidone will be generally effective and that side effects especially metabolic indices will be reduced.
Study Started
May 31
2005
Primary Completion
Apr 30
2008
Study Completion
Apr 30
2008
Results Posted
May 06
2013
Estimate
Last Update
May 01
2020

Drug ziprasidone

Ziprasidone by mouth 40mg twice a day (bid) for one day, then 80mg bid; may be increased to 120mg bid after three weeks

Experimental Experimental

Open label change to ziprasidone

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Schizophrenia or schizoaffective
Capacity to give consent
Stable, on the same medication for a month but only partial response or with unacceptable side effects 18-65 years of age

Exclusion Criteria:

Repeated non-compliance
Current depot medication
Active medical conditions
QTc >500msec
Previous non-response
Previous treatment with ziprasidone

Summary

Experimental

All Events

Event Type Organ System Event Term Experimental

Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) Measuring Symptoms of Schizophrenia

Minimum score 32 (best) maximum 210 (worst)

Experimental

Bronx baseline

95.0
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 16

Bronx end

99.0
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 25

Buffalo baseline

72.0
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 22

Buffalo end

62.0
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 19

Insulin Level

Measure of the amount of insulin in the blood, in uIU/ml. No minimum or maximum but fasting levels are usually below 25 uIU/ml. After a dose of glucose they may be 30 to 230 uIU/ml.

Experimental

Bronx baseline

10.0
uIU/ml (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 7.2

Bronx end

13.0
uIU/ml (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 14

Buffalo baseline

12.0
uIU/ml (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 9.2

Buffalo end

17.0
uIU/ml (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 14

Clinical Global Impression (CGI) Scores the Evaluator's Overall Impression of Severity (CGI-S) or Change (CGI-I) in Illness.

CGI-S scores from 1 = normal to 7 = most extremely ill

Experimental

Bronx baseline

4.6
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 0.6

Bronx end

4.9
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 0.8

Buffalo baseline

3.5
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 0.9

Buffalo end

2.8
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 0.8

Weight

Experimental

Bronx baseline

195.0
pounds (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 43

Bronx end

193.0
pounds (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 41

Buffalo baseline

213.0
pounds (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 57

Buffalo end

204.0
pounds (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 52

Fasting Glucose

Amount of glucose in the blood in mg/dl

Experimental

Bronx baseline

91.0
mg/dl (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 28

Bronx end

82.0
mg/dl (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 24

Buffalo baseline

94.0
mg/dl (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 18

Buffalo end

93.0
mg/dl (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 19

Cholesterol

Experimental

Bronx baseline

185.0
mg/dL (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 44

Bronx end

160.0
mg/dL (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 28

Buffalo baseline

186.0
mg/dL (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 42

Buffalo end

179.0
mg/dL (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 36

Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) Measures Tardive Dyskinesia

Scores 0 (none) to 4 (severe) choreo-athetoid and dystonic movements of seven parts of the body with a maximum score 28

Experimental

Bronx baseline

0.3
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 0.8

Bronx end

0.3
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 0.7

Buffalo baseline

2.9
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 3.1

Buffalo end

1.6
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 1.4

Simpson-Angus Scale Measures Drug Induced Parkinsonism

Measures 10 signs, (not all of which are now considered Parkinsonism), minimum score 0 (no Parkinsonism) maximum 40.

Experimental

Bronx baseline

0.2
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 0.5

Bronx end

0.1
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 0.2

Buffalo baseline

3.6
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 3.6

Buffalo end

2.5
score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 2.6

Corrected QT Interval (QTc)

Time interval between Q and T waves on EKG corrected for pulse rate. Over 500 msec may be dangerous

Experimental

Bronx baseline

396.0
msec (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 18

Bronx end

411.0
msec (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 15

Buffalo baeline

412.0
msec (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 21

Buffalo end

427.0
msec (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 17

Brief Assessment of Cognition in Schizophrenia (BACS)

Scores on the BACS scale, which measures cognition, were changed to Z-scores based on normal controls from Keefe (2008) A Z-score of zero would indicate cognition the same as the normal controls. Negative scores indicate cognition worse than the normal. Theoretically there are no maximum or minimum scores.

Experimental

Bronx baseline

-14.0
Z-score from score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 6.0

Bronx end

-13.0
Z-score from score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 5.3

Buffalo baseline

-12.0
Z-score from score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 5.9

Buffalo end

-11.0
Z-score from score on scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 6.5

Calgary Depression Scale for Schizophrenia

Score on scale, from 0 to 27, above 6 considered indicative of depression, higher scores mean worse outcome,

Experimental

Bronx baseline

5.4
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 4.4

Bronx end

5.3
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 3.8

Buffalo baseline

3.4
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 3.7

Buffalo end

1.3
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 2.0

Personal Evaluation of Transitions in Treatment Scale (PETiTP

PETiT is a 30 item self administered scale measuring response to and tolerability and adherence to antipsychotic medication in people with schizophrenia. The range is 30 to 100. Higher scores are better. Although different features are assessed there is a single total score - no subscales.

Experimental

Bronx baseline

43.0
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 9.7

Bronx end

45.0
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 11

Buffalo baseline

46.0
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 11

Buffalo end

48.0
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 13

Medical Outcomes Study Cognitive Functioning Scale (MOS-COG)

MOS-COG measures day to day problems in six aspects of cognitive functioning. The scores are converted to 0-100 and so can range from 0 to 100 with 100 being the best. Population means are 70 to 80.

Experimental

Bronx baseline

17.0
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 5.8

Bronx end

16.0
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 6.3

Buffalo baseline

18.0
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 5.4

Buffalo end

19.0
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 3.9

Barnes Akathisia Scale

Barnes Akathisia Scale measures akathisia: a score of zero is none (good) maximum score is 12

Experimental

Bronx baseline

0.6
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 1.7

Bronx end

0.8
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 1.7

Buffalo baseline

1.4
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 1.5

Buffalo end

1.1
score on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 1.7

HbA1c

Lab measure of glycated hemoglobin indicative of blood glucose over the last three months. At that time in the US measured as a percentage (of glucose attached to hemoglobin). No maximum or minimum but over 6.5% is generally considered indicative of diabetes.

Experimental

Bronx baseline

5.3
HbA1c (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 0.6

Bronx end

5.4
HbA1c (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 0.7

Buffalo baseline

6.0
HbA1c (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 0.9

Buffalo end

5.7
HbA1c (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 0.8

Antipsychotic Medication Costs

No data were collected because it turned out we had no way of measuring the costs. No subjects were analysed by costs

Experimental

Age, Continuous

42
years (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 15

Age, Categorical

Region of Enrollment

Sex: Female, Male

Overall Study

Experimental

Drop/Withdrawal Reasons

Experimental