Antipsychotic switching
Antipsychotic switching refers to the process of switching out one
Rationale
Antipsychotics may be switched due to inadequate efficacy, drug intolerance, patient/guardian preference, drug regimen simplification, or for economic reasons.[1]
- Inadequate efficacy: An inadequate treatment response to an antipsychotic, assuming that the lack of efficacy is due to an otherwise adequately dosed regimen for an appropriate duration, can result from failure to achieve therapeutic goals in any major treatment domain. For example, this can refer to a patient who becomes acutely psychotic after being stable previously. Other failures include persistent antipsychotics are often indicated in the setting of medication nonadherence.[1]
- drug interactions can cause adverse effects as well.[1]
- Patient/guardian preference: A patient or caregiver may prefer a different antipsychotic. This may be due to misinformation regarding the antipsychotic, including its side effects, a lack of insight into the importance of the medication and the severity of the disease, or overestimating the therapeutic effect.[1]
- Drug regimen simplification: inversely related to the frequency of dosing.[2] The antipsychotic quetiapine is typically dosed two to three times daily for the management of schizophrenia.[3] A simpler regimen would be a once daily administered antipsychotic.[1] For example, risperidone can be administered once daily.[4] A lack of adherence can lead to poor health outcomes, as well as unnecessary financial burden.[5]
- Economics: A patient or caregiver may request antipsychotic switching to reduce medication costs.[1] See below for a table of the direct costs of living with schizophrenia per patient across countries.
Cost of schizophrenia per patient by country Country Annual direct costs (in US dollars) Belgium 12,050[6] People's Republic of China700[7] South Korea 2,600[7] Taiwan 2,115 to 2,144[7] United Kingdom 3,420[6] United States 15,464[7]
Contraindications
In general, contraindications to antipsychotic switching are cases in which the risk of switching outweighs the potential benefit. Contraindications to antipsychotic switching include effective treatment of an acute psychotic episode, patients stable on a LAI antipsychotic with a history of poor adherence, and stable patients with a history of self-injurious behavior, violent behavior, or significant self-neglect or other symptoms.[1]
Strategies
There are multiple strategies available for switching antipsychotics. An abrupt switch involves abruptly switching from one antipsychotic to the other without any titration.[8] A cross-taper is accomplished by gradually discontinuing the pre-switch antipsychotic while simultaneously up-titrating the new antipsychotic.[1] An overlap and discontinuation switch involves maintaining the pre-switch antipsychotic until the new antipsychotic is gradually titrated up, then gradually titrating down on the pre-switch antipsychotic.[1] Alternatively, in an ascending taper switch, the pre-switch antipsychotic can be abruptly discontinued.[8] Another alternative, known as the descending taper switch, involves slowly discontinuing the pre-switch antipsychotic while abruptly starting the new antipsychotic.[8] These switching strategies can be further subdivided by the inclusion or exclusion of a plateau period.[8]
See the figure below for a graphic visualization of the five main antipsychotic switching strategies discussed above.
Due to differences in how individual antipsychotics work, even within each generation, the process of switching between antipsychotics has become more complex.[8]
Adverse effects
The three major adverse effects of antipsychotic switching are
Supersensitivity syndromes
Antipsychotics work by antagonizing the
Rebound syndromes
The second-generation antipsychotic
In general, rebound D2R activity may induce rebound parkinsonism and rebound akathisia.[8]
Withdrawal
D2 receptor activity withdrawal may induce withdrawal dyskinesia.[8] This late-onset, hypersensitivity-type dyskinesia is in contrast to the early-onset dyskinesia that can occur due to an over-compensatory dopamine release associated with abrupt dopamine antagonist withdrawal.[8] Other symptoms of dopamine withdrawal include difficulty sleeping, anxiety, and restlessness.[11]
Alternatives
An alternative to antipsychotic switching, in the setting of a person that is not responding to the initial dose of an antipsychotic, is to increase the dose of antipsychotic prescribed. A 2018 Cochrane review compared the evidence between the two strategies, but the authors were unable to draw any conclusions about whether either method was preferable due to limited evidence.[12]
Notes
- ^ As a point of contrast, hypothermia, or low core body temperature, has most frequently occurred in the presence of olanzapine, risperidone, or haloperidol.[10]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Bobo, William (14 March 2013). "Switching Antipsychotics: Why, When, and How? | Psychiatric Times". Psychiatric Times. Psychiatric Times Vol 30 No 3. 30 (3). UBM. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
- ^ Hall, Colleen (2017). "How you can simplify your patient's medication regimen to enhance adherence". Current Psychiatry. 16 (5): 18–21, 29. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
- ^ "SEROQUEL (quetiapine fumarate) tablets, 2003" (PDF). accessdata.fda.gov. AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals LP. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
- ^ "RISPERDAL (risperidone) tablets, 2009" (PDF). accessdata.fda.gov. Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
- PMID 27777062. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
- ^ PMID 15279046. Retrieved 12 May 2018.
- ^ PMID 23983478.
- ^ S2CID 207486017.
- PMID 23983836.
- PMID 28936184.
- PMID 6150030.
- PMID 29749607.