Chakrabarti S. Clozapine resistant schizophrenia: Newer avenues of management. World J Psychiatr 2021; 11(8): 429-448 [PMID: 34513606 DOI: 10.5498/wjp.v11.i8.429]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Subho Chakrabarti, MD, Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Sector 12, Chandigarh 160012, India. subhochd@yahoo.com
Research Domain of This Article
Psychiatry
Article-Type of This Article
Review
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≥ 80% of prescribed doses for the duration of treatment
Response to clozapine
Baseline symptom severity and functional impairment
Moderately severe illness either globally or in positive and negative symptom domains assessed using standardized scales (CGI, BPRS, PANSS, SAPS, SANS). Moderate levels of functional impairment assessed using standardized scales (GAF, SOFAS)
Non-response
< 20% reduction in symptoms and minimal response in levels of functional impairment during an adequate trial of clozapine treatment
Persistence
Moderately severe illness and functional impairment should persist following an adequate trial of clozapine treatment
Table 2 Reviews of antipsychotic augmentation strategies in clozapine-resistant schizophrenia1
Systematic review of 25 studies of SGA augmentation of clozapine - risperidone (11 trials) and aripiprazole (6 trials). Meta-analysis of 5 RCTs of risperidone augmentation of clozapine.
Low quality evidence indicated benefits for aripiprazole and amisulpiride augmentation. No benefit of risperidone augmentation.
Some benefit of aripiprazole in reducing negative symptoms from 1 RCT.
Table 3 Meta-analyses of antidepressant and mood stabilizer augmentation in clozapine-resistant schizophrenia
5 RCTs of valproate (n = 2), lamotrigine (n = 2), lithium (n = 1), and topiramate(n = 1) augmentation
Low-quality evidence for valproate and lithium augmentation in reducing total symptom severity. Reduction of positive and negative symptom severity by topiramate augmentation based on1 RCT.
22 RCTs of valproate (n = 9), lamotrigine (n = 8), and topiramate (n = 4) augmentation
Significant benefits for valproate and topiramate in reducing total and positive symptom severity but based on low-quality studies. No effects on clinical response.
Pooled analysis of patients with TRS treated with clozapine and ECT based on 4 open trials, 2 controlled trials (1 RCT)1, 2 chart reviews, 6 case series, and 15 case reports
Pooled response rate with the clozapine-ECT combination was 54% on meta-analysis. Systematic review showed 76% overall response rate with clozapine-ECT treatment and a relapse rate of 32%.
9 studies of the clozapine-ECT combination in TRS including 2 controlled trials (1 RCT)1, 3 open trials, and 4 case series/chart-reviews vs 9 studies of ECT-non-clozapine antipsychotic combination
The ECT-clozapine combination was significantly better than the ECT-non-clozapine antipsychotic combinations in reducing positive symptoms on the PANSS and the BPRS.
Pooled data from 10 RCTs for 131 patients with persistent positive and negative symptoms being treated with clozapine
No differences between active and sham rTMS in improving clinical response and reducing PANSS scores. No benefit of rTMS augmentation for patients with persistent symptoms on clozapine.
Table 5 Psychosocial augmentation strategies in clozapine-resistant schizophrenia
CBT vs usual treatment for 9 mo. Follow-up for 21 mo.
Significant reductions in PANSS scores with CBT at 9 mo but no differences at 21 mo.
Sensky et al[72], 2000; Valmaggia et al[73], 2005; Edwards et al[74], 2011
RCTs of patients with TRS (n = 48-90) including patients on clozapine or clozapine non-responders
CBT vs supportive treatment or clozapine alone or comparisons with combinations of CBT with other antipsychotics.
Significant reductions in positive, negative, and depressive symptom severity, improvement in clinical response and functioning with CBT; benefits at end of treatment usually maintained during follow-up.
9 patients with TRS and comorbid personality disorders/substance use and violence; 1 on clozapine but non-adherent treated with olanzapine LAI combination
1 yr of retrospective pre- and post-LAI comparisons showed significant improvements in psychotic symptoms, violence, and reduction in number and length of hospitalizations and emergency visits.
Retrospective observational of 23 patients with TRS in whom paliperidone LAI was added toclozapine
Significant reductions in severity of global, positive, negative, depressive, and cognitive symptoms with the combination. Significantly lower doses of clozapine and paliperidone LAI required with combination treatment vs monotherapy.
Retrospective observational study with a mirror-image design of 20 patients with TRS treated with clozapine and LAIs for 32 mo
Significant reductions in number and length of hospitalizations during 32 mo of combination treatment vs 1 yr of monotherapy. No increase in side effects with the combination.
Retrospective observational study with a mirror- image design of 20 patients with poor response to clozapine or LAIs treated with clozapine and LAI combinations for 2 yr
Significant reductions in hospital admissions and emergency visits during 2 yr of combination treatment vs 2 yr of monotherapy. Overall improvement in behaviour and social functioning but no change in symptoms.
Retrospective observational study with a mirror- image design of 50 patients with TRS treated with clozapine and paliperidone LAI for 6 mo
Significant reductions in BPRS scores, emergency visits, number and length of hospitalizations, and number and severity of adverse effects as well as significant improvements in social functioning during 6 mo of combination treatment vs 6 mo of monotherapy.
Retrospective observational study with a mirror- image design in 29 patients with TRS treated with clozapine and LAI combinations for 1 yr
Significant reductions in number of relapses and number and length of hospitalizations during 1 yr of combination treatment vs 1 yr of monotherapy. No differences in side effects with the combinations.
Table 7 Scandinavian nationwide cohort studies of antipsychotic treatment
Significantly lower risks of rehospitalization or treatment discontinuation in patients on perphenazine LAI, clozapine, or olanzapine vs those on oral haloperidol.
Clozapine was associated with a substantially lower mortality than any other antipsychotics singly or in combination, with perphenazine as a comparator.
2588 inpatients followed up for 2 mo after discharge
Significantly lower risks of rehospitalization with LAIs than oral medications. Clozapine and olanzapine were associated with significantly lower risk of rehospitalization than risperidone.
62250 inpatients on antipsychotic monotherapy or antipsychotic combinations followed up for 14 yr
Combination of clozapine and aripiprazole was associated with significantly lower risk of rehospitalization and mortality than clozapine alone in first episode and chronic schizophrenia. Clozapine monotherapy was associated with the most favourable outcomes compared to other antipsychotics.
2250 patients on clozapine treatment followed up for more than 1 yr before discontinuation
Compared to no antipsychotic treatment, significantly lower risks of rehospitalization with re-institution of clozapine alone, oral olanzapine, and antipsychotic combinations. Significantly lower risks of treatment failure1with aripiprazole LAI, re-institution of clozapine alone, and oral olanzapine.
Table 8 Steps for ensuring optimal clozapine treatment[65,81,110,111,120,123,132]
Steps for ensuring optimal clozapine treatment
Adequate assessment
Diagnosis should be established properly. Comorbid conditions should be looked for. Adherence should be determined. Symptoms and other outcome domains should be preferably rated using validated instruments. Caregiver burden and coping should be assessed. Stressors and adverse circumstances should be evaluated.
Proper dosing
Inter-individual and ethnic variability in optimal doses should be considered. If facilities for serum levels are available, doses should be titrated to ensure plasma levels > 350 ng/mL. Doses should be increased slowly with careful monitoring of side effects to reduce the burden of dose-dependent side effects.
Adequate duration
A minimum of 2-3 mo is considered necessary. Durations could be shorter in those with high risk of aggression or self-harm. Durations could be longer in those with negative or cognitive symptoms and in partial responders.
Managing side effects
Many of the common side effects of clozapine can be managed by slow titration, using the least effective dose, reducing doses when side effects develop, adding medications, or adopting lifestyle changes to counter side effects. Additionally, careful monitoring should be carried out for the more serious and idiosyncratic adverse reactions such as agranulocytosis and cardiopulmonary complications.
Managing non-adherence
Careful monitoring of adherence based on multiple sources is necessary. Managing side effects, educating patients to deal with negative attitudes to clozapine, developing a trusting alliance to improve motivation, caregiver education and support to increase their involvement in the patient’s care may help. These measures should ideally be initiated right at the beginning of treatment. Use of long-acting antipsychotic injections may be considered.
Collaboration with patients and caregivers
Both patients and caregivers should be the focus of treatment. Measures should be tailored according to their needs. Goals of treatment should be reduction of symptoms and distress, improving support, forging effective alliances, and promoting patient and caregiver engagement. Simple psychosocial measures including cognitive or behavioural strategies, psychoeducation, and emotional and practical support should be implemented at the start of treatment or as early as possible. More structured interventions can be tried depending on availability of resources and expertise.
Addressing clinician related barriers
Clinicians’ lack of awareness and experience of clozapine treatment and negative attitudes towards clozapine use should be addressed by proper education, dissemination of information, and dedicated facilities.
Citation: Chakrabarti S. Clozapine resistant schizophrenia: Newer avenues of management. World J Psychiatr 2021; 11(8): 429-448