A short-term, multicenter, placebo-controlled, randomized withdrawal study of a metabotropic glutamate 2/3 receptor agonist using an electronic patient-reported outcome device in patients with schizophrenia

Virginia L Stauffer, Simin K Baygani, Bruce J Kinon, Judith O Krikke-Workel, Virginia L Stauffer, Simin K Baygani, Bruce J Kinon, Judith O Krikke-Workel

Abstract

This 6-week, multicenter, randomized withdrawal, placebo-controlled trial sought to determine whether symptoms of physical dependence occur after abrupt cessation of pomaglumetad methionil (LY2140023 monohydrate), a metabotropic glutamate 2/3 receptor agonist, in patients with schizophrenia. Eligible outpatients, 18 to 65 years old who required a modification or initiation of antipsychotic medication received 4 weeks of pomaglumetad methionil during open-label treatment and then were randomized, double-blind, to continue pomaglumetad methionil or receive placebo for 2 weeks. The primary outcome compared results of the 3-day moving mean of the total score on the Discontinuation Symptom Checklist-Modified Rickels for pomaglumetad methionil-treated patients with those on placebo during the randomized withdrawal phase. An electronic patient-reported outcome (ePRO) device was used daily to record these results. During the withdrawal phase, 103 patients were randomized, and 98 patients completed the trial. There was no statistically significant evidence of withdrawal symptoms associated with placebo compared with pomaglumetad methionil continuation as measured by Discontinuation Symptom Checklist-Modified Rickels (P = 0.170). The results are supported by secondary analyses with the clinician-rated, Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment of Alcohol Scale Revised, which showed no statistically significant differences between treatment groups. Using the ePRO device, 82.5% of the patients achieved 75% to 100% of compliance. No discontinuations due to worsening of schizophrenia, serious adverse events, deaths, or seizures were reported during either phase of the study. These findings suggest that there is no evidence of withdrawal symptoms associated with the abrupt discontinuation of pomaglumetad methionil and that an ePRO device can be successfully used in a multicenter schizophrenia trial.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01452919.

Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
Plot of the 3-day moving mean of the DSCMR total score by day and treatment in patients who entered the randomized withdrawal phase. Baseline is defined as the 3-day mean of the patient’s total score at the time of randomization. The 3 days include baseline visit date, baseline visit date – 1, and baseline visit date – 2. Day X = [mean DSCMR assessment date on day X, DSCMR assessment date on day (X – 1), DSCMR assessment date on day (X– 2)]. BL indicates baseline; R-PBO, randomized to placebo; R-Poma-met, randomized to pomaglumetad methionil.

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Source: PubMed

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