Electroconvulsive Therapy in Clozapine Refractory Schizophrenia
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Schizophrenia |
Therapuetic Areas: | Psychiatry / Psychology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - 60 |
Updated: | 4/21/2016 |
Start Date: | December 2000 |
End Date: | July 2008 |
ECT in Clozapine Refractory Schizophrenia
This study will evaluate electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) in patients who have not responded
adequately to clozapine.
adequately to clozapine.
ECT augmentation of clozapine will be compared to clozapine monotherapy in schizophrenic
patients who continue to have psychotic symptoms despite optimal treatment with clozapine.
patients who continue to have psychotic symptoms despite optimal treatment with clozapine.
Inclusion criteria:
- Diagnosis of schizophrenia according to DSM-IV criteria
- Duration of illness 2 years or greater
- Resistance to at least 2 antipsychotics
- Clozapine resistance
- Capacity to give informed consent
- For women of childbearing capacity, a negative pregnancy test and patient agreement
to use a medically accepted form of contraception
- Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale score of at least a 4 on one of the four psychotic
items on the psychotic sub-scale or a score of 12 on these 4 items combined.
- Clinical Global Impressions (CGI) - severity rating of at least moderate (score of 4)
- Receiving at least two 400 mg doses of chlorpromazine equivalents for at least 4
weeks (may include newer antipsychotics)
- Having substantial psychotic symptoms despite at least 12 weeks of treatment (at
least 8 weeks at a consistent dose)
Exclusion criteria
- schizoaffective disorder; bipolar disorder;
- current affective episode;
- Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) within the past 6 months
- history of epilepsy; severe neurological or systemic disorder that could
significantly affect cognition, behavior, or mental status (other than tardive
dyskinesia or neuroleptic-induced parkinsonism); psychoactive substance dependence
(other than nicotine or caffeine) within 1 month prior to entering the study
- a score of less than 18 on the 24-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D)
- clinical determination that mood stabilizers were necessary and therefore could not
be discontinued.
- pregnancy.
- affective disorders and prominent depressive symptoms because ECT is well known to be
effective in those situations, and we wanted to avoid contamination of our results by
improvement solely driven by the treatment of the affective symptoms.
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