Abstract
Objective:
To examine the effect of antipsychotic medication half-life on the risk of psychiatric hospital admission and emergency department (ED) visits among adults with schizophrenia.
Methods:
Retrospective claims-based cohort study of adult Medicaid patients with schizophrenia who were prescribed second-generation antipsychotic monotherapy following hospital discharge between 1/1/04 and 12/31/06. Cox proportional hazards models were applied to compare adjusted hazards of mental disorder admission among patients treated with oral antipsychotics that have either a long [risperidone (t1/2 = 20 h), olanzapine (t1/2 = 30 h), aripiprazole (t1/2 = 75 h)] (n = 1479) or short [quetiapine (t1/2 = 6 h), ziprasidone (t1/2 = 7 h)] (n = 837) half-life. Day-level models controlled for baseline background characteristics and antipsychotic adherence over time as measured by gaps in the prescription record. Similar analyses examined either hospitalization or ED visits as separate endpoints.
Results:
A significantly lower rate of hospitalization/ED visits was evident for long (0.74/patient-year) vs short (1.06/patient-year) half-life antipsychotics (p < 0.001). The unadjusted rate of hospitalization alone was significantly lower for long (0.38/patient-year) vs short (0.52/patient-year) half-life antipsychotics (p = 0.005). Compared with short half-life antipsychotic drugs, the adjusted hazard ratio associated with long half-life medications was 0.77 (95% CI = 0.67–0.88) for combined hospitalization/ED visits and 0.80 (95% CI = 0.67–0.96) for hospitalization. The corresponding number needed to treat with long, rather than short, half-life medications to avoid one hospitalization was 16 patients for 1 year and to avoid one hospitalization or ED visit was 11 patients for 1 year.
Limitations:
This study demonstrated an association between antipsychotic medication half-life and hospitalization, not a causal link. Patients using long half-life medications had fewer comorbid mental health conditions and took fewer psychiatric medications at baseline. Other unmeasured differences may have existed between groups and may partially account for the findings.
Conclusions:
In schizophrenia management, longer-acting second-generation antipsychotics were associated with a lower risk of hospital admission/ED visits for mental disorders.
Transparency
Declaration of funding
This research was funded by the Bristol-Myers Squibb Company and Otsuka Pharmaceuticals.
Declaration of financial/other relationships
M.B. and E.C. are employees of Partnership for Health Analytic Research, LLC, which was paid by Bristol-Myers Squibb to conduct the research. J.A.B., Y.J., and T.H. are employees of Bristol-Myers Squibb Company. R.A.F. is an employee of Otsuka Pharmaceuticals.
Acknowledgments
No assistance in the preparation of this article is to be declared.