Randomized controlled trials are the gold-standard design used to test the efficacy of antipsychotics but only reflect effectiveness in patients who volunteer for such trials. Despite the obvious shortcomings, an alternative approach is to carefully analyze data from available health care databases, including medication and hospitalization data on large samples of individuals. This may offer insight into antipsychotic prescribing practices in clinical practice, enable comparison of the effectiveness among all medications used, and allow direct comparisons between oral and long-acting injectable (LAI) formulations of the same medications (
1). The majority of extant observational studies of administrative databases were performed outside of the United States (
2 –
5), used smaller and regional samples from the Veterans Administration system (
6,
7) and Medicaid (
8), and/or focused on the use of specific, rather than all, antipsychotics (
6,
9). Hence, there is a need to study all-cause discontinuation of all oral and LAI antipsychotics, as well as psychiatric hospitalization, in a large nationwide study in the United States, including comparison of LAI formulations with the same oral medication, using a comprehensive health care database.
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system maintains a large, comprehensive health care service utilization database on all veterans who receive their care within the VA system. The database includes information on diagnosis, demographic characteristics, prescriptions, and service utilization, including psychiatric hospitalizations. Thus, the database provides a unique opportunity to examine the relative effectiveness of oral and LAI antipsychotics in a real-world setting. In this study, we analyzed all-cause discontinuation of antipsychotic medications and psychiatric hospitalizations for 37,368 people with schizophrenia treated in the VA health care system. To our knowledge, this is the largest study comparing all-cause discontinuation of antipsychotics and psychiatric hospitalizations in the United States and the first to compare LAI formulations with the same oral medication in a nationwide, multiyear U.S. sample using nonprofit funding. Based on findings from previous studies (
10), we hypothesized that clozapine and LAI antipsychotics would be associated with longer time to discontinuation and fewer psychiatric hospitalizations compared with oral olanzapine and that LAI formulations would be associated with longer time to discontinuation and fewer psychiatric hospitalizations than oral formulations of the same medication (
11).
Results
Of the 37,368 individuals with schizophrenia included in the study, 91% were male, 41% were nonwhite, 61% had ever been married, 45% had at least a 50% service connection, and the mean age was 54.3 years (SD=12.6).
In analyses of large databases, it is not possible to ascertain the precise reasons for overlapping antipsychotic prescriptions. We found that the average length of the incident episodes classified as polypharmacy was 395 days in this study. While the incident episodes must have overlapped for at least 60 days to be included in this group, on average, the actual duration of overlap was almost 250 days (SD=256 days, median=146 days). The strengths and limitations of operationalizing polypharmacy in this manner are described below in the Discussion section.
Treatment Discontinuation
Among the 62,056 incident antipsychotic episodes that were included, the median duration of the antipsychotic medication episodes was 183 days (interquartile range=99–401). The median time to all-cause discontinuation, based on unadjusted Cox proportional hazards regression to account for right censoring, for each antipsychotic cohort is presented in
Table 1.
Adjusting for covariates, the Cox proportional hazards regression results yielded a hazard ratio of 0.43 (95% CI=0.38, 0.48) for clozapine, a hazard ratio of 0.71 (95% CI=0.58, 0.85) for aripiprazole LAI, a hazard ratio of 0.76 (95% CI=0.72, 0.81) for paliperidone LAI, and a hazard ratio of 0.91 (95% CI=0.85, 0.97) for risperidone LAI (all p values <0.05, after FDR adjustment) (
Figure 1). We also found that antipsychotic polypharmacy was associated with a lower risk (hazard probability) of all-cause discontinuation compared with oral olanzapine (hazard ratio=0.77, 95% CI=0.74, 0.80, p<0.05).
Figure 1 also shows that oral first-generation antipsychotics, oral risperidone, oral aripiprazole, oral ziprasidone, and oral quetiapine had a statistically significant higher hazard probability of discontinuation than olanzapine (all p values <0.05, after FDR adjustment). There were no significant differences in the hazard of discontinuation between haloperidol LAI, oral lurasidone, oral paliperidone, or fluphenazine LAI and oral olanzapine, but the 95% confidence intervals were wider for these comparisons, partly because of fewer observations (i.e., less frequent use) of these antipsychotics.
Similar results were obtained in sensitivity analyses, in which the definition of antipsychotic polypharmacy episodes was modified to require 90 and 120 consecutive days of overlap between episodes (for further details, see
Figures 1 and
2 in the
online supplement). The results were also unaffected by whether the antipsychotic polypharmacy group included episodes of LAI antipsychotics or episodes of clozapine or only included overlapping episodes not involving these agents.
Figure 2 shows the comparison of time to discontinuation between each LAI antipsychotic and its oral version. Aripiprazole LAI (hazard ratio=0.59, 95% CI=0.49, 0.72), paliperidone LAI (hazard ratio=0.73, 95% CI=0.62, 0.85), risperidone LAI (hazard ratio=0.80, 95% CI=0.75, 0.85), and haloperidol LAI (hazard ratio=0.85, 95% CI=0.79, 0.93) were all associated with lower risks of discontinuation compared with their oral formulations (all p values <0.05, after FDR adjustment), whereas fluphenazine LAI was not (hazard ratio=0.96, 95% CI=0.85, 1.08).
Psychiatric Hospitalizations
Median time to psychiatric hospitalization, based on unadjusted Cox proportional hazards regression to account for right censoring, for each antipsychotic cohort is summarized in
Table 2. Compared with oral olanzapine and adjusting for covariates, no drug was associated with lower risk for psychiatric hospitalization (
Figure 3). Use of oral first-generation antipsychotics (hazard ratio=1.22, 95% CI=1.10, 1.36), paliperidone LAI (hazard ratio=1.27, 95% CI=1.12, 1.43), lurasidone (hazard ratio=1.33, 95% CI=1.09, 1.63), quetiapine (hazard ratio=1.36, 95% CI=1.22, 1.51), haloperidol LAI (hazard ratio=1.39, 95% CI=1.18, 1.62), fluphenazine LAI (hazard ratio=1.40, 95% CI=1.11, 1.76), and ziprasidone (hazard ratio=1.46, 95% CI=1.27, 1.68) was associated with increased risk of hospitalizations compared with oral olanzapine (all p values <0.05, after FDR adjustment). When we compared time to hospitalization between each LAI antipsychotic and its oral version, we found no statistically significant difference between any of the oral LAI comparisons: aripiprazole LAI compared with oral aripiprazole (p=0.41), fluphenazine LAI compared with oral fluphenazine (p=0.63), haloperidol LAI compared with oral haloperidol (p=0.15), paliperidone LAI compared with oral paliperidone (p=0.42), and risperidone LAI compared with oral risperidone (p=0.62) (
Figure 2).
Discussion
In support of our study hypothesis, we found that in a nationwide sample of veterans, clozapine and LAI second-generation antipsychotics were less likely to be discontinued, on average, than oral olanzapine and other oral antipsychotic medications. In addition, we observed that antipsychotic polypharmacy was associated with a longer time to discontinuation. The clozapine and LAI second-generation antipsychotic findings are consistent with the results from a similar, smaller VA study (
7), as well as with the results from other database studies conducted in Sweden (
2), Finland (
20), and Canada (
3). These results are partially similar to those of a study of Medicaid patients with treatment-resistant schizophrenia (
21), which also found that clozapine was associated with increased time to discontinuation but differed in that the authors found a clear superiority of clozapine in reducing hospitalization. This difference may be related to the fact that their study focused only on patients defined as treatment nonresponders, whereas our study examined hospitalizations of all patients.
The issue of replication in medicine (
22,
23) is particularly important in nonrandomized studies (
24), and showing findings in this large U.S.-based study that are almost identical to those from recently published findings from Scandinavia and Finland greatly strengthens the validity and generalizability of the results. In contrast to our hypothesis, neither clozapine nor LAI antipsychotic medications were better than oral olanzapine in decreasing risk for hospitalizations, a result also very similar to findings reported by Tiihonen et al. (
2) (see Figure S9 in the
online supplement).
Our study extends the results from the Tiihonen et al. study (
2) in that we included oral and LAI aripiprazole, whereas Tiihonen et al. did not include aripiprazole LAI, and we found that aripiprazole LAI was associated with a lower discontinuation rate than oral aripiprazole. In addition, the Tiihonen et al. study did not include oral lurasidone, which is a newer and more expensive oral medication and which did not outperform oral olanzapine in our study. Finally, although we used a different approach than Tiihonen et al. to define antipsychotic polypharmacy, our analyses were between individuals for incident users, whereas theirs were within individuals. Regardless, the results of the two studies are strikingly similar.
In our study, as in the Tiihonen et al. study, first-generation antipsychotics were more likely to be discontinued than second-generation antipsychotics. A possible explanation for this observation may be that prescribers and patients opt to discontinue first-generation antipsychotics because of their concerns about extrapyramidal side effects, although not all second-generation antipsychotics (e.g., risperidone, paliperidone) are devoid of these effects, and randomized controlled trials do not always demonstrate that first-generation antipsychotics are associated with greater rates of extrapyramidal side effects (
25).
Clozapine was the treatment with the smallest risk for all-cause discontinuation. The smaller risk of discontinuation for clozapine may be related to the use of this agent in people who are more likely to be adherent to the monitoring requirements or the increased frequency of visits required to monitor the use of this agent. The smaller risk of clozapine discontinuation may also be related to the lack of alternative treatments for people who fail to demonstrate a robust response to clozapine. However, other database studies (
26), as well as meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials, have also found that clozapine was the most efficacious treatment in schizophrenia (
27 –
29). Prospective studies would have to be conducted to address this issue empirically.
We also found increased time to discontinuation among veterans receiving the LAI formulation compared with the oral formulation of the same medication. Meta-analyses have revealed similar findings in studies that used mirror-image (before-after) designs (
11,
30,
31), while a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials comparing the effectiveness of the same oral antipsychotic compared with the LAI antipsychotic showed no significant difference (
32). This difference in effectiveness of LAI antipsychotic medications in observational studies compared with randomized controlled trials may be because many of the more severely ill, nonadherent patients, who might benefit most from LAIs, are often not included in randomized controlled trials. In addition, the increased time to LAI discontinuation may also reflect the reluctance of prescribers to discontinue an LAI once a patient has been started on such a medication. In light of the limited use of LAIs in the United States, our results add further evidence supporting and encouraging broader use of LAIs (
33). The findings of differences between different medications regarding time to discontinuation were not present when the effect of these antipsychotic medications on time to hospitalization was examined, which revealed no medication to be better than oral olanzapine, including no difference between oral and LAI antipsychotics (
Figure 2), but commonly used second-generation antipsychotics, such as quetiapine and ziprasidone, were found to be worse than olanzapine, consistent with the findings of Tiihonen et al. (
2) and Taipale et al. (
20) in Sweden and Finland, respectively. It is conceivable that discontinuation as a proxy for acceptability or effectiveness works best in blinded randomized trials. Hospitalization, perhaps more objective and less influenced by knowledge of treatment, seems to be more patient oriented and is more affected by factors other than antipsychotic medication.
Previous studies (
34 –
37) and treatment guidelines (
38) have suggested that the use of antipsychotic polypharmacy may not be recommended. However, the findings from our study, together with findings from similar studies conducted in Canada and Finland using population-based data (
3,
5), showed a significantly longer time to discontinuation with antipsychotic polypharmacy compared with monotherapy. It may not be that polypharmacy is always better but that monotherapy with certain antipsychotics may be worse, as Tiihonen et al. found with polypharmacy compared with quetiapine (
Figure 3). In contrast, a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials of antipsychotic polypharmacy compared with monotherapy did not find a better treatment response for polypharmacy, defined as study-specific inefficacy and all-cause discontinuation (
37). We note that our approach to operationalizing antipsychotic polypharmacy included periods of time during an episode of treatment when two antipsychotics overlapped and when such combination treatment had yet to begin or had ended. As opposed to analyzing only periods of overlapping treatment, we included the entire episode of each drug treatment that was part of the overlap. This approach reflects the possibility that polypharmacy as an augmentation strategy allows for an individual drug episode to continue longer than it would when used alone. Our findings are nevertheless similar to those of Tiihonen et al. (
2) and Taipale et al. (
20), and together with the conflicting data between randomized controlled trials and registry-based studies, they suggest that further research on polypharmacy for schizophrenia is warranted.
Strengths and Limitations
We analyzed a large and diverse sample of incident users of antipsychotic medications over 5 years and adjusted the analyses for many demographic and clinical covariates available in the VA health care service utilization data set. Compared with similar database studies by Tiihonen et al. (
2) and Taipale et al. (
20), this study is limited in that our between-subject design may not have adequately addressed residual confounding related to selection bias compared with those studies that used within-subject approaches; however, our results, which were very similar to those of Tiihonen et al. and Taipale et al., indicate that this is not a major limitation.
The results may be biased because of unmeasured confounding variables. In addition, the analyses performed on some of the newer antipsychotics (oral paliperidone and aripiprazole LAI) include a relatively small number of veterans, although each sample did include several hundred veterans. As a result of infrequent prescribing, we were not able to analyze rates of discontinuation of LAI olanzapine. Additionally, the results of this study are relevant to veterans with schizophrenia treated by the VA, who are more likely to be male, be older, have higher incomes, and be hospitalized and less likely to receive psycho-social treatment (
39) compared with patients treated via Medicaid. Also, the VA does not limit the use of long-acting paliperidone and aripiprazole, which are more expensive compared with generic LAIs. An additional potential limitation is the assumption that time to all-cause discontinuation is an overall effectiveness measure; this study did not include clinical measures, such as symptoms and functioning.