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Aripiprazole Augmentation Associated With Depression Remission Gains
Aripiprazole augmentation of antidepressants may be an effective long-term strategy for the treatment of patients with refractory major depressive disorder, according to a systematic review and meta-analysis published in The Primary Care Companion for CNS Disorders.
“These long-term studies do not provide data to recommend optimal duration of maintenance therapy,” researchers wrote. “However, relative safety of low-dose augmentation and suggestion of increasing benefit from longer treatment duration suggest aripiprazole could be a safe long-term maintenance strategy for up to 52 weeks.”
The review included 4 open-label studies investigating aripiprazole, an atypical antipsychotic approved in 2007 as an adjunct for major depressive disorder, as augmentation therapy for 6 months to 1 year in a total 2632 participants. Two studies were conducted in the United States, 1 in Italy, and 1 in Japan.
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Random effects meta-analysis of 3 aripiprazole augmentation studies involving 2117 participants identified a weighted remission proportion of 0.33, suggesting a third of participants achieved remission of depression with long-term treatment. Researchers reported a trend of increased treatment response with increased duration of treatment.
One study reported no significant adverse effects with aripiprazole augmentation, while 3 provided adverse effect data. Weight gain considered medically significant occurred in a quarter of participants receiving mean doses of 5 mg or more but in just 3.5% of participants with mean doses less than 5 mg.
Doses higher than 5 mg were also associated with akathisia (15%–16%), insomnia (12%–17%), somnolence (14%), and fatigue (18%), according to the study. The risk of tardive dyskinesia was low, at less than 1%, at 1-year follow-up.
“However, it must be noted that the studies reporting treatment response data included in this review were open-label studies with no control groups, making firm conclusions on efficacy difficult,” researchers wrote. “Additionally, side effects such as tardive dyskinesia could emerge many years after treatment.”
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