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  • Amisulpride vs. risperidone in the treatment of acute exacerbations of schizophrenia. Amisulpride study group.

Amisulpride vs. risperidone in the treatment of acute exacerbations of schizophrenia. Amisulpride study group.

Psychiatry research (2000-01-06)
J Peuskens, P Bech, H J Möller, R Bale, O Fleurot, W Rein
ABSTRACT

Amisulpride, a substituted benzamide with high selectivity for dopamine D3 and D2 receptors, was compared with the antipsychotic risperidone in patients with acute exacerbations of schizophrenia. The study was double-blind and involved 228 patients allocated, after a 3-6-day wash-out period, to amisulpride 800 mg (n = 115) or risperidone 8 mg (n = 113) for 8 weeks. Both treatments produced a marked improvement in schizophrenic symptomatology. Decreases in mean BPRS total score were 17.7 +/- 14.9 for amisulpride and 15.2 +/- 13.9 for risperidone, and all of the individual factors on the BPRS showed a numerically greater improvement in the amisulpride than in the risperidone patients. Both treatments were equally effective against positive symptoms on the PANSS positive syndrome subscale; however, there was a trend in favor of greater improvement in negative symptoms assessed on the PANSS negative subscale in patients receiving amisulpride with a decrease of 6.9 +/- 7.5 vs. 5.3 +/- 6.6 for risperidone (P = 0.09). Both drugs demonstrated good safety profiles, and scores on neurological scales (SAS, AIMS, and BAS) did not increase during treatment. A comparable proportion of patients received antiparkinsonian medication, 30 and 23% in the amisulpride and risperidone groups, respectively (P = 0.21). Patients receiving risperidone experienced an increase in body weight, which was significantly greater than for amisulpride (P = 0.026).