TY  -  JOUR
AU  -  Gramaglia, Carla
AU  -  Rizza, Maria Cristina
AU  -  Gattoni, Eleonora
AU  -  Gambaro, Eleonora
AU  -  Di Marco, Sarah
AU  -  Coppola, Isabella
AU  -  Rossi, Annalisa
AU  -  Jona, Amalia
AU  -  Imperatori, Fredrica
AU  -  Prosperini, Pierluigi
AU  -  Chieppa, Nunzia
AU  -  Binda, Valeria
AU  -  Farruggio, Serena
AU  -  Grossini, Elena
AU  -  Zeppegno, Patrizia
T1  -  Asenapine in clinical practice: preliminary results from a naturalistic observational study
PY  -  2014
Y1  -  2014-11-01
DO  -  10.1708/1766.19122
JO  -  Rivista di Psichiatria
JA  -  Riv Psichiatr
VL  -  49
IS  -  6
SP  -  241
EP  -  246
PB  -  Il Pensiero Scientifico Editore
SN  -  2038-2502
Y2  -  2026/05/21
UR  -  http://dx.doi.org/10.1708/1766.19122
N2  -  SUMMARY. Objective. Asenapine, a second-generation antipsychotic, seems to be an effective and tolerable alternative to other treatments for patients with manic or mixed episodes. The objective of our naturalistic observational study was to identify asenapine responders and remitters and to compare responders vs. non-responders and remitters vs. non-remitters, as far as clinical and socio-demographic features are concerned. Materials and methods. We recruited patients with diagnosis of manic episode in bipolar I (BD I) or schizoaffective disorder, with clinical indication to asenapine treatment. Patients’ assessment was performed at baseline (T0), after 1 week (T1) and after 4 weeks (T2) of treatment, with the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS; T0,T1,T2) and Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HAM-D; T0, T2). According to YMRS scores, we classified patients as early improvers, treatment responders, and treatment remitters. Results. A significant decrease was found in HAM-D scores from baseline to T2, with no significant difference between remitters and non-remitters or responders vs. non-responders. The YMRS score significantly improved from baseline to T2, with a significant difference between remitters and non-remitters, but not between responders and non-responders. No difference was found between responders and non-responders as far as socio-demographic and clinical variables, and questionnaire baseline scores are concerned. Remitters and non-remitters showed significant differences in baseline YMRS scores, which were lower in the first and in the type of current episode, which was more frequently moderate in the former than in the latter. Conclusions. Early improvers comprised 51% of subjects, responders comprised 91.9% and remitters comprised 59.4%. Elderly manic patients with neurological impairment and/or dementia may have poorer therapeutic outcomes. Our results suggest that: 1) decision regarding treatment discontinuation should be cautious in patients who fail to have an early response to asenapine; 2) different diagnosis (BD or schizoaffective disorder) does not seem to have a significant impact on asenapine efficacy; 3) remission with asenapine is more likely to happen for less severe manic episodes. Further naturalistic studies on larger samples are required to support our findings.
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