‘Highly desirable’ option
Commenting on the study, Stephen R. Saklad, PharmD, director of the psychiatric pharmacy program, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, said that to call TV-46000 a LASCA rather than a depot injection is merely a “change in nomenclature.”
However, compared with a once-monthly subcutaneous injection of risperidone (Perseris), which was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2018 for the treatment of schizophrenia, the new drug has fewer injection site reactions, said Dr. Saklad, who was not involved with the current research.
That benefit plus having efficacy similar to that of oral risperidone and having the “more patient- and clinician-desirable administration location” of the upper arm as well as the abdomen means the option to switch a risperidone-stabilized patient directly to TV-46000 monthly or bimonthly is “highly desirable,” he added.
Dr. Saklad also noted the reduction in the likelihood of impending relapse with TV-46000 over placebo is a relatively large effect size “and shows the value toward improving the care of these patients.”
In addition, he agreed with Dr. Kane that the uptake of long-acting antipsychotics is “deplorably low.”
“This is due to a number of factors that include patient reluctance to get a ‘shot’ or ‘jab,’ clinician inexperience with LAIs during training, and the incorrect presentation of LAIs as a punishment paradigm for ‘bad’ patients,” Dr. Saklad said.
He added that “everyone tires of taking their medication or just forgets to take a dose,” and most patients with other disorders will resume their medication the next day.
However, patients with schizophrenia have a “specific cognitive difficulty” in making the connection between stopping their medication and a later relapse. If they miss a dose, they will “incorrectly conclude that they are now ‘well’ and don’t need the medication any longer,” he said.
Dr. Saklad stressed that for a patient with schizophrenia a relapse can mean substantial loss of function and of assets such as housing or support networks, and many “will complete suicide.”
The study was supported by Teva Branded Pharmaceutical Products R&D. Dr. Kane reported relationships with Alkermes, Allergan, Dainioppon Sumitomo, H. Lundbeck, Indivior, Intracellular Therapies, Janssen, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Johnson & Johnson, LB Pharmaceuticals, Merck, Neurocine, North Shore Therapeutics, Novartis Pharmaceutical, Otsuka, Reviva, Roche, Saladex, Sunovion, Takeda, Teva, Otsuka, Lundbeck, Sunovion, UptoDate, and Vanguard Research Group.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.