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A randomized, double-blind study of alpidem vs placebo in the prevention and treatment of benzodiazepine withdrawal syndrome

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

GB Cassano
Affiliation:
Clinica Psichiatrica, Università degli Studi di Pisa, Ospedale Santa Chiara, Via Roma 67, 56100 Pisa
A Petracca
Affiliation:
Clinica Psichiatrica, Università degli Studi di Pisa, Ospedale Santa Chiara, Via Roma 67, 56100 Pisa
C Borghi
Affiliation:
Synthélabo Recherche. MilanItaly
S Chiroli
Affiliation:
Synthélabo Recherche. MilanItaly
G Didoni
Affiliation:
Synthélabo Recherche. MilanItaly
M Garreau
Affiliation:
Synthélabo Recherche, Bagneux, France
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Summary

The aim of the trial was to assess alpidem efficacy in preventing and treating the benzodiazepine (BZ) withdrawal syndrome (WS). A multicentre, double-blind, randomized versus placebo, parallel group study of six-week duration was carried out in outpatients suffering from generalized anxiety or adjustment disorder with an anxious mood and taking non-hypnotic BZ as continuous course of therapy of at least one-year duration. At the entry, the patients abruptly discontinued BZs and were treated with 50 mg/bid/tid of alpidem or placebo. Withdrawal syndrome diagnosis was (regarding treatment allocation) formulated by an independent psychiatrist, according to DSM-III-R and an appropriate scale, the SESSB. One hundred seventy-three patients were randomized and 148 completed the study. Withdrawal syndrome occurred in 27 patients of the alpidem group (31.0%) and in 38 patients of the placebo group (44.2%). A severe WS was diagnosed in 11.1% of the patients in the alpidem group and in 31.6% of the placebo group. If not having been withdrawn from the market, alpidem could have been useful for the prevention of BZ withdrawal syndrome.

Type
Original article
Copyright
Copyright © Elsevier, Paris 1996

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Footnotes

*

Presented at the IX World Congress of Psychiatry, Rio de Janeiro, 10 June 1993.

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