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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 April 2020
The safety and tolerability of aripiprazole as adjunctive treatment was examined in patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) without psychotic features who had a major depressive episode and who did not respond adequately to standard antidepressant therapy (ADT).
Data from three identical short-term, double-blind, placebo-controlled studies (CN138139, CN138163, CN138165) were pooled. After a prospective phase with placebo plus ADT, patients without adequate response entered a 6-week, double-blind phase with placebo or aripiprazole plus ADT. Safety endpoints included death, serious adverse events (SAEs), treatment-emergent adverse events (AEs), Simpson-Angus Scale (SAS), Barnes Akathisia Global Clinical Assessment, Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS), clinical laboratory tests, vital signs and electrocardiograms.
In total, 538 patients were randomized to adjunctive placebo and 547 to adjunctive aripiprazole. AEs with an incidence ≥5% and at least twice the rate of placebo were akathisia (adjunctive aripiprazole, 22.7%; adjunctive placebo, 4.1%), restlessness (12.4% vs 2.2%), fatigue (8.6% vs 4.3%), insomnia (8.2% vs 3.2%), vision blurred (6.2% vs 1.5%), somnolence (5.9% vs 2.6%), and constipation (4.9% vs 2.4%). AEs that had a treatment difference of ≥2% included akathisia, somnolence, sedation, dizziness, disturbance in attention, extrapyramidal disorder, restlessness, insomnia, constipation, dyspepsia, fatigue, feeling jittery, vision blurred, weight increased, and dyspnea. SAEs occurred in 0.7% of patients in each treatment group. There were no deaths during the studies.
In this pooled analysis of patients with MDD and an inadequate response to ADT, adjunctive aripiprazole showed consistently high study completion rates and low discontinuation rates resulting from adverse events.
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