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Original Research

Dosing Quetiapine in Drug-Naive First-Episode Psychosis: A Controlled, Double-Blind, Randomized, Single-Center Study Investigating Efficacy, Tolerability, and Safety of 200 mg/day vs. 400 mg/day of Quetiapine Fumarate in 141 Patients Aged 15 to 25 Years

Gregor E. Berger, MD, FMHPsych, FRANZCP; Tina-Marie Proffitt, PhD; Mirabel McConchie, MSc; Melissa Kerr, MSc; Connie Markulev, MSc; Hok Pan Yuen, MSc; Colin O'Donnell, MB, BCh, MRCPsych; Dan Lubman, PhD; Andrea Polari, MD; Stephen Wood, PhD; G. Paul Amminger, MD; and Patrick D. McGorry, MD, PhD, FRANCP

Published: November 30, 2008

Article Abstract

Objective: To assess dosing, efficacy, and tolerability of quetiapine fumarate in drug-naive first-episode psychosis.

Method: We present a prospective, randomized, controlled, single-center, double-blind, fixed-dose, 4-week comparison study of 200 mg/day versus 400 mg/day of quetiapine in 141 drug-naive acutely ill first-episode psychosis patients (diagnosed according to DSM-IV) aged 15 to 25 years. The double-blind 4-week trial (Part 1) was followed by a single-blind, naturalistic, flexible-dose 8-week period (Part 2). The main outcome measures were symptomatic change, functioning, and tolerability. Data were collected from July 2003 until January 2006.

Results: The estimated time trends of the linear mixed-effects modeling indicated that efficacy between the 2 treatment groups in Part 1 was similar for most outcome measures except for 5 measures: the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms (SANS) anhedonia-asociality subscale (p = .011), the Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale (p = .020), the Global Assessment of Functioning scale (p = .070), the SANS affective flattening or blunting subscale (p = .051), and the Udvalg for Kliniske Undersogelser total (p = .056), suggesting that the 200-mg group improved more for the SANS anhedonia-asociality subscale, whereas the 400-mg group showed a slight deterioration. Social and global functioning also improved more in the 200-mg group than in the 400-mg group. Part 2 of the study revealed that, independent of the initial target dose, when clinicians were able to adjust the dose flexibly, the dose at 12 weeks was similar between groups and averaged 268 mg/day.

Conclusion: Our study in acutely ill drug-naive first-episode psychosis patients suggests that quetiapine is a safe and well-tolerated antipsychotic medication. In contrast to multiepisode patients, dosing should be more conservative in untreated new-onset cases. An initial dose of 250 to 300 mg/day of quetiapine is proposed as a primary target dose in drug-naive first-episode psychosis patients.

Trial Registration: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00449397

Volume: 69

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