Two Studies in Patients With Acute Bipolar Mania Show Rapid and Significant Improvement in Patients Treated With Geodon(R)
May 05 2004 - 4:57PM
PR Newswire (US)
Two Studies in Patients With Acute Bipolar Mania Show Rapid and
Significant Improvement in Patients Treated With Geodon(R) A
One-Year Extension Study Suggests Long-Term Benefits Without Weight
Gain, Higher Cholesterol or Triglyceride Levels NEW YORK, May 5
/PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Pfizer Inc's Geodon (ziprasidone HCl)
showed superiority to placebo in improving manic symptoms and
overall illness severity in acute bipolar mania, according to data
presented today at the American Psychiatric Association (APA) 157th
annual meeting. Onset of improvement in manic symptoms was seen by
day two in patients treated with Geodon. In a pooled analysis of
two, randomized, double-blind studies involving 415 hospitalized
patients diagnosed with acute bipolar mania, improvement over a
three week study period was significantly greater and more rapid
for Geodon patients than those on placebo. "Analysis of the pooled
results shows that Geodon is equally effective in treating a broad
spectrum of patients with manic or mixed episodes, as well as those
with or without psychotic symptoms," said Paul E. Keck, MD,
professor of psychiatry and pharmacology and vice chairman for
research, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cincinnati
College of Medicine. "This is important new information for
practitioners as well as patients, who need effective treatment
options for this complex illness." Geodon-treated patients in the
two randomized studies began taking daily doses of 80 mg on day
one, with an increase to 160 mg on day two in the first study, and
an increase to 120 mg on day two and 160 mg on day three permitted
in the second study. The most common side effects were somnolence,
headache and dizziness. Over the course of the three-week studies,
Geodon was well tolerated, with 11% of patients discontinuing due
to treatment-related adverse effects. Results from a one-year, open
label extension study that included 127 patients support Geodon's
longer-term efficacy and tolerability in these patients.
Concomitant medications were allowed during the one year extension
study. Patients were initiated on 80 mg per day at the start of the
study, and were then flexibly dosed up to 160 mg per day. The
average dose of Geodon used during the extension study was 122 mg
per day. Further improvements in manic symptoms (as assessed by the
Mania Rating Scale and Clinical Global Impression) were seen over
the year of treatment with no observed increase in weight,
cholesterol, or triglycerides. "The lack of weight gain, as well as
no increase in cholesterol and triglycerides, in this extended
study is noteworthy and together with the efficacy benefits suggest
that Geodon may be a promising treatment option in the long-term
management of this disorder," Dr. Keck stated. About Geodon
Approved in the United States in February of 2001 for the treatment
of schizophrenia, Geodon is licensed in 67 countries, and more than
3 million prescriptions have been written worldwide. It is widely
accepted on hospital, Medicaid, national VA and managed care
formularies. Geodon is the first atypical antipsychotic approved in
both capsule and IM formulations. Discovered and developed by
Pfizer, Geodon is a serotonin and dopamine antagonist. In
short-term trials, the most commonly observed side effects
associated with Geodon at an incidence of greater than or equal to
5 percent and at least twice the rate of placebo were somnolence
(14 percent vs. 7 percent), respiratory distress (8 percent vs. 3
percent), of which more than 90 percent were cold symptoms or upper
respiratory infections, and EPS (5 percent vs. 1 percent). Geodon
is contraindicated in patients with a known history of QT
prolongation, recent acute myocardial infarction, or uncompensated
heart failure, and should not be used with other QT-prolonging
drugs. Geodon has a greater capacity to prolong the QTc interval
than several antipsychotics. In some drugs, QT prolongation has
been associated with torsade de pointes, a potentially fatal
arrhythmia. In many cases this would lead to the conclusion that
other drugs should be tried first. Full Geodon prescribing
information is available upon request, or at
http://www.pfizer.com/. DATASOURCE: Pfizer Inc CONTACT: Shreya
Prudlo, Pfizer Inc, +1-212-733-4889 Web site:
http://www.pfizer.com/ Company News On-Call: Pfizer's press
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