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Why we need research: a short history of evidence-based psychiatry

Why we need research: a short history of evidence-based psychiatry. John Geddes Oxford Clinical Trials Unit for Mental Illness. Conflict of Interest . Funding from: MRC, ESRC, NIHR SMRI Trial drug supplies GSK Sanofi-Aventis. Pre-evidence-based medicine. Ackner and Oldham NIMH MRC

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Why we need research: a short history of evidence-based psychiatry

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  1. Why we need research:a short history of evidence-based psychiatry John Geddes Oxford Clinical Trials Unit for Mental Illness

  2. Conflict of Interest Funding from: MRC, ESRC, NIHR SMRI Trial drug supplies GSK Sanofi-Aventis

  3. Pre-evidence-based medicine • Ackner and Oldham • NIMH • MRC • Prien et al

  4. Long-term treatment: beyond lithium?

  5. Lithium

  6. Falling use of lithium in USA • Between 1992-5 and 1996-9* • Lithium fell from 51% to 30% • Valproate rose from 11% to 27% Trend has continued Limited evidence for valproate Increasing evidence for lithium *Blanco et al Am J Psych 2002 1005-1010

  7. Pre-evidence-based medicine • Ackner and Oldham • NIMH • MRC • Prien et al

  8. Aims • To determine if combination therapy with lithium plus divalproex is superior to monotherapy with either agent • To compare lithium and divalproex monotherapy • To establish proof of concept of large, simple randomised trials in psychiatry

  9. lithium or divalproex or lithium + divalproex BALANCE Active run–in Up to 8 weeks lithium + divalproex Randomized Phase 2 years Time to first intervention for mood episode

  10. Drug doses • Lithium – 0.4 to 1.0 mmol • Divalproex – target 1250mg, dose established during run-in

  11. Sites • 4 countries (UK, US, France, Italy) • 90% UK • 41 sites

  12. Characteristics of participants • 459 patients with Bipolar Disorder, type 1entered run-in • 129 withdrew before randomisation • 30% couldn’t tolerate drugs • 30% withdrew consent for various reasons • 330 patients randomised – 110 in each group • Equal men and women • Mean age 43 years • Median 2 hospital admissions (range 0-30) • 75% previous long-term drug therapy

  13. Primary Outcome – New Treatment/Hospital Admission Li+Va vs Va HR 0.59 p=0.002 Li+Va vs Li HR 0.82 p=0.27 Li vs Va HR 0.71 p=0.05

  14. Subgroup analyses No substantial differences between: • Men and women • Different age groups • Most recent episode • Illness stage/severity • Site

  15. Sensitivity analyses Results unaffected when: • Events occurring in first 3 months post-randomisation excluded • Events occurring when no longer on allocated treatment excluded • Adjustment by minimisation factors

  16. Time to Hospital Admission

  17. Time From Randomization to First Use of Additional Medication

  18. Time From Randomization to First Treatment for Mania

  19. Time From Randomization to First Treatment for Depression

  20. Time From Randomization to Stopping Allocated Treatment

  21. Secondary outcomes No differences on: • Quality of life • Deliberate self harm/parasuicide/suicide • Global functioning • Adverse events including deaths

  22. Conclusions • For people with bipolar disorder for whom long-term therapy is clinically indicated, combination therapy with lithium plus divalproex is more likely to prevent relapse than monotherapy • The relative advantage is most robust compared to divalproex monotherapy – risk reduced by about 40% • This relative benefit appears to be irrespective of patient or illness characteristics and is maintained for up to two years • Efficient, cost-effective trial designs are possible in psychiatry and can yield clinically useful results

  23. Numbers Needed to Treat • Combination vs. valproate 7 • Combination vs. lithium 20 • Lithium vs. valproate 10

  24. Clinical Scenarios • 56 year old female, 10 episodes, currently on lithium COMBINATION • 75 year old male, 5 episodes, on valproate COMBINATION • 36 year old male, 5 episodes, currently on valproate COMBINATION • 21 year old male, no previous long-term therapy, 2 episodes COMBINATION • 21 year old female, no previous long-term therapy 2 episodes LITHIUM

  25. Methodology • Open design – potential for • Ascertainment bias • Performance bias • Active run-in: • Effects on generalisability • Drug dosing • Optimize vs clinically typical

  26. Acknowledgements • Thanks to all participants in the study and the clinical and administrative staff in all four countries who assisted with the trial.

  27. Writing Committee: Prof John R Geddes (Chief Investigator)*; Prof Guy M. Goodwin, Dr Jennifer Rendell (Trial Manager), Prof Jean-Michel Azorin (Chief Investigator, France), Dr Andrea Cipriani (Chief Investigator, Verona, Italy) Dr Michael J Ostacher (Chief Investigator, Massachusetts, USA), Prof Richard Morriss, Nicola Alder (Statistician), Ed Juszczak (Statistician) • Trial Steering Committee: Prof Shon Lewis (Chair), Prof John R Geddes (Chief Investigator); Prof Guy Goodwin, Professor Richard Morriss, Dr Jennifer Rendell (Trial Manager) • Trial Management Group: Prof John R Geddes (Chief Investigator)*; Prof Guy Goodwin, Dr Jennifer Rendell (Trial Manager), Jane Hainsworth, Emma Van der Gucht, Christine Healey, Will Stevens, Brigid Carter, Heather Young, Ed Juszczak • Clinical Trial Service Unit: Dr Christina Davies, Prof Richard Peto • Data Monitoring and Ethics Committee: Prof Thomas RE Barnes (Chair); Dr Vivienne Curtis; Dr Tony Johnson • Trial Pharmacy: Michael Marven

  28. CEQUEL....... • Comparing lamotrigine plus quetiapine with quetiapine monotherapy • MRC funded • Currently recruiting • Join us!

  29. With SPaRCLe data – All Relapse

  30. With SPaRCLe data – Manic Relapse

  31. With SPaRCLe data – Depressive Relapse

  32. Lithium: prevention of suicide Cipriani, A, Pretty H, Hawton K, and Geddes JR. Am.J.Psychiatry 162 (10):1805-1819, 2005.

  33. Primary Outcome – New Treatment/HospitalAdmission Li+Va vs Va HR 0.59 p=0.002 Li+Va vs Li HR 0.82 p=0.27 Li vs Va HR 0.71 p=0.05

  34. ECT

  35. Atypical antipsychotics

  36. Conclusion • Scepticism is appropriate • We need replication • Multiples of trials

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