Conference Coverage

Prepsychosis links with elevated metabolic syndrome


 

AT THE EUROPEAN CONGRESS OF PSYCHIATRY

References

He took data from two studies designed to assess lurasidone’s efficacy for treating adults with schizophrenia for 12 months, compared with either risperidone in a study with 621 patients, or with quetiapine XR in a study with 292 patients. He applied the same metabolic syndrome definition used by Dr. Cordes to clinical measurements taken at baseline and after 12 months on treatment.

The results showed that treatment with lurasidone produced less than half the rate of new metabolic syndrome cases, compared with risperidone, a statistically significant difference, and less than two-thirds the rate of quetiapine XR, a difference that did not reach statistical significance.

Dr. Cordes said he has been a speaker for Servier. Dr. Botis had no disclosures. Dr. Pikalov is an employee of Sunovion, which markets lurasidone (Latuda).

mzoler@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @mitchelzoler

Pages

Recommended Reading

Does sharing genetic risk change behavior?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Incretin-based diabetes drugs don’t raise heart failure risk
MDedge Internal Medicine
Heart attack patients getting younger, fatter, and less healthy
MDedge Internal Medicine
Brain imaging suggests link between stress and cardiovascular events
MDedge Internal Medicine
Arterial calcium findings on mammograms can predict heart disease risk
MDedge Internal Medicine
Guideline update shortens minimum DAPT duration in CAD
MDedge Internal Medicine
Endovascular surges over surgery for patients hospitalized for CLI
MDedge Internal Medicine
Breast cancer treatment linked to mild systolic dysfunction
MDedge Internal Medicine
Women with suspected CAD classified as lower risk than men
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA: CT scans safe for patients with electronic medical devices
MDedge Internal Medicine