Haloperidol reduces mania a little faster than second-generation antipsychotics, according to systematic review

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There are a range of treatment options for people with bipolar disorder who are experiencing a manic episode. An important part of this treatment is to reduce the symptoms of mania and provide the individual with some level of normality.

I blogged this time last year about a meta-analysis in the Lancet that showed that antipsychotics were significantly more effective than mood stabilisers at treating acute mania.

It’s obviously helpful to reduce manic symptoms as quickly as possible, so this new meta-analysis and review from researchers in Barcelona will be welcomed by clinicians, as it provides a direct comparison as to the effectiveness of haloperidol (a first generation antipsychotic drug) with olanzapine, ziprasidone, aripiprazole, quetiapine and risperidone (second generation antipsychotics) in the first week of treatment.

The authors searched Medline and the Cochrane Central database for randomised controlled trials, including articles up to September 2011. They found 8 trials that met their inclusion criteria and rejected one trial because of poor methodological quality. The 7 trials that went into their meta-analysis included 2,037 patients.

Here’s what they found:

  • After 1 week, haloperidol was significantly more efficacious at reducing mania than:
    • Olanzapine (SMD: 0.40 [0.21, 0.59])
    • Ziprasidone (0.39 [0.18, 0.61])
  • Haloperidol had a non-significant superiority over:
    • Aripiprazole (SMD: 0.13 [-0.02, 0.19])
  • There were no significant differences between haloperidol and
    • Quetiapine (0.17 [-0.11, 0.44])
    • Risperidone (SMD: -0.10 [0.30, 0.09])

The authors concluded:

Haloperidol shows a faster onset of anti-manic action than second-generation antipsychotics. This difference may be related to D2 affinity. Haloperidol may be considered a treatment option in severely ill manic patients who require urgent relief of symptoms.

It’s worth noting that the effect sizes in this review are small, with the Standardised Mean Difference (SMD) being 0.17, with a 95% Confidence Interval ranging from 0.01 to 0.32.

Clearly, patients and clinicians will need to weigh up these effect sizes with the side effect profiles of the different treatments.

Links

Goikolea JM, Colom F, Capapey J, Torres I, Valenti M, Grande I, Undurraga J, Vieta E. Faster onset of antimanic action with haloperidol compared to second-generation antipsychotics. A meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials in acute mania. Eur Neuropsychopharmacol. 2012 Jul 26. [Epub ahead of print] [PubMed abstract]

Cipriani A, Barbui C, Salanti G, Rendell J, Brown R, Stockton S, Purgato M, Spineli LM, Goodwin GM, Geddes JR. Comparative efficacy and acceptability of antimanic drugs in acute mania: a multiple-treatments meta-analysis. Lancet. 2011 Aug 16. [Epub ahead of print] [PubMed abstract]

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André Tomlin

André Tomlin
André started the Mental Elf website in May 2011. He has worked as an Information Scientist in Mental Health since the late nineties; initially at Oxford University's Centre for Evidence-Based Mental Health and since 2002 as the Managing Director of Minervation Ltd. He loves blogging, social media and elves! He also has established interests in evidence-based healthcare, usability testing and web design.

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