Prophylactic Effect of Lamotrigine Compared With Lithium in Bipolar Disorder
Information source: University of Aarhus
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on June 20, 2008 Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.
Condition(s) targeted: Bipolar Disorder
Intervention: lithium or lamotrigine (Drug)
Phase: Phase 3
Status: Completed
Sponsored by: University of Aarhus Official(s) and/or principal investigator(s): Rasmus W Licht, MD, PhD, Principal Investigator, Affiliation: Aarhus University Psychiatric Hospital, Risskov, Denmark
Summary
The purpose of this study is to compare lamotrigine with lithium in the long term treatment
of bipolar disorder in terms of new episode preventive potentials.
Clinical Details
Official title: Lamotrigine Versus Lithium in Subjects With Bipolar Affective Disorders - a Randomised Study of Prophylactic Effect
Study design: Treatment, Randomized, Open Label, Active Control, Parallel Assignment, Safety/Efficacy Study
Primary outcome: Time to a new mood episode after having succeeded the first 6 month of treatment and reached monotherapy with study drug at that point. New episode defined as symptoms requiring treatment or admission (or suicide).
Secondary outcome: 1: number of patients (ITT population)that completed first 6 months and achieved monotherapy at that time.2: Number of patients with reported AE (type specified) 3: Number of patients with an endpoint other than censoring (among populations under observation for ½ year, 1 year, 1½ years, 2 years, and 2½ years) 4:The primary end point but selected to patients under observations for 1½ and 2½ years 5: Number of endpoint (other than censoring)among patients reaching 6 months and monotherapy at that time, per person-time(testing for inter-group balance with respect to background variables)
Detailed description:
Bipolar disorder is a recurrent lifelong illness. Lithium is still the drug of first choice
in the prophylactic treatment. However, lithium’s side effects are considerable. Thus the
interest in developing alternatives to lithium has increased, and various antiepileptic drugs
have been studied. Among these, lamotrigine, which generally is well tolerated, has been
evaluated in industry generated trials. However, for various reasons, the generalisability of
the results from these studies is limited. Also the follow-up time is limited. This study is
a pragmatic effectiveness study, overcoming some of these limitations, and comparing
lamotrigine with that of lithium in terms of their potentials for preventing new episodes in
patients with bipolar disorder.
Eligibility
Minimum age: 18 Years.
Maximum age: N/A.
Gender(s): Both.
Criteria:
Inclusion criteria:
1. Age above 18
2. Inclusion is preceded by an affective episode requiring hospitalisation or outpatient
drug treatment (index episode) which can be a manic episode (ICD-10 research
criteria), a depressive episode of at least moderate degree (ICD-10 research criteria)
or a mixed manic state (manic episode with at least additional three ICD-10 depressive
symptoms except for difficulties with concentration or thinking, agitation or
dyssomnia). The episode can be with or without psychotic symptoms including
Schneiderian first-rank symptoms or bizarre delusions as long as the psychotic
symptoms do not occur outside the affective episode.
3. No more than 12 months may pass between the onset of the index episode (or admission
if that is the case)and date of randomisation (in order to ensure a current risk of
relapse as well as reliable psychopathological information).
4. Besides the index episode, at least one previous episode must have occurred within the
last five years which meets the criteria mentioned in point number two above. This
episode may not necessarily have led to hospitalisation. Two episodes are separated by
at least two months without significant symptoms or change in polarity (depression to
mania/mixed mania or vice versa).
5. At least one manic episode (or mixed manic episode) within the last 5 years.
Exclusion criteria:
1. Contraindications to the protocol drugs.
2. Severe somatic disease, e. g. epilepsy, which may interfere with study treatment or
effect evaluation.
3. Pregnancy (or risk of pregnancy).
4. Subject has prior to randomization received prophylactic treatment with lithium or
lamotrigine conducted adequately in the sense of sufficient time and dose and ensuring
compliance, and experienced a definite lack of prophylactic effect
5. An ICD-10 diagnosis of abuse within the last year with a subsequent risk of protocol
violation. Therefore, subjects with a secondary abuse can often be included in the
study.
6. Anticipated protocol violation for other reasons.
7. No written informed consent from the subject can be obtained.
8. The subject has previously been randomised in the study.
Locations and Contacts
Aarhus University Psychiatric Hospital, Risskov 8240, Denmark
Additional Information
Starting date: March 2001
Ending date: December 2006
Last updated: April 4, 2007
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