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Title: Adjunctive risperidone in the treatment of generalized anxiety disorder: a double-blind, prospective, placebo-controlled, randomized trial. Author: Pandina GJ, Canuso CM, Turkoz I, Kujawa M, Mahmoud RA. Journal: Psychopharmacol Bull; 2007; 40(3):41-57. PubMed ID: 18007568. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Residual symptoms despite treatment are common in generalized anxiety disorders (GAD). The Patient-Rated Troubling Symptoms for Anxiety (PaRTS-A) is a newly created and validated instrument that measures the symptoms most troublesome to each individual patient and was used to test the hypothesis that adjunctive risperidone improves residual GAD symptoms. METHODS: Primary care and psychiatry clinicians enrolled adults (n = 417) with GAD and a Clinical Global Impressions of Severity rating ≥ 4 despite ≥ 8 weeks of anxiolytic treatment. Subjects were randomized to adjunctive risperidone or placebo. The primary endpoint was change from baseline to week 4 endpoint in PaRTS-A. RESULTS: Improvement from baseline to week 4 endpoint in PaRTS-A total score (mean +/-SE) was similar between treatment groups (-8.54 [0.63] and -7.61 [0.64] for adjunctive risperidone and placebo, respectively; P = .265). Patients in each treatment group exhibited significant improvements from baseline in nearly all patient- and clinician-rated measures. A post-hoc analysis of PaRTS-A symptoms of moderate to severe severity at baseline suggested greater improvement with risperidone than placebo (P = .04). Headache, weight increase, and increased appetite were the most frequently reported adverse events in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: Residual GAD symptoms assessed by the PaRTS-A improved with either adjunctive risperidone or placebo. Alternative analyses or scoring approaches may improve the ability of the PaRTS-A to provide clinically meaningful information on patient-rated symptoms. Further exploration of the benefits of risperidone in patients with more severe GAD may be indicated.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]