Abstract

BackgroundClozapine has specific indication for use in Treatment Resistant Schizophrenia (TRS) with guidelines for therapeutic drug monitoring. Though a plasma level > 350 ng/ml has been cited as the therapeutic threshold, many other studies have shown poor or inconsistent associations between blood levels of clozapine and side effects. Clozapine is about 95% bound to plasma proteins with a small biologically active fraction. Saliva presents as a promising alternative for therapeutic drug monitoring where clozapine levels would be at equilibrium with free unbound clozapine in the plasma. This provides the added advantage of a potentially stronger relationship with efficacy and adverse effects when compared to plasma levels because of saliva’s closer representation of biologically-active clozapine. Salivary collection is also non-invasive and can be sampled serially for more precise evaluation of intra-individual variations. In the present investigation, we set out to evaluate the agreement and comparative clinical utility between plasma and salivary clozapine levels.Methods53 participants with schizophrenia and on stable doses of clozapine for at least 2 weeks were recruited for the study. Participants had to undergo a clinical interview and the SCID, PANSS, plus side effect scales were administered. Symptomatic remission status was defined using the symptom criteria proposed by Andreasen et al (2005). A fasting sample of venous blood and salivary sample were collected at the same time. Assays for clozapine and norclozapine were performed using high performance liquid chromatography. A total of 106 saliva and plasma samples have been analysed.ResultsOur results showed strong correlations between plasma and salivary levels of clozapine (r=0.61, P<0.05) and norclozapine (r=0.63, P<0.05). Twenty (37.7%) participants achieved symptomatic remission at the time of recruitment. Non-remitters had a significantly higher level of plasma clozapine. Thirty-one (93.9%) participants in the non-remitter group have plasma clozapine levels greater than 350ng/ml.DiscussionOur study shows potential for salivary samples to be an alternate non-invasive source for therapeutic drug monitoring of clozapine. This will be useful in serial monitoring of clozapine levels to evaluate treatment adherence and fluctuating pharmacokinetic profiles. There is a significant proportion of patients who do not achieve symptomatic remission on clozapine, which highlights a pressing need to identify new pharmacological agents or modalities of treatment.

Highlights

  • Clozapine has specific indication for use in Treatment Resistant Schizophrenia (TRS) with guidelines for therapeutic drug monitoring

  • S309 nervous system activity and lowered parasympathetic nervous system activity to the audiovisual stimulation. These results suggested that schizophrenic patients would show higher negative affect, less adaptive autonomic nervous system and hypersensitive or sharp to audiovisual stimulation, and decreased relaxation ability after stimulation

  • Baseline assessments consisted of the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms (SANS), Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms (SAPS), Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS), Clinical Global Impression (CGI), Calgary Depression Scale for Schizophrenia (CDSS), MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery (MCCB), and Quality of Life Scale (QLS) for community functioning

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Summary

Poster Session II

S309 nervous system activity and lowered parasympathetic nervous system activity to the audiovisual stimulation. These results suggested that schizophrenic patients would show higher negative affect, less adaptive autonomic nervous system and hypersensitive or sharp to audiovisual stimulation, and decreased relaxation ability after stimulation. Audiovisual stimulation in integrative arts therapy program for schizophrenia might have avoid overactive sympathetic stimulation and recommend activate parasympathetic stimulation. Integrative art therapy for schizophrenia must be sufficiently relaxed, empathetic, and promote positive affect during therapeutic process. Jimmy Lee*,1, Jie Yin Yee, Yuen Mei See, Charmaine Tang, Boon Tat Ng1, Gary Remington, Balram Chowbay3 1Institute of Mental Health, Singapore; 2Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), University of Toronto; 3National Cancer Centre, Singapore

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