Abstract

BackgroundClozapine was the widely accepted gold standard treatment for treatment resistant psychotic symptoms. Clozapine has efficacy of about 50% and some responding patients have to discontinue it due to serious adverse effects. The search for novel agents to use for clozapine-non-responders continues. One such possible agent is the non-dopaminergic antipsychotic pimavanserin, an inverse agonist of serotonin 5-HT2A receptors which was recently approved for the hallucinations and delusions of Parkinson's Disease Psychosis. We report here the successful results of using pimavanserin in patients with refractory hallucinations and delusions who failed to respond to clozapine. We also report similar results in refractory psychosis patients who did not receive clozapine. MethodsWe present ten cases of patients with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder with refractory hallucinations and delusions who received a trial of pimavanserin when clozapine or multiple antipsychotics failed. Six of ten patients had not responded to a clozapine trial. The subjects' ages ranged between 21 and 77 years and were followed up for several months. ResultsAll 10 patients with refractory hallucinations and delusions showed marked response to pimavanserin 34 mg/day within 4–8 weeks, with continuation of the response for several months of follow-up. Improvements in negative symptoms and social functioning were also observed in several patients. DiscussionThis series of 10 cases of patients with refractory psychosis who responded to pimavanserin is an important new finding that has never been reported before. Controlled studies comparing clozapine and pimavanserin in refractory schizophrenia are warranted to confirm these clinical observations.

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