Published January 13, 2017 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Is treatment-resistant schizophrenia categorically distinct from treatment-responsive schizophrenia? a systematic review

  • 1. Psychosis Studies Department, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, 16 De Crespigny Park, Denmark Hill, London, SE5 8AF, UK
  • 2. Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK

Description

Background: Schizophrenia is a highly heterogeneous disorder, and around a third of patients are treatment-resistant. The only evidence-based treatment for these patients is clozapine, an atypical antipsychotic with relatively weak dopamine antagonism. It is plausible that varying degrees of response to antipsychotics reflect categorically distinct illness subtypes, which would have significant implications for research and clinical practice. If these subtypes could be distinguished at illness onset, this could represent a first step towards personalised medicine in psychiatry. This systematic review investigates whether current evidence supports conceptualising treatment-resistant and treatment-responsive schizophrenoa as categorically distinct subtypes.

Method: A systematic literature search was conducted, using PubMed, EMBASE, PsycInfo, CINAHL and OpenGrey databases, to identify all studies which compared treatment-resistant schizophrenia (defined as either a lack of response to two antipsychotic trials or clozapine prescription) to treatment-responsive schizophrenia (defined as known response to non-clozapine antipsychotics).

Results: Nineteen studies of moderate quality met inclusion criteria. The most robust findings indicate that treatment-resistant patients show glutamatergic abnormalities, a lack of dopaminergic abnormalities, and significant decreases in grey matter compared to treatment-responsive patients. Treatment-resistant patients were also reported to have higher familial loading; however, no individual gene-association study reported their findings surviving correction for multiple comparisons.

Conclusions: Tentative evidence supports conceptualising treatment-resistant schizophrenia as a categorically different illness subtype to treatment-responsive schizophrenia. However, research is limited and confirmation will require replication and rigorously controlled studies with large sample sizes and prospective study designs.

Files

12888_2016_Article_1177.pdf

Files (1.0 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:74619060756383e9224e4c895ac9fa14
185.3 kB Download
md5:1ab4c4cffb64777caa381990f359d85c
29.3 kB Download
md5:6afbe11bcef42b465054c964ae72b994
799.4 kB Preview Download
md5:43fda19c4276ffd29510077d1bed8d79
19.0 kB Download

Additional details

Funding

CRESTAR – Pharmacogenomic biomarkers as clinical decision making tools for clozapine treatment of schizophrenia 279227
European Commission