A Practical Clinical Trial Comparing Haloperidol, Risperidone, and Olanzapine for the Acute Treatment of First-Episode Nonaffective Psychosis

Nov 17, 2006The Journal of clinical psychiatry

Comparing haloperidol, risperidone, and olanzapine for early treatment of first-time nonaffective psychosis

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Abstract

In a clinical trial of 172 patients, all three antipsychotic medications demonstrated similar effectiveness in reducing psychotic symptoms after 6 weeks.

  • The proportion of patients responding to treatment, with a 40% or greater improvement in symptoms, was 57.1% for haloperidol, 52.5% for risperidone, and 63.6% for olanzapine, with no significant differences among the groups.
  • All three medications were effective in decreasing the severity of general, negative, and positive symptoms as measured by various clinical scales.
  • Haloperidol was associated with a higher frequency of extrapyramidal symptoms and a greater need for anticholinergic medications compared to olanzapine and risperidone.
  • Patients treated with olanzapine experienced significantly more weight gain than those receiving haloperidol or risperidone.

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