Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Jonathan Thomas.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1997
Robert A. Rosenheck; Joyce A. Cramer; Weichun Xu; Jonathan Thomas; William G. Henderson; Linda K. Frisman; Carol L. Fye; Dennis S. Charney
BACKGROUND Clozapine, a relatively expensive antipsychotic drug, is widely used to treat patients with refractory schizophrenia. It has a low incidence of extrapyramidal side effects but may cause agranulocytosis. There have been no long-term assessments of its effect on symptoms, social functioning, and the use and cost of health care. METHODS We conducted a randomized, one-year, double-blind comparative study of clozapine (in 205 patients) and haloperidol (in 218 patients) at 15 Veterans Affairs medical centers. All participants had refractory schizophrenia and had been hospitalized for the disease for 30 to 364 days in the previous year. All patients received case-management and social-rehabilitation services, as clinically indicated. RESULTS In the clozapine group, 117 patients (57 percent) continued their assigned treatment for the entire year, as compared with 61 (28 percent) of the patients in the haloperidol group (P<0.001). As judged according to the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale of Schizophrenia, patients in the clozapine group had 5.4 percent lower symptom levels than those in the haloperidol group at all follow-up evaluations (mean score, 79.1 vs. 83.6; P=0.02). The differences on a quality-of-life scale were not significant in the intention-to-treat analysis, but they were significant among patients who did not cross over to the other treatment (P=0.003). Over a one-year period, patients assigned to clozapine had fewer mean days of hospitalization for psychiatric reasons than patients assigned to haloperidol (143.8 vs. 168.1 days, P=0.03) and used more outpatient services (133.6 vs. 97.9 units of service, P=0.03). The total per capita costs to society were high --
Biological Psychiatry | 1998
Robert A. Rosenheck; William B. Lawson; John W. Crayton; Joyce A. Cramer; Weichun Xu; Jonathan Thomas; Marilyn Stolar; Dennis S. Charney
58,151 in the clozapine group and
Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2000
Joyce A. Cramer; Robert A. Rosenheck; Weichun Xu; Jonathan Thomas; William G. Henderson; Dennis S. Charney
60,885 in the haloperidol group (P=0.41). The per capita costs of antipsychotic drugs were
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2000
Robert A. Rosenheck; Sidney E. Chang; Yeon Choe; Joyce A. Cramer; Weichun Xu; Jonathan Thomas; William G. Henderson; Dennis S. Charney
3,199 in the clozapine group and
Archives of General Psychiatry | 1999
Robert A. Rosenheck; Joyce A. Cramer; Edward Allan; Joseph Erdos; Linda K. Frisman; Weichun Xu; Jonathan Thomas; William Henderson; Dennis S. Charney
367 in the haloperidol group (P<0.001). Patients assigned to clozapine had less tardive dyskinesia and fewer extrapyramidal side effects. Agranulocytosis developed in three patients in the clozapine group; all recovered fully. CONCLUSIONS For patients with refractory schizophrenia and high levels of hospital use, clozapine was somewhat more effective than haloperidol and had fewer side effects and similar overall costs.
Archives of General Psychiatry | 1998
Robert A. Rosenheck; Janet Tekell; Jeffrey L. Peters; Joyce A. Cramer; Alan Fontana; Weichun Xu; Jonathan Thomas; William G. Henderson; Dennis S. Charney
BACKGROUND We sought to identify baseline predictors of response to clozapine. METHODS Data were from a 15-site randomized clinical trial comparing clozapine and haloperidol in hospitalized patients with refractory schizophrenia (n = 423). Three-month outcomes were analyzed with the full sample (n = 368 due to attrition). Because of crossovers, analyses of 12-month outcomes were conducted with crossovers excluded (n = 291). Clinical predictors included age, race, diagnosis (current substance abuse, paranoid subtype of schizophrenia, or depressive syndrome), severity of symptoms, quality of life, age at onset of schizophrenia, extrapyramidal symptoms, and VA compensation payment. Multiple regression analysis was used to examine the interaction of treatment condition and each of these variables in predicting outcomes for symptoms, quality of life, side effects, and days hospitalized. RESULTS Patients with higher quality of life at baseline (p = .04) and higher symptoms (p = .02) had relatively smaller declines in hospital days at 6 months. In the 12-month sample patients with higher levels of symptoms had greater symptom reductions at 12 months (p = .03) and greater improvement in quality of life (p = .004). CONCLUSIONS Although high levels of symptoms were associated with greater improvement on clozapine, these findings are not robust enough to suggest that any specific, clinically defined subgroup of refractory patients should be preferentially targeted for clozapine treatment.
American Journal of Psychiatry | 1999
Robert A. Rosenheck; Lawrence Dunn; Michael A. Peszke; Joyce A. Cramer; Weichun Xu; Jonathan Thomas; Dennis S. Charney
Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2001
Joyce A. Cramer; Robert A. Rosenheck; Weichun Xu; William G. Henderson; Jonathan Thomas; Dennis S. Charney
Schizophrenia Bulletin | 1999
Robert A. Rosenheck; D. Evans; Lawrence Herz; Joyce A. Cramer; Weichun Xu; Jonathan Thomas; William G. Henderson; Dennis Charney
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1991
William C. Cushman; Ibrahim M. Khatri; Barry J. Materson; Domenic J. Reda; Edward D. Freis; Gerald Goldstein; Eli A. Ramirez; Frederick N. Talmers; Thomas J. White; Stewart Nunn; Harold W. Schnaper; Jonathan Thomas; William G. Henderson; Carol L. Fye