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Featured researches published by Keith Karcher.


European Neuropsychopharmacology | 2005

Acute and continuation risperidone monotherapy in bipolar mania: a 3-week placebo-controlled trial followed by a 9-week double-blind trial of risperidone and haloperidol

Anatoly B. Smulevich; Sumant Khanna; Marielle Eerdekens; Keith Karcher; Michelle Kramer

In a randomized, double-blind trial, patients with acute bipolar mania received 1-6 mg/day of risperidone, 2-12 mg/day of haloperidol, or placebo for 3 weeks, followed by double-blind risperidone or haloperidol for 9 weeks. Of 438 patients, 154 were randomized to risperidone, 144 to haloperidol, and 140 to placebo. The mean+/-S.D. modal doses were 4.2+/-1.7 mg/day of risperidone and 8.0+/-3.6 mg/day of haloperidol during the initial 3-week phase and 4.1+/-1.8 and 7.4+/-3.7 mg/day during the 12-week period. At week 3, mean Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) score reductions from baseline were significantly greater in patients receiving risperidone than placebo (p<0.001). Differences between risperidone and haloperidol on this efficacy measure were not significant. Further reductions in YMRS scores were seen in patients receiving risperidone or haloperidol during the subsequent 9 weeks. No unexpected adverse events were reported. Extrapyramidal disorder and hyperkinesias, the most commonly reported adverse events with antipsychotic use, occurred less frequently with risperidone than haloperidol. We conclude that risperidone monotherapy was an effective and well-tolerated treatment for bipolar mania and that efficacy was maintained over the long term.


Biological Psychiatry | 2010

Risperidone Long-Acting Injectable Monotherapy in the Maintenance Treatment of Bipolar I Disorder

Jorge Quiroz; Lakshmi N. Yatham; Joseph M. Palumbo; Keith Karcher; Stuart Kushner; Vivek Kusumakar

BACKGROUND Treatment adherence is a significant problem in patients with bipolar disorder. This study was designed to determine the efficacy of risperidone long-acting injectable (LAI) in the maintenance treatment of bipolar I disorder. METHODS Eligible patients with current or recent manic or mixed episodes (n = 559, aged 18-65 years) were treated with open-label oral risperidone for 3 weeks (period II) and open-label risperidone LAI for 26 weeks (n = 501; period III). Patients who maintained response (n = 303) were randomly allocated 1:1 to placebo injections (n = 149) or to continue risperidone LAI (n = 154) for up to 24 months (period IV). RESULTS Most (77%) patients on risperidone LAI received a dose of 25 mg every 2 weeks during period IV. Time to recurrence for any mood episode (primary outcome variable) was significantly longer in the risperidone LAI group versus placebo (p < .001); the difference was significant for time to recurrence of elevated-mood episode (p < .001) but not time to recurrence of depressive episode (p = .805). Weight gains > or = 7% (compared with the periods baseline) occurred in 15% of patients in period III; in 12% of patients on risperidone LAI and 3% of patients on placebo in period IV. CONCLUSIONS Risperidone LAI monotherapy significantly delayed the time to recurrence of mood episodes, versus placebo, in this controlled, randomized study in patients with bipolar I disorder. Risperidone LAI was tolerable and no new safety concerns emerged compared with previous studies of risperidone LAI.


Current Drug Safety | 2011

Are the long-acting intramuscular formulations of risperidone or paliperidone palmitate associated with post-injection delirium/sedation syndrome? An assessment of safety databases.

Larry Alphs; Srihari Gopal; Keith Karcher; Justine M. Kent; Jennifer Kern Sliwa; Stuart Kushner; Isaac Nuamah; Jaskaran Singh

Long-acting injectable (LAI) formulations of antipsychotics are valuable treatment alternatives for patients with psychotic disorders, and understanding their safe use is critical. Post-injection delirium/sedation syndrome (PDSS) has been reported following treatment with one atypical antipsychotic LAI. Clinical databases of risperidone LAI and paliperidone palmitate were explored to identify if cases of PDSS had been observed. No cases of PDSS were identified in 15 completed trials of 3,164 subjects (approximately 115,000 injections) or the postmarketing safety database of risperidone LAI. Only one case of PDSS was identified among 10 completed trials (3,817 subjects, 33,906 injections) of paliperidone palmitate—that case having been reported in a patient randomized to treatment with placebo. Examination of these prospective databases finds no evidence that risperidone LAI and paliperidone palmitate are associated with PDSS and suggest that findings seen with another antipsychotic LAI are not generalizable.


Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2013

Risk of cardiovascular morbidity with risperidone or paliperidone treatment: analysis of 64 randomized, double-blind trials.

Srihari Gopal; David Hough; Keith Karcher; Isaac Nuamah; Joseph Palumbo; Jesse A. Berlin; Alan Baseman; Yimei Xu; Justine M. Kent

Abstract A post hoc analysis of the risperidone (RIS)/paliperidone (Pali) clinical trials database comprising 64 studies was conducted. Risk of sudden death, cardiovascular (CV), and cerebrovascular events during RIS or Pali treatment was estimated. Treatment emergent CV adverse events were identified using 7 prespecified Standardised MedDRA Queries as follows: embolic/thrombotic events, cerebrovascular disorders, ischemic heart disease, cardiac arrhythmias, cardiac failure, torsades/QT prolongation, and convulsions. Risk in the RIS/Pali pooled group was significantly increased compared to placebo for the following adverse events: syncope, tachycardia, palpitations, edema peripheral, dysarthria, and transient ischemic attack. Incidence of death related to CV events was low and similar across groups. Consistent with the known pharmacologic profile and product information, this analysis of treatment emergent adverse event data from a large, randomized, controlled clinical trials database described increased risk versus placebo for several specific CV events. Apart from events described in existing product labeling, no new safety findings emerged.


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2003

Long-acting injectable risperidone: Efficacy and safety of the first long-acting atypical antipsychotic

John M. Kane; Marielle Eerdekens; Jean-Pierre Lindenmayer; Samuel J. Keith; Michael Lesem; Keith Karcher


The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2003

Treatment of schizophrenia with long-acting injectable risperidone: a 12-month open-label trial of the first long-acting second-generation antipsychotic.

W. Wolfgang Fleischhacker; Marielle Eerdekens; Keith Karcher; Gary Remington; Pierre-Michel Llorca; Wlodzimierz Chrzanowski; Stephen Martin; Ola Gefvert


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2004

Rapid Antimanic Effect of Risperidone Monotherapy: A 3-Week Multicenter, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial

Robert M. A. Hirschfeld; Paul E. Keck; Michelle Kramer; Keith Karcher; Carla M. Canuso; Marielle Eerdekens


British Journal of Psychiatry | 2007

Long-acting injectable risperidone v. olanzapine tablets for schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. Randomised, controlled, open-label study.

Nicholas A. Keks; Michael Ingham; Akbar Khan; Keith Karcher


International Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2006

An open-label extension trial of risperidone monotherapy in the treatment of bipolar I disorder.

Robert M. A. Hirschfeld; Mari lle Eerdekens; Amir H. Kalali; Carla M. Canuso; Akbar Khan; Keith Karcher; Joseph M. Palumbo


European Neuropsychopharmacology | 2002

Long-acting injectable risperidone: Efficacy and safety

John M. Kane; Marielle Eerdekens; Samuel J. Keith; Michael Lesem; Keith Karcher; Jean-Pierre Lindenmayer

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John M. Kane

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Robert M. A. Hirschfeld

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Amir H. Kalali

University of California

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