4.3 Article

Efficacy of drug treatment for acute mania differs across geographic regions: An individual patient data meta-analysis of placebo-controlled studies

Journal

JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 8, Pages 923-932

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0269881115586938

Keywords

Mania; bipolar disorder; treatment; efficacy; geographic region

Funding

  1. Lundbeck
  2. Alkermes
  3. Neurotech
  4. Eli Lilly
  5. Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development (ZonMw)
  6. private-public funded Top Institute Pharma
  7. Innovative Medicines Initiative
  8. EU 7th Framework Program (FP7)
  9. Dutch Medicines Evaluation Board
  10. Dutch National Health Care Institute
  11. Dutch Ministry of Health
  12. Medtronic

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Given globalization trends in the conduct of clinical trials, the external validity of trial results across geographic regions is questioned. The objective of this study was to examine the efficacy of treatment in acute mania in bipolar disorder across regions and to explain potential differences by differences in patient characteristics. We performed a meta-analysis of individual patient data from 12 registration studies for the indication acute manic episode of bipolar disorder. Patients (n = 3207) were classified into one of three geographic regions: Europe (n = 981), USA (n = 1270), and other regions (n = 956). Primary outcome measures were mean symptom change score on the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) from baseline to endpoint and responder status (50% improvement form baseline). Effect sizes were significantly smaller in the USA (g = 0.203, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.062-0.344; odds ratio (OR) 1.406, 95% CI 0.998-1.980) than in Europe (g = 0.476, 95% CI 0.200-0.672; OR 2.380, 95% CI 1.682-3.368) or other regions (g = 0.533, 95% CI 0.399-0.667; OR 2.300, 95% CI 1.800-2.941). Regional differences in age, gender, initial severity, body mass index, placebo response, discontinuation rate, and type of compound could not explain the geographic differences in effect. Less severe symptoms at baseline in the US patients did explain some of the difference in responder status between patients in Europe and the USA. These findings suggest that the results of studies involving patients with acute mania cannot be extrapolated across geographic regions. Similar findings have been identified in schizophrenia, contraceptive, and in cardiovascular trials. Therefore, this finding may indicate a more general problem regarding the generalizability of pharmacological trials over geographic regions.

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