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Donald C. Goff: Chapter 32. Risperidone and Paliperidone, in The American Psychiatric Publishing Textbook of Psychopharmacology, 4th Edition. Edited
by Alan F. Schatzberg, Charles B. Nemeroff. Copyright ©2009 American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc. DOI: 10.1176/appi.books.9781585623860.418938.
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Chapter 32. Risperidone and Paliperidone
HISTORY AND DISCOVERY
A decade before clozapine was approved for marketing in the United States, Janssen Pharmaceuticals established a program
to examine the potential role of serotonergic agents in schizophrenia. Early interest in serotonergic agents stemmed from a
preclinical literature demonstrating that both behavioral effects of dopamine agonists and haloperidol-induced catalepsy
could be modulated by serotonin2 (5-HT2) antagonists; in addition, the early butyrophenone derivative pipamperone, which
was observed to reduce agitation and improve social activity in patients with severe depression, was found to possess
primarily 5-HT2 antagonist activity (Ansoms et al. 1977; Leysen et al. 1978).
In 1981, Janssen Pharmaceuticals developed setoperone, a 5-HT 2 antagonist with weak dopamine2 (D2) antagonism that
displayed antipsychotic effects and efficacy for negative symptoms in a preliminary open trial (Ceulemans et al. 1985).
Janssen Pharmaceuticals additionally synthesized a selective 5-HT 2A and 5-HT2C antagonist, ritanserin, which was shown to
decrease extrapyramidal side effects (EPS) when combined with haloperidol in rat studies. Ritanserin also was active in
animal models of anxiety (Colpaert and Meert 1985; Meert and Colpaert 1986) and partially ameliorated behavioral effects of
lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) (Colpaert and Meert 1985). In placebo-controlled trials in patients with chronic
schizophrenia, addition of ritanserin to conventional antipsychotics improved negative symptoms and EPS (Bersani et al.
1990; Duinkerke et al. 1993; Gelders 1989; Reyntjens et al. 1986). Concluding that 5-HT 2 antagonism might improve efficacy
of D2 blockers, particularly for negative symptoms, and reduce EPS, but that it was not sufficiently effective as monotherapy,
Paul Janssen and colleagues undertook development of risperidone, which combined potent 5-HT 2A and D2 blockade.
After extensive preclinical characterization (Janssen et al. 1988), risperidone was first studied in clinical trials in 1986 and
received U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for marketing in the United States in 1994. By the time
risperidone became available to clinicians, the prominence of theories attributing 5-HT 2 enhancement of D2 antagonism as a
primary mechanism for clozapine’s atypical properties (Meltzer et al. 1989), and the evidence from registration trials of
reduced EPS and greater efficacy compared with high-dose haloperidol, resulted in considerable enthusiasm for the first of
the “serotonin–dopamine antagonists.” Risperidone was rapidly incorporated into clinical practice in the United States,
where within 2 years it became the most frequently prescribed antipsychotic agent. In 2003, risperidone microspheres
(Consta) received FDA approval as the first long-acting injectable second-generation antipsychotic. In December 2006,
Janssen Pharmaceuticals introduced paliperidone (9-hydroxyrisperidone), the active metabolite of risperidone, formulated
as an extended-release tablet marketed under the brand name Invega. A depot preparation, paliperidone palmitate, is
currently in late-stage development.
PHARMACOLOGICAL PROFILE
Risperidone, or
3-[2-(4-[6-fluoro-1,2-benzisoxazol-3-yl]-1-piperidinyl)ethyl]-6,7,8,9-tetrahydro-2-methyl-4H-pyrido[1,2-a]pyrimidin-4-one,
is a benzisoxazole derivative (Figure 32–1) characterized by very high affinity for 5-HT 2A and moderately high affinity for D2,
H1, and 1- and 2-adrenergic receptors. In vitro, the affinity of risperidone for 5-HT 2A receptors is roughly 10- to 20-fold
greater than for D2 receptors (Leysen et al. 1994; Schotte et al. 1996); in vivo binding to rat striatal D 2 receptors occurs at a
dose 10 times higher than does binding to 5-HT 2A receptors (Leysen et al. 1994). The affinity for 5-HT 2A receptors is more
than 100-fold greater than for other serotonin receptor subtypes. The active metabolite 9-hydroxyrisperidone has a similar
receptor affinity profile. Both risperidone and 9-hydroxyrisperidone display high affinities for 5-HT 2A receptors in rat brain
tissue and for cloned human receptors expressed in COS-7 cells (Leysen et al. 1994). Risperidone binds to 5-HT 2A receptors
with approximately 20-fold greater affinity than clozapine and 170-fold greater affinity than haloperidol (Leysen et al.
1994).
FIGURE 32–1. Chemical structure of risperidone.
The affinity of risperidone for D2 receptors is approximately 50-fold greater than that of clozapine and approximately
20%–50% that of haloperidol (Leysen et al. 1994) (Table 32–1). Binding affinity for D 2 receptors was similar in rat
mesolimbic and striatal tissue and in the long and short forms of cloned human D 2 receptors expressed in embryonic kidney
cells (Leysen et al. 1993a). The affinities of risperidone and 9-hydroxyrisperidone for dopamine 4 (D4) and D1 receptors are Print: Chapter 32. Risperidone and Paliperidone http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=418942&print=yes…
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similar to those of clozapine and haloperidol (Leysen et al. 1994). Risperidone has essentially no affinity for muscarinic
acetylcholine receptors and modest histaminergic H1 activity, whereas 9-hydroxyrisperidone minimally binds to H 1
receptors. Unlike haloperidol, risperidone does not bind to sigma sites (Leysen et al. 1994). However, compared with other
agents, risperidone has a relatively high affinity for 2-adrenergic receptors, which is substantially greater than that of
clozapine or any conventional agent and which approaches the affinity of phentolamine (Richelson 1996). The affinity of
risperidone for 1-adrenergic receptors is roughly comparable to that of chlorpromazine and approximately 5 to 10 times
greater than that of clozapine (Leysen et al. 1993b; Richelson 1996). The median effective dose (ED 50) of risperidone
required to inhibit D2-mediated apomorphine-induced stereotypies in rats is 0.5 mg/kg; at this dose, approximately 40% of
D2 receptors are occupied, as are 80% of 5-HT2A receptors, 50% of H1 receptors, 38% of 1-adrenergic receptors, and 10%
of 2-adrenergic receptors (Leysen et al. 1994).
TABLE 32–1. Receptor-binding affinities (Ki values, in nM) of risperidone (versus haloperidol and clozapine) in rat
Risperidone Haloperidol Clozapine
Dopaminergic
D2
3.1 1.2 152
D1
536 430 570
Serotonergic
5-HT2A
0.16 27 3.3
5-HT1A
420 1,500 145
Adrenergic
1
2.4 19 24
2
7.5 >10,000 159
H1 histaminergic 2.1 4,400 0.78
Muscarinic >10,000 4,400 33
Source. Adapted from Leysen et al. 1993b.
Several groups have studied the occupancy of D2 and 5-HT2 receptors in patients with schizophrenia, employing positron
emission tomography (PET) or single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) ligand-binding techniques. Kapur et
- (1999) used PET to measure D2 occupancy with 11C-labeled raclopride and 5-HT2 occupancy with 18F-labeled setoperone
in patients with chronic schizophrenia maintained on a stable clinician-determined dose of risperidone. The PET was
performed 12–14 hours after the last dose of risperidone. Occupancy of D 2 receptors ranged from 63% to 89%; 50%
occupancy was calculated to occur with a daily risperidone dose of 0.8 mg. Patients treated with risperidone (6 mg/day)
exhibited a mean D2 occupancy of 79%, which was consistent with the mean occupancy of 82% that was previously reported
by Nyberg et al. (1999) and would be expected to exceed the putative threshold for EPS in some patients. A similar degree of
D2 occupancy was calculated to occur with olanzapine at approximately 30 mg daily (Kapur et al. 1999). A maximal 5-HT 2
occupancy of greater than 95% was achieved with risperidone at daily doses as low as 2–4 mg. In a small sample of patients
treated biweekly for at least 10 weeks with risperidone microspheres (Consta), Remington et al. (2006) found that the
25-mg dose produced a mean D2 occupancy of 54% (preinjection) and 71% (postinjection), whereas the 50-mg dose
produced occupancy levels of 65% (preinjection) and 74% (postinjection).
Preclinical characterization of risperidone in rats revealed more potent antiserotonergic activity, compared with ritanserin, in
all tests (Janssen et al. 1988). For example, in reversal of tryptophan-induced effects in rats, risperidone was 6.4 times more
potent than ritanserin for reversal of peripheral 5-HT 2-mediated effects and 2.4 times more potent for reversal of centrally
mediated 5-HT2 effects (Janssen et al. 1988). Risperidone was also found to completely block discrimination of LSD, in
contrast to the partial attenuation observed with ritanserin (Meert et al. 1989). Although risperidone demonstrated activity
in all dopamine-mediated tests, the dose–response pattern differed from that of haloperidol (Janssen et al. 1988). The two
drugs were roughly equipotent for inhibition of certain dopamine effects, such as amphetamine-induced oxygen
hyperconsumption, whereas the dose of risperidone necessary to cause pronounced catalepsy in rats was 18-fold higher
than that of haloperidol (Janssen et al. 1988). Risperidone depressed vertical and horizontal activity in rats at a dose 2–3
times greater than that of haloperidol but required doses more than 30 times greater than those of haloperidol to depress
small motor movements (Megens et al. 1988).
PHARMACOKINETICS AND DISPOSITION
Risperidone is rapidly absorbed after oral administration, with peak plasma levels achieved within 1 hour (Heykants et al.
1994). In early Phase I studies, risperidone demonstrated linear pharmacokinetics at dosages between 0.5 and 25 mg/day
(Mesotten et al. 1989; Roose et al. 1988). After a single dose of the extended-release formulation of paliperidone (Invega),
serum concentrations gradually increase until a maximum concentration is achieved approximately 24 hours after ingestion.
Absorption of paliperidone is increased by approximately 50% when taken with a meal compared with the fasted state.
Extended-release paliperidone also demonstrates dose-proportional pharmacokinetics within the recommended dosing range
(3–12 mg/day). Risperidone microspheres do not begin to release appreciable amounts of drug until 3 weeks after injection
and continue to release drug for approximately 4 weeks, with maximal drug release occurring after about 5 weeks.
Risperidone is 90% plasma protein bound, whereas 9-hydroxyrisperidone (paliperidone) is 74% plasma protein bound
(Borison 1994). The absolute bioavailability of risperidone is about 100%; that of extended-release paliperidone is aboutPrint: Chapter 32. Risperidone and Paliperidone http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=418942&print=yes…
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28%.
Risperidone is metabolized by hydroxylation of the tetrahydropyridopyrimidinone ring at the seven and nine positions and by
oxidative N-dealkylation (Mannens et al. 1993). The most important metabolite, 9-hydroxyrisperidone, accounts for up to
31% of the dose excreted in the urine and has a receptor affinity profile similar to that of the parent compound. Because
hydroxylation of risperidone is catalyzed by cytochrome P450 (CYP) 2D6, the half-life of the parent compound varies
according to the relative activity of this enzyme. In “extensive metabolizers,” which include about 90% of Caucasians and as
many as 99% of Asians, the half-life of risperidone is approximately 3 hours. In healthy subjects, approximately 60% of
9-hydroxyrisperidone is excreted unchanged in the urine, and the remainder is metabolized by at least four different
pathways (dealkylation, hydroxylation, dehydrogenation, and benzisoxazole scission), none of which accounts for more than
10% of the total. The terminal half-life of 9-hydroxyrisperidone (and of extended-release paliperidone) is 23 hours. “Poor
metabolizers” metabolize risperidone primarily via oxidative pathways; the half-life may exceed 20 hours. In extensive
metabolizers, radioactivity from 14C-labeled risperidone is not detectable in plasma 24 hours after a single dose, whereas
9-hydroxyrisperidone accounts for 70%–80% of radioactivity. In poor metabolizers, risperidone is primarily responsible for
radioactivity after 24 hours. In the U.S. multicenter registration trial, the correlations between risperidone dose and serum
risperidone and 9-hydroxyrisperidone concentrations were 0.59 and 0.88, respectively (Anderson et al. 1993).
MECHANISM OF ACTION
As previously discussed, risperidone was developed specifically to exploit the apparent pharmacological advantages of
combining 5-HT2 antagonism with D2 blockade. Selective 5-HT2A antagonists administered alone have demonstrated activity
in several animal models suggestive of antipsychotic effect, including blockade of both amphetamine- and phencyclidine
(PCP)–induced locomotor activity (Schmidt et al. 1995). Dizocilpine-induced disruption of prepulse inhibition is also blocked
by 5-HT2A antagonists, suggesting that sensory gating deficits characteristic of schizophrenia and perhaps resulting from
glutamatergic dysregulation might also benefit from the 5-HT2 antagonism of risperidone (Varty et al. 1999). The disruption
of prepulse inhibition by dizocilpine (MK-801, a noncompetitive N-methyl-D-aspartate [NMDA] antagonist) is attenuated by
atypical antipsychotics, but not by conventional D2 blockers (Geyer et al. 1990). From a study in which the selective 5-HT 2A
antagonist M100907 was added to low-dose raclopride (a selective D 2 blocker), Wadenberg et al. (1998) concluded that
5-HT2A antagonism facilitates D2 antagonist blockade of conditioned avoidance, another behavioral model associated with
antipsychotic efficacy, but does not block conditioned avoidance when administered alone.
One mechanism by which risperidone, paliperidone, and similar atypical agents might produce enhanced efficacy for
negative symptoms and cognitive deficits and reduced risk for EPS is via 5-HT 2A receptor modulation of dopamine neuronal
firing and cortical dopamine release. Prefrontal dopaminergic hypoactivity has been postulated to underlie negative
symptoms and cognitive deficits in schizophrenia (Goff and Evins 1998); both clozapine and ritanserin have been shown to
increase dopamine release in prefrontal cortex, whereas haloperidol does not (Busatto and Kerwin 1997). Following 21 days
of administration, risperidone, but not haloperidol, continued to increase dopamine turnover in the dorsal striatum and
prefrontal cortex (Stathis et al. 1996). Ritanserin has been shown to enhance midbrain dopamine cell firing by blocking a
tonic inhibitory serotonin input (Ugedo et al. 1989). Ritanserin also normalized ventral tegmental dopamine neuron firing
patterns in rats after hypofrontality was induced by experimental cooling of the frontal cortex (Svensson et al. 1989).
Svensson et al. (1995) have performed a series of elegant studies examining the impact of atypical antipsychotics on ventral
tegmental dopamine firing patterns disrupted by glutamatergic NMDA receptor antagonists. In healthy human subjects,
administration of the NMDA antagonist ketamine is widely regarded as a promising model for several clinical aspects of
schizophrenia, including psychosis, negative symptoms, and cognitive deficits (Goff and Coyle 2001; Krystal et al. 1994). In
rats, administration of the NMDA channel blockers dizocilpine or PCP increased burst firing of ventral tegmental dopamine
neurons predominately projecting to limbic structures but reduced firing of mesocortical tract dopamine neurons and
disrupted firing patterns. Administration of ritanserin and clozapine preferentially enhanced firing of dopamine neurons with
cortical projections, and when added to a D2 blocker, ritanserin increased dopamine release in prefrontal cortex. In addition
to modulating ventral tegmental dopamine neuron firing, risperidone also blocks 5-HT 2 receptors on inhibitory
-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-ergic interneurons, which could also influence activity of cortical pyramidal neurons that are
regulated by these local inhibitory circuits (Gellman and Aghajanian 1994).
In placebo-controlled clinical trials, 5-HT2 antagonists have reduced antipsychotic-induced parkinsonism and akathisia
(Duinkerke et al. 1993; Poyurovsky et al. 1999). This effect may reflect 5-HT 2A antagonist effects upon nigrostriatal
dopamine release. When combined with haloperidol, selective 5-HT 2 antagonists increase dopamine metabolism in the
striatum and prevent an increase in D2 receptor density, thereby possibly reducing the effects of D2 receptor blockade and
dopamine supersensitivity (Saller et al. 1990). These agents do not affect dopamine metabolism in the absence of D 2
blockade.
The relative importance of 5-HT2 antagonist activity in producing atypical characteristics is the subject of debate. As argued
by Kapur and Seeman (2001) and Seeman (2002), most atypical antipsychotic agents have dissociation constants for the D 2
receptor that are larger than the dissociation constant of dopamine. This “loose binding” to the D 2 receptor may allow
displacement by endogenous dopamine and may contribute to a reduced liability for EPS and hyperprolactinemia. Unique
among atypical agents, risperidone is “tightly bound” to the D2 receptor, with a dissociation constant smaller than that of
dopamine (Seeman 2002). A model for atypical antipsychotic mechanisms that emphasizes D 2 dissociation constants would
predict that the apparent atypicality of risperidone, compared with that of haloperidol, reflects the reduced D 2 occupancy
achieved by more favorable dosing rather than the intrinsic pharmacological characteristics of risperidone. According to
some binding data, a comparable clinical dosage of haloperidol would be approximately 4 mg/day, rather than 20 mg/day as
used in the North American multicenter registration trial (Kapur et al. 1999). Consistent with this view, benefits of
risperidone for negative symptoms and EPS were less apparent when compared with lower doses of haloperidol or withPrint: Chapter 32. Risperidone and Paliperidone http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=418942&print=yes…
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lower-potency conventional agents (see “Indications and Efficacy” section later in this chapter) than when compared with
high-dose haloperidol (20 mg/day).
An additional mechanism possibly contributing to the enhanced efficacy of risperidone and paliperidone is their considerable
-adrenergic antagonism. In a placebo-controlled augmentation trial, Litman et al. (1996) demonstrated significant
improvement in psychosis and negative symptoms with the 2-adrenergic antagonist idazoxan when it was added to
conventional antipsychotics. Idazoxan has been shown to increase dopamine levels in the rat medial prefrontal cortex
(Hertel et al. 1999). In aged rats (Haapalinna et al. 2000) and in patients with frontal dementias (Coull et al. 1996),
2-adrenergic blockers have also been reported to improve cognitive functioning. Svensson et al. (1995) found that prazosin,
an 1 antagonist, inhibited both behavioral activation and the increase in mesolimbic dopamine release produced by PCP or
MK-801.
In summary, risperidone and paliperidone possess at least two mechanisms that may confer atypical characteristics. 5-HT 2A
antagonism partially protects against D2 antagonist–induced neurological side effects and may improve negative symptoms
and cognitive functioning via modulation of mesocortical dopamine activity. In addition, blockade of adrenoceptors may
further increase prefrontal cortical activity and could enhance antipsychotic efficacy by modulation of mesolimbic dopamine
activity. Unlike other atypical agents, risperidone and paliperidone do not differ from conventional agents in their
dissociation constant for the D2 receptor; this feature perhaps accounts for the risk of EPS at high doses, as well as their
greater propensity to cause hyperprolactinemia.
INDICATIONS AND EFFICACY
Risperidone is approved by the FDA for the treatment of schizophrenia, bipolar mania, and irritability associated with autism.
In August 2007, the indication for schizophrenia was extended to include adolescents ages 13–17 years, and the bipolar
mania indication was extended to include children 10–17 years of age. Risperidone microspheres (Consta long-acting
injection) and extended-release paliperidone (Invega) are approved for the treatment of schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia
Clinical Trial Results for Risperidone
In the two North American registration trials (Chouinard et al. 1993; Marder and Meibach 1994), a total of 513 patients with
chronic schizophrenia were randomly assigned to an 8-week double-blind, fixed-dose, placebo-controlled comparison of
risperidone (2, 6, 10, or 16 mg/day) or haloperidol (20 mg/day). Risperidone dosages of 6, 10, and 16 mg/day produced
significantly greater reductions, as compared with haloperidol, in each of the five domains of the Positive and Negative
Syndrome Scale (PANSS), derived by principal-components analysis (Marder et al. 1997), and significantly higher response
rates, defined as a 20% reduction in the PANSS total score. Effect sizes representing the difference in change scores
between risperidone (6 mg/day) and haloperidol, although statistically significant, were uniformly small by Cohen’s
classification system (Cohen 1988): negative symptoms 0.31; positive symptoms 0.26; disorganized thoughts 0.22;
uncontrolled hostility/excitement 0.29; and anxiety/depression 0.30 (Table 32–2). Severity of EPS was greater with
haloperidol than with risperidone; further statistical analysis suggested that differences in EPS rates did not significantly
influence the differences in PANSS subscale ratings (Marder et al. 1997). In fact, risperidone (10 and 16 mg/day) produced
improvements in negative symptoms equivalent to those seen with risperidone (6 mg/day), despite increased EPS at the
higher dosages of risperidone.
TABLE 32–2. Effect sizes on Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) symptom dimensions: North American trials ( N
= 513)
Adjusted mean change scores Risperidone 6 mg/day
Placebo Risperidone 6 mg/day Haloperidol Effect size vs. placebo Effect size vs. haloperidol
PANSS total –3.8 –18.6 –5.1 0.53 0.31
Negative
0.2 –3.4 –0.1 0.27 0.26
Positive
0.9 –5.7 –2.3 0.48 0.22
Disorganized thought
0.1 –4.6 –0.2 0.43 0.24
Hostility/excitement
0.2 –2.5 –0.1 0.47 0.29
Anxiety/depression
–0.1 –2.5 –0.6 0.36 0.30
Source. Adapted from Marder et al. 1997.
When risperidone (1, 4, 8, 12, and 16 mg/day) was compared with haloperidol (10 mg/day) in a large 8-week European trial
involving 1,362 subjects with schizophrenia (Peuskens 1995), PANSS subscale change scores indicated preferential
response to daily risperidone doses of 4 and 8 mg. However, neither the risperidone group taken as a whole nor individual
risperidone doses achieved significantly better outcomes than haloperidol (10 mg/day) on any measure except for EPS,
suggesting that the degree of the clinical superiority of risperidone, compared with haloperidol, may be dependent on the
dosing of the comparator.
In the National Institute of Mental Health–funded Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE; Stroup
et al. 2003), 1,432 patients with chronic schizophrenia were randomly assigned to double-blind, flexibly dosed treatment for
18 months with risperidone, olanzapine, quetiapine, ziprasidone, or the conventional antipsychotic comparator
perphenazine. Clinicians could adjust the dosage of each drug by prescribing 1–4 capsules daily; risperidone capsulesPrint: Chapter 32. Risperidone and Paliperidone http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=418942&print=yes…
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contained 1.5 mg, and the mean daily dose administered in the study was 3.9 mg. Based on the primary outcome measure,
time to all-cause discontinuation, risperidone was less effective than olanzapine (mean dosage = 20 mg/day) and
comparable in effectiveness to perphenazine (mean dosage = 21 mg/day) and the other atypical agents (Lieberman et al.
2005). Although differences in rates of dropout due to intolerance did not reach statistical significance, risperidone
consistently was the best-tolerated drug, particularly in subjects who had failed their first-assigned drug due to intolerance.
Whereas the superior efficacy of risperidone for acute symptom reduction, compared with haloperidol, is quite broad (but of
relatively small magnitude) and may be determined in part by the haloperidol dose, efficacy for prevention of relapse
appears to be of a substantially greater relative magnitude. For example, Csernansky et al. (2002) randomly assigned 365
patients with stable schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder to clinician-determined flexible dosing with risperidone or
haloperidol for a minimum of 1 year. Kaplan-Meier estimates of the risk of relapse at the end of the study were 34% with
risperidone, compared with 60% with haloperidol, a highly significant difference ( P = 0.001).
Several studies have indicated that risperidone may significantly enhance cognitive functioning, particularly verbal working
memory, compared with haloperidol (Green et al. 1997). More recently, in a large double-blind, flexibly dosed 3-month trial
in first-episode schizophrenia patients, risperidone (mean dosage = 3.2 mg/day) produced a modest, although statistically
significant, improvement in the composite cognitive score compared with haloperidol (mean dosage = 2.9 mg/day) (Harvey
et al. 2005). Another large double-blind trial examined cognitive effects in chronic schizophrenia patients treated for 52
weeks with risperidone (mean dosage = 5.2 mg/day), olanzapine (12.3 mg/day), and haloperidol (8.2 mg/day) (Keefe et al.
2006). No difference between treatments was found in improvement on the composite cognitive score, although risperidone
and olanzapine were superior to haloperidol in a secondary analysis of completers (Keefe et al. 2006). No significant
differences in cognitive effects were found among risperidone, perphenazine, or the other atypical antipsychotics in the
CATIE (Keefe et al. 2007).
Risperidone has been found to be well tolerated and effective in subgroups of patients with schizophrenia, including
first-episode patients and elderly patients. In a 4 month double-blind trial comparing risperidone (mean dosage = 3.9
mg/day) and olanzapine (mean dosage = 11.8 mg/day) in 112 first-episode patients, both treatments were well tolerated,
with an overall completion rate of 72% (Robinson et al. 2006). Response rates did not differ significantly between
risperidone (54%) and olanzapine (44%), although patients who responded to risperidone were significantly more likely to
retain their response. Experience with patients with treatment-resistant schizophrenia has been less consistent. In the U.S.
multicenter registration study, Marder and Meibach (1994) found that patients who were presumed to have failed to respond
to conventional agents, on the basis of a history of hospitalization for at least 6 months prior to study entry, did not respond
to haloperidol (20 mg/day) but did display significant response to risperidone (6 and 16 mg/day), compared with placebo.
Wirshing et al. (1999) reported significant improvement with risperidone (6 mg/day), compared with haloperidol (15
mg/day), during a 4 week fixed-dose trial in 67 patients with schizophrenia and histories of treatment resistance. However,
the difference between treatments was lost during a subsequent 4 week flexible-dose phase in which the mean risperidone
dosage was increased to 7.5 mg/day and the mean haloperidol dosage was increased to 19.4 mg/day. Bondolfi et al. (1998)
reported comparable significant improvement with risperidone (mean dosage = 6.4 mg/day) and clozapine (mean dosage =
292 mg/day) in a randomized, double-blind trial involving 86 patients with schizophrenia described as resistant or intolerant
to conventional antipsychotics by history. In a large open trial, risperidone produced significantly higher response rates than
did haloperidol in 184 patients with histories of poor response (Bouchard et al. 2000). The relative superiority of risperidone
over haloperidol steadily increased over time, reaching a maximum at the conclusion of the 12-month study. In contrast,
Volavka et al. (2002) found no difference between high-dose risperidone (8–16 mg/day) and haloperidol (10–20 mg/day) in
patients established by history to be treatment resistant to conventional antipsychotics. In the CATIE, risperidone was more
effective than quetiapine but did not differ from olanzapine and ziprasidone in patients who discontinued their first-assigned
atypical antipsychotic medication due to lack of efficacy (Stroup et al. 2006). In contrast, patients who discontinued
perphenazine (for any reason) subsequently did better on quetiapine or olanzapine than they did on risperidone (Stroup et
- 2007).
Clinical Trial Results for Paliperidone
Extended-release paliperidone (Invega) at dosages of 6, 9, and 12 mg/day was more effective than placebo in a 6-week trial
in acutely ill schizophrenia patients (Kane et al. 2007). In a flexibly dosed trial, extended-release paliperidone (9–15
mg/day) significantly reduced relapse compared with placebo (Kramer et al. 2007). The long-acting risperidone microsphere
(Consta) formulation at fixed doses of 25 mg, 50 mg, and 75 mg administered biweekly was also superior in efficacy to
placebo in a 12-week trial (Kane et al. 2003). In a 52-week study, treatment with risperidone microspheres was associated
with low relapse rates; the incidence of relapse was 21.6% with the 25-mg dose and 14.9% with the 50-mg dose
administered every 2 weeks (Simpson et al. 2006). In an open-label pilot trial of risperidone microspheres administered at a
dose of 50 mg every 4 weeks, the 1-year relapse rate was estimated to be 22.4% (Gharabawi et al. 2007).
Affective Disorders
Six controlled trials of 3–4 weeks’ duration that included a total of 1,343 patients have examined the efficacy of risperidone
as monotherapy or in combination with a mood stabilizer for the acute treatment of bipolar mania (Rendell et al. 2006). As
monotherapy and in combination, risperidone was more effective than placebo and comparable to haloperidol (Rendell et al.
2006). Risperidone’s comparative efficacy in long-term prevention of relapse in bipolar disorder has not been established
(Rendell and Geddes 2006).
Risperidone 1–2 mg/day was evaluated as an adjunct to antidepressant therapy in a 4-week placebo-controlled trial in 174
antidepressant-resistant patients with major depression recruited from 19 primary care and psychiatric centers (Mahmoud
et al. 2007). Risperidone significantly lowered ratings of depressive symptoms compared with placebo. Remission rates werePrint: Chapter 32. Risperidone and Paliperidone http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=418942&print=yes…
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25% with risperidone versus 11% with placebo ( P = 0.004). Risperidone was well tolerated, with an 81% completion rate
(vs. 88% with placebo).
Autism
Risperidone was also studied in a large 8-week placebo-controlled trial in 101 children (ages 5–17 years) with autism
accompanied by severe tantrums, aggression, or self-injurious behavior (McCracken et al. 2002). Flexible dosing with
risperidone (range = 0.5–3.5 mg/day; mean dosage = 1.2 mg/day) resulted in a mean reduction of 57% in irritability,
compared with a decrease of 14% in the placebo group, and the response rate was 69% with risperidone versus 12% with
placebo. In a study of 32 children (ages 5–17 years) treated for 4 months with open-label risperidone (mean dosage = 2
mg/day), those who continued treatment with risperidone during the second study arm, an 8-week double-blind substitution
trial, had much lower relapse rates than patients switched to placebo (Research Units on Pediatric Psychopharmacology
Autism Network 2005). Risperidone at a mean dosage of 2 mg/day was also found to be effective compared with placebo in
a study of 31 adults with autism or pervasive developmental disorder (McDougle et al. 1998). In these studies, risperidone
improved irritability and behavioral problems associated with autism but was not effective for social or language deficits.
Risperidone at a dosage of 0.02–0.06 mg/kg was found to be well tolerated and effective for disruptive behaviors in children
with low intelligence (intelligence quotient [IQ] between 36 and 84) in a 6-week placebo-controlled trial (Aman et al. 2002).
Other Disorders
In a 4-week placebo-controlled trial in 417 patients with generalized anxiety disorder, anxiety symptoms improved to a
similar degree in both the placebo and the risperidone groups (Pandina et al. 2007). Risperidone was highly effective for
obsessive-compulsive disorder symptoms in a 6-week placebo-controlled trial in 36 adults prospectively confirmed to be
refractory to treatment with a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (McDougle et al. 2000). Symptoms of anxiety and
depression also responded to risperidone compared with placebo. Fifty percent of risperidone-treated patients responded
(mean dosage = 2.2 mg/day), compared with 0% in the placebo group.
SIDE EFFECTS AND TOXICOLOGY
Risperidone shares class warnings with other atypical antipsychotics in the United States, including the risks of tardive
dyskinesia, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, and hyperglycemia and diabetes, as well as the risk of increased mortality in
elderly patients with dementia-related psychosis. However, risperidone generally has been very well tolerated in clinical
trials. In the U.S. multicenter trial reported by Marder and Meibach (1994), only headache and dizziness were significantly
more frequent with risperidone (6 mg/day), compared with placebo, whereas the group receiving risperidone (16 mg/day)
treatment also reported more EPS and dyspepsia than did the group receiving placebo (Table 32–3). Fatigue, sedation,
accommodation disturbances, orthostatic dizziness, palpitations or tachycardia, weight gain, diminished sexual desire, and
erectile dysfunction displayed a statistically significant relationship to risperidone dose, although most were not significantly
elevated compared with placebo. In a flexible-dose relapse prevention study reported by Csernansky et al. (2002), no side
effects were more frequent with risperidone, compared with haloperidol, although risperidone produced significantly greater
weight gain. In a flexibly dosed, placebo-controlled trial of risperidone for children with disruptive behavior, risperidone
(mean dosage = 1.2 mg/day) produced more somnolence, headache, vomiting, dyspepsia, weight gain, and prolactin
elevation than did placebo; most side effects were rated mild to moderate and did not adversely affect compliance (Aman et
- 2002).
TABLE 32–3. Side effects reported by patients with schizophrenia receiving placebo, risperidone, or haloperidol in the U.S.
multicenter trial
Percentage of patients
Placebo (n = 66) Risperidone 6 mg (n = 64) Risperidone 16 mg (n = 64) Haloperidol (n = 66)
Insomnia 9.1 12.5 9.4 12.1
Agitation 7.6 10.9 12.5 16.7
Anxiety 1.5 7.8 4.7 1.5
Nervousness 1.5 6.3 1.6 0
Somnolence 0 3.1
9.4a
4.5
Extrapyramidal side effects 10.6 10.9
25.0a
25.8a
Headache 4.5
15.6a
9.4 7.6
Dizziness 0
9.4a
10.9b
0
Dyspepsia 4.5 9.4 6.3 4.5
Vomiting 1.5 6.3 6.3 3.0
Nausea 0 6.3 3.1 1.5
Constipation 0 1.6 6.3 1.5
Rhinitis 6.1 15.6 6.3 4.5
Coughing 1.5 9.4 3.1 3.0
Sinusitis 1.5 6.3 1.6 0
Fever 0 6.3 3.1 1.5Print: Chapter 32. Risperidone and Paliperidone http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=418942&print=yes…
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Percentage of patients
Placebo (n = 66) Risperidone 6 mg (n = 64) Risperidone 16 mg (n = 64) Haloperidol (n = 66)
Tachycardia 0 4.7 6.3 1.5
aP <0.05 versus placebo.
bP <0.01 versus placebo.
Source. Adapted from Marder and Meibach 1994.
Weight gain with risperidone is intermediate—that is, the degree of weight gain is between that associated with agents like
molindone and ziprasidone, which appear to be relatively weight neutral, and that associated with agents like clozapine,
olanzapine, and low-potency phenothiazines. In a meta-analysis of controlled trials, Allison et al. (1999), using a random
effects model, estimated the mean weight gain at 10 weeks with risperidone to be 2.0 kg, compared with 0.5 kg with
haloperidol, 3.5 kg with olanzapine, and 4.0 kg with clozapine. Although determining the risk for hyperglycemia is complex,
and results of studies have not been completely consistent, it appears that risperidone does not produce insulin resistance
and dyslipidemia to the degree associated with olanzapine and clozapine (American Diabetes Association et al. 2004;
Henderson et al. 2006; Lieberman et al. 2005). In the CATIE, risperidone was associated with the lowest rate of
discontinuation due to side effects (Lieberman et al. 2005). Risperidone treatment resulted in a mean 0.4-lb weight gain per
month, compared with 2.0 lbs with olanzapine, 0.5 lb with quetiapine, and a mean monthly weight loss of 0.2 lb with
perphenazine and 0.3 lb with ziprasidone.
Mesotten et al. (1989) reported the results of a safety trial involving 17 inpatients with psychosis in which, following a
washout of previous medication, risperidone was started at 10 mg/day, and the dosage was then increased weekly by 5
mg/day to a maximum of 25 mg/day. Despite extremely high doses, sedation was the only prominent side effect. Although
risperidone does not bind significantly to muscarinic cholinergic receptors, transient dry mouth, blurred vision, and urinary
retention were observed in individual subjects. Palpitations occurred in 2 subjects. Heart rate significantly increased during
the trial, and blood pressure slightly decreased; however; no cases of significant hypotension were reported. An endocrine
battery, including plasma triiodothyronine, thyroid-stimulating hormone, growth hormone, prolactin, follicle-stimulating
hormone, luteinizing hormone, and cortisol levels, was performed, and only prolactin was found to be affected.
Extrapyramidal Side Effects
Significant reductions in EPS with risperidone, compared with high-dose haloperidol, were a consistent finding in the North
American trials (Chouinard et al. 1993; Marder and Meibach 1994). Measurement of EPS in the placebo group was
complicated because 25% of the subjects were taking depot antipsychotics prior to enrollment. Risperidone produced
significantly fewer parkinsonian side effects than did haloperidol (20 mg/day), based on several measures, including
self-report, change scores on the Extrapyramidal Symptom Rating Scale (ESRS), and use of anticholinergic medication.
Patients receiving risperidone (2 and 6 mg/day) did not differ from the group receiving placebo in mean ratings of
parkinsonism and in the use of anticholinergic medication. Parkinsonism change scores were significantly correlated with
the risperidone dosage (r = 0.94); however, risperidone (16 mg/day) was associated with fewer parkinsonian side effects
than was haloperidol. Dystonia occurred in six of the patients treated with risperidone (1.7%) versus two of the patients
treated with haloperidol (2.4%). Dystonia rates did not differ between treatment groups, and the rates did not exhibit a
relationship to risperidone dosage.
In the large European multicenter trial, maximum ratings of parkinsonism, hyperkinesias, and dystonia were greater with
haloperidol (10 mg/day) than with all dosages of risperidone (maximum of 12 mg/day), and anticholinergic dosing was
accordingly higher in the group treated with haloperidol (Peuskens 1995). Similarly, in a flexible-dose comparison of
risperidone (mean dosage = 4.9 mg/day) and haloperidol (mean dosage = 11.7 mg/day) for prevention of relapse, EPS rates
and use of anticholinergic medication significantly favored the group taking risperidone (Csernansky et al. 2002). However,
in a smaller double-blind, flexible-dose trial comparing risperidone (5–15 mg/day) and the moderate-potency conventional
agent perphenazine (16–48 mg/day) in 107 patients, no difference in EPS rates was observed (Hoyberg et al. 1993),
indicating that the potency of the comparator agent may in part determine the relative benefit of risperidone for EPS. Of
interest, in a study of low-dose risperidone (mean dosage = 1.16 mg/day) in children with behavioral disorders, ratings of
EPS did not differ between risperidone and placebo (Aman et al. 2002). No differences in EPS ratings were found between
any treatment groups in the CATIE (Lieberman et al. 2005), although discontinuation rates due to EPS significantly differed,
with perphenazine producing the highest discontinuation rate (8%) and olanzapine (2%), risperidone (3%), and quetiapine
(3%) producing the lowest.
The experience with tardive dyskinesia (TD) in patients treated with risperidone has been quite promising. Jeste et al.
(1999) randomly treated 122 elderly patients with low-dose haloperidol (median dose = 1 mg) versus risperidone (median
dose = 1 mg). The very high rates of treatment-emergent TD typically found in geriatric patients make this sample a
sensitive assay for TD risk. After 9 months, treatment-emergent TD rates were 30% with haloperidol versus less than 5%
with risperidone. Risperidone was also noted to decrease dyskinetic movements, compared with haloperidol, in a Canadian
multicenter trial reported by Chouinard et al. (1993), and it was associated with a treatment-emergent TD rate of 0.6%,
compared with a rate of 2.7% with haloperidol, in a relapse prevention trial reported by Csernansky et al. (2002).
Hyperprolactinemia
Unlike other atypical antipsychotic agents, risperidone substantially increases serum prolactin levels—in some studies, to a
greater degree than does haloperidol (Kearns et al. 2000; Markianos et al. 1999). The relationship between serum prolactin
concentrations and clinical side effects remains somewhat unclear, however. Kleinberg et al. (1999) analyzed combined
results from the North American and European multicenter registration trials, which included plasma prolactinPrint: Chapter 32. Risperidone and Paliperidone http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=418942&print=yes…
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concentrations from 841 patients and clinical ratings of symptoms associated with hyperprolactinemia from 1,884 patients.
Mean prolactin levels significantly correlated with risperidone dosage; risperidone 6 mg/day produced elevations roughly
comparable to those seen with haloperidol 20 mg/day and significantly higher than those seen with haloperidol 10 mg/day.
The combined incidence of amenorrhea and galactorrhea in women, which varied between 8% and 12%, was similar for all
dosages of risperidone and haloperidol (10 mg/day). Because symptom frequencies were available only for 14 women
treated with placebo, comparisons with placebo were not informative. Sexual dysfunction or gynecomastia occurred in 15%
of men treated with risperidone (4–6 mg/day), compared with 14% of men treated with haloperidol (10 mg/day) and 8% of
men in the placebo group. Compared with placebo, ejaculatory dysfunction was significantly more frequent only in the group
treated with risperidone (12–16 mg/day). Mean plasma prolactin levels were not significantly related to clinical side effects
for either men or women. Decreased libido also did not differ between treatment groups and did not correlate with plasma
prolactin levels. In the CATIE, prolactin levels increased by a mean of 15.4 ng/mL with risperidone, compared with a
0.4-ng/mL mean elevation with perphenazine and decreases of 4.5–9.3 ng/mL with the other atypical agents (Lieberman et
- 2005). Despite having significantly higher serum prolactin concentrations, patients treated with risperidone did not
report significantly higher rates of sexual dysfunction, gynecomastia, galactorrhea, or irregular menses.
Two reports of clinical trials with extended-release paliperidone have indicated low levels of prolactin-related side effects
(1% and 4%) (Kane et al. 2007; Kramer et al. 2007). However, in the one publication that reported prolactin levels,
substantial increases in mean plasma prolactin concentrations were observed (males: 17.4 ng/mL at baseline to 45.3 ng/mL
at week 6; females: 38.0 ng/mL to 124.5 ng/mL) (Kane et al. 2007). Two preliminary studies with risperidone found that
plasma prolactin concentrations correlated with 9-hydroxyrisperidone (paliperidone) concentrations and not with
risperidone concentrations (Melkersson 2006; Troost et al. 2007). The ratio of 9-hydroxyrisperidone levels to risperidone
levels also correlated with prolactin concentration (Troost et al. 2007); in agreement with this finding, rapid metabolizers of
CYP2D6 were found to have higher prolactin concentrations than poor metabolizers (Troost et al. 2007). Because of the
difficulty in establishing dose equivalence between risperidone and paliperidone in clinical trials, it is not clear whether the
two drugs differ in their potential to elevate prolactin. Additional studies are needed to compare prolactin elevations with
the two drugs.
Cardiovascular Effects
Because of relatively high affinities for adrenoreceptors, risperidone would be expected to produce orthostatic hypotension.
However, by following a 3- to 7-day dosage escalation schedule, initial postural hypotension and tachycardia have been
avoided in clinical trials, with only rare cases of hypotension and syncope reported (Chouinard et al. 1993; Marder and
Meibach 1994). Risperidone has very modest effects on cardiac conduction. No significant prolongation of the QTc interval
was detected at dosages of up to 25 mg/day in early safety trials, and no relationship between QTc interval and risperidone
dose was apparent (Mesotten et al. 1989). In the CATIE, risperidone was associated with the least QTc prolongation (mean
0.2 msec) and quetiapine with the greatest (mean 5.9 msec), although differences were not statistically significant
(Lieberman et al. 2005). A mean 10-msec prolongation of the QTc, measured after peak absorption of risperidone (16
mg/day), was found in a study comparing atypical and typical antipsychotic agents, according to data filed with the FDA by
Pfizer Inc. (Harrigan et al. 2004). Reported overdoses with risperidone have generally been benign, with moderate QT
prolongation and no serious cardiac complications (Brown et al. 1993; Lo Vecchio et al. 1996).
DRUG–DRUG INTERACTIONS
Because CYP2D6 status affects the half-life of risperidone and the relative ratio of risperidone to 9-hydroxyrisperidone in
plasma, the total serum concentration of the “active moiety,” or risperidone plus 9-hydroxyrisperidone, may be significantly
increased with addition of a CYP2D6 inhibitor (e.g., fluoxetine) in rapid metabolizers but not in poor metabolizers (Bondolfi
et al. 2002; Spina et al. 2002). Paliperidone plasma concentrations are not influenced by CYP2D6 status, nor are
paliperidone plasma concentrations likely to be affected by drug–drug interactions. It is possible that the addition of a
CYP2D6 inhibitor (e.g., fluoxetine) could decrease risperidone-induced prolactin elevation by increasing the ratio of
risperidone to 9-hydroxyrisperidone (Troost et al. 2007).
CONCLUSION
Risperidone was the first antipsychotic agent developed specifically to exploit the clinical advantages of combined D 2 and
5-HTA2 antagonism. -Adrenergic antagonism additionally may contribute to the antipsychotic and cognitive-enhancing
effects of risperidone. Risperidone is generally quite well tolerated, producing only moderate weight gain and mild sedation.
Initial dosage titration is necessary to prevent orthostatic blood pressure changes and dizziness, although this may be less
necessary with extended-release paliperidone. EPS are dose related, but their incidence at dosages less than or equal to 6
mg/day has not significantly differed from placebo. Risperidone substantially elevates prolactin levels, although the
relationship between plasma prolactin concentrations and clinical symptoms is complex; prolactin-related side effects have
not been detected in several studies of risperidone and paliperidone despite considerable prolactin elevation. The efficacy of
risperidone is well established; compared with high-dose haloperidol, risperidone (6 mg/day) is significantly more effective
for all five symptom clusters derived from the PANSS. Although it is broadly more effective, the magnitude of difference in
effect size is not large for individual symptom clusters. At a dosage of 3.9 mg/day, risperidone did not differ from
perphenazine in rates of discontinuation due to lack of effectiveness in the CATIE (Lieberman et al. 2005). Perhaps most
impressive has been evidence indicating that risperidone is substantially more effective than haloperidol in preventing
relapse. Evidence of enhanced cognitive functioning with risperidone, with particular benefits for verbal memory, is
encouraging, although also of a relatively modest magnitude. The availability of risperidone microspheres (Consta), the first
long-acting injectable atypical agent, represents an important advance with the potential both to improve compliance and to
minimize peak serum drug concentrations associated with oral dosing. While extended-release paliperidone also produces
more uniform serum concentrations and avoids the variability associated with CYP2D6 status, the possibility of greaterPrint: Chapter 32. Risperidone and Paliperidone http://www.psychiatryonline.com/popup.aspx?aID=418942&print=yes…
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prolactin elevation with this formulation requires further study.
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Copyright © 2009 American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Course Content
Introduction to Antipsychotics: Understanding Their Role
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The History of Antipsychotics
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Mechanism of Action: How Antipsychotics Work
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Indications and Uses of Antipsychotics
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Quiz: Key Concepts in Antipsychotic Therapy
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Side Effects and Safety Considerations
Risperidone: Mechanisms, Uses, and Clinical Applications
Paliperidone: Pharmacology, Indications, and Efficacy
Managing Side Effects and Interactions: Best Practices
Advanced Clinical Considerations and Case Studies
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