B +ziprasidone 2014.
Methods |
Allocation: randomised. Blinding: double‐blind. Duration: 16 weeks. Setting: outpatients. Design: parallel. Country: Italy. |
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Participants | Diagnosis: schizophrenia (DSM‐IV). N = 40. Sex: M 13, F 27. Age: ˜ 35 years. History: chronic, treatment resistant patients that demonstrated persistent positive and negative symptoms despite an adequate trial of clozapine. | |
Interventions |
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Outcomes |
‐ Usable data ‐
‐ Not able to use ‐
‐ Not used in this review ‐
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Notes | ||
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Low risk | “Prerandomized codes generated by computer.” |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Low risk | “Coded treatments were allocated sequentially to subjects in order of their registration for the trial. The randomization list was held securely.” |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) All outcomes | Unclear risk | “None of the research personnel, who enrolled, assessed, and treated the patients, were aware of the patient assignments until the study was concluded. Ziprasidone and placebo were dispensed in identical‐appearing capsules; patients randomized to placebo took the same number of capsules as those assigned to ziprasidone.” |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | High risk | “Two discontinuations in the ziprasidone group were all attributed to treatment‐emergent adverse events (akathisia and sedation) and 2 withdrew for perceived lack of efficacy. Among a total of 3 dropouts in the placebo group, 2 were due to non‐compliance with the visits and 1 withdrew due to a subjectively assessed lack of efficacy.” The reasons for leaving the study early differ across groups. “An intention‐to‐treat analysis with last‐observation‐carried forward was performed.” |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | High risk | No protocol available. “No clinically significant changes” reported for haematological parameters. |
Other bias | Low risk | None obvious. |