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An open label pilot trial of low-dose lithium for young people at ultra-high risk for psychosis

Version 2 2024-06-14, 10:38
Version 1 2024-05-09, 02:20
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-14, 10:38 authored by SM Rice, B Nelson, GP Amminger, SM Francey, LJ Phillips, MB Simmons, M Ross, HP Yuen, Alison YungAlison Yung, K O'Gorman, PD McGorry, SJ Wood, GE Berger
AbstractAimLithium, even at low doses, appears to offer neuroprotection against a wide variety of insults. In this controlled pilot, we examined the safety (i.e., side‐effect profile) of lithium in a sample of young people identified at ultra‐high risk (UHR) for psychosis. The secondary aim was to explore whether lithium provided a signal of clinical efficacy in reducing transition to psychosis compared with treatment as usual (TAU).MethodsYoung people attending the PACE clinic at Orygen, Melbourne, were prescribed a fixed dose (450 mg) of lithium (n = 25) or received TAU (n = 78). The primary outcome examined side‐effects, with transition to psychosis, functioning and measures of psychopathology assessed as secondary outcomes.ResultsParticipants in both groups were functionally compromised (lithium group GAF = 56.6; monitoring group GAF = 56.9). Side‐effect assessment indicated that lithium was well‐tolerated. 64% (n = 16) of participants in the lithium group were lithium‐adherent to week 12. Few cases transitioned to psychosis across the study period; lithium group 4% (n = 1); monitoring group 7.7% (n = 6). There was no difference in time to transition to psychosis between the groups. No group differences were observed in other functioning and symptom domains, although all outcomes improved over time.ConclusionsWith a side‐effect profile either comparable to, or better than UHR antipsychotic trials, lithium might be explored for further research with UHR young people. A definitive larger trial is needed to determine the efficacy of lithium in this cohort.

History

Journal

Early Intervention in Psychiatry

Pagination

1-10

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

1751-7885

eISSN

1751-7893

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Wiley