The use of concurrent long-acting injectable antipsychotic therapy with paliperidone palmitate and aripiprazole monohydrate in a patient with schizophrenia

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Abstract

International schizophrenia guidelines endorse seeking the patient's preference for guiding antipsychotic therapy. There exists a small niche of patients who prefer, or are required to use, long-acting injectable antipsychotic medications due to the adherence benefit. However, they may not be able to achieve adequate symptom reduction prior to experiencing treatment-limiting adverse effects from a single agent. Here, we present a patient case prescribed concurrent long-acting injectable antipsychotic therapy with paliperidone palmitate and aripiprazole monohydrate due to patient preference in the setting of a history of nonadherence to oral medications, treatment-limiting adverse effects to long-acting injectable paliperidone, and failure to achieve adequate symptom reduction with long-acting injectable aripiprazole monotherapy.

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Evernden, C., Giang, I., & Anderson, M. (2021). The use of concurrent long-acting injectable antipsychotic therapy with paliperidone palmitate and aripiprazole monohydrate in a patient with schizophrenia. Mental Health Clinician, 11(5). https://doi.org/10.9740/mhc.2021.09.305

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