Background: Clozapine is the most effective in treatment-resistant schizophrenia. Neutropenia is an adverse effect of the drug requiring treatment discontinuation. This study related treatment continuation with little or no interruption after a neutropenia episode. The study contrasted from rechallenge studies after an extended treatment interruption.
Methods: This retrospective chart audit examined 37 patients with an episode of neutropenia. It described characteristics of patients continuing treatment with minimal interruption.
Findings: Thirty-one patients continued treatment after an initial treatment interruption for less than 3 days. A probable cause for neutropenia other than clozapine was identified in 14 patients. Twelve patients continued treatment with a change in the absolute neutrophil counts threshold to 1000/μL to determine treatment cessation. Most patients recovered from the index episode of neutropenia within 2 days. They also frequently presented with recurring benign episodes of low neutrophil cell counts during treatment than a comparative group.
Implications: The study recommends modifying clozapine treatment protocol absolute neutrophil count thresholds to less than 1000/μL to determine treatment cessation. Consideration of other probable causes for neutropenia, diurnal variations in cell counts, and laboratory errors reduced preemptive discontinuation of treatment. A risk-benefit approach supports continuing clozapine treatment after an episode of neutropenia.
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