Journey Study: Evaluate the Efficacy, Safety, and Tolerability of Valbenazine as Adjunctive Treatment for Schizophrenia
About the study
The primary objective for this study is to evaluate the effect of adjunctive valbenazine versus placebo on symptoms of schizophrenia in participants who have inadequate response to antipsychotic treatment.
Who can take part
You may be eligible to participate in the study if you meet the following criteria:
INCLUSION CRITERIA
Inclusion Criteria:
• Participants must meet all of the following inclusion criteria:
- Completed written informed consent for adult participants or written and witnessed pediatric assent from the participant and written informed consent from the participant's legal guardian in accordance with the Institutional Review Board (IRB)/Independent Ethics Committee (IEC) and according to local laws and regulations.
- At the time of signing the informed consent (or assent for pediatric participants), participant must be ≥13 years of age.
- Medically confirmed diagnosis of schizophrenia as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5).
- The initial diagnosis of schizophrenia must be ≥1 year prior to screening.
- Plasma levels for at least 1 of the participant's antipsychotic medications must be detectable by an available assay.
- The participant is treated with a stable regimen antipsychotic medication.
Must meet all of the following criteria at screening and Day 1:
PANSS total score ≥70
PANSS score of ≥4 on at least 1 of the following:
- P1 (delusions)
- P3 (hallucinations)
- P6 (suspiciousness)
- G9 (unusual thought content)
- CGI-S score ≥4
- Stable background antipsychotic medication dose between screening and Day 1
- Stable PANSS total score between screening and Day 1
- The participant is outpatient with stable symptomatology
- The participant must have an adult informant (for example, a family member, relative, partner, social worker, caseworker, residential facility staff, or nurse).
- Female participants of childbearing potential who have undergone menarche must agree to use contraception consistently from screening until 30 days after the last dose of study drug or final study visit, whichever is longer.
- Male participants must agree to use contraception consistently from screening until 30 days after last dose of study treatment.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA
Exclusion Criteria:
Participants will be excluded from the study if they meet any of the following criteria:
- Pregnant or breastfeeding or plans to become pregnant during the study. This criterion must be reconfirmed prior to the first dose of study treatment on Day 1.
- Known hypersensitivity to any component of the formulation of valbenazine.
- Has history of treatment resistant schizophrenia.
- Evidence of depression as measured by a Calgary Depression Scale for Schizophrenia (CDSS) score >11 at screening or Day 1.
- Participants with any suicidal behavior or suicidal ideation within 6 months before screening or Day 1.
- Diagnosis of moderate or severe substance use disorder within the 6 months prior to screening.
- Have a clinically significant unstable medical condition within 60 days prior to screening in the judgement of the investigator (30 days prior to screening for minor medical conditions) or any laboratory value outside the normal range that is considered by the investigator to be clinically significant at the screening visit.
- Prior (within 6 months of Screening) or concomitant use of any VMAT2 inhibitors.
Study Locations
Enter your ZIP code/Postal code/PIN code to locate study sites near you:
How to Apply
Contact the study center to learn if this study is a good match for you.
Study’s details
Contition
Schizophrenia
Age (in years)
13+
Phase
Phase 3
Participants needed
400
Est. Completion Date
Sep 30, 2024
Treatment type
Interventional
Sponsor
Neurocrine Biosciences
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier
NCT05110157
Study number
NBI-98854-ATS3019
Understanding Clinical Trials
Get answers to your questions about clinical trials.What is a clinical research?What does taking part in clinical trials involve?What should I ask the trial doctor?