MEDICATIONS: EFFECTIVENESS OF CERTAIN
ANTIDEPRESSANTS MAY BE INFLUENCED BY GENE VARIATIONS OF INDIVIDUALS
Oct. 5, 2006 — Whether specific types of antidepressants are effective for
patients with late-life major depression may depend if they have certain genetic
variations, according to a study in the October 4 issue of the Journal of the
American Medical Association.
Initial drug treatments fail in 30 percent to 40 percent of patients with
major depression. Pharmacogenetic (the relation of genetic factors to variations
in response to drugs) prediction of response is one possibility for improving
antidepressant treatment, according to background information in the article.
Polymorphisms (occurrence in more than one form) in the serotonin transporter
gene (5-HTT) may influence antidepressant response to selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs — a class of antidepressant drugs).
Hyeran Kim, M.D., of Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul,
Korea, and colleagues conducted a study to determine whether there were
significant associations between the efficacy of norepinephrine reuptake
inhibitors (NRIs — a class of antidepressant drugs) and norepinephrine
transporter (NET) polymorphisms and also between SSRI efficacy and 5-HTT
polymorphisms. If confirmed, these associations could provide a basis for
predicting response to certain antidepressants. The study included 241 Korean
patients with major depression. They were treated for six weeks with an SSRI
(fluoxetine or sertraline; n = 136) or an NRI (nortriptyline; n = 105)
antidepressant. The average age at onset of major depressive disorder among
these patients was in the early to mid-50s.
The researchers found that the presence of certain polymorphisms, alone or in
combination, was associated with response and non-response to therapy with SSRIs
or NRIs.
They write that their data analysis suggests that patients carrying the GG
polymorphism of NET G1287A have a statistically significantly superior rate of
response to NRI treatment than to SSRI treatment (83.3 percent vs. 58.7
percent).
"... This study demonstrates that the responses to antidepressants with
different targets have significant associations with homologous monoamine
transporter gene polymorphisms. Our data confirm a relationship between SSRI
response and 5-HTT polymorphisms, and establish an association between
NRI response and the NET G1287A polymorphism. We also found that the 5-HTTLPR
s/l variation plays a role in the treatment of depression with both NRI and
SSRI agents. The results of this study need to be confirmed in other
populations, using selective NRIs other than nortriptyline. Additional studies
in younger populations with depression are also needed," the researchers write.
"Confirmation of these preliminary findings would permit refined pharmacogenetic
selection of antidepressant treatment."
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