50 research outputs found
Consistent superiority of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors over placebo in reducing depressed mood in patients with major depression.
The recent questioning of the antidepressant effect of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) is partly based on the observation that approximately half of company-sponsored trials have failed to reveal a significant difference between active drug and placebo. Most of these have applied the Hamilton depression rating scale to assess symptom severity, the sum score for its 17 items (HDRS-17-sum) serving as effect parameter. In this study, we examined whether the negative outcomes of many SSRI trials may be partly caused by the use of this frequently questioned measure of response. We undertook patient-level post-hoc analyses of 18 industry-sponsored placebo-controlled trials regarding paroxetine, citalopram, sertraline or fluoxetine, and including in total 6669 adults with major depression, the aim being to assess what the outcome would have been if the single item depressed mood (rated 0-4) had been used as a measure of efficacy. In total, 32 drug-placebo comparisons were reassessed. While 18 out of 32 comparisons (56%) failed to separate active drug from placebo at week 6 with respect to reduction in HDRS-17-sum, only 3 out of 32 comparisons (9%) were negative when depressed mood was used as an effect parameter (
Differences in Efficacy and Safety of Pharmaceutical Treatments between Men and Women: An Umbrella Review
Being male or female is an important determinant of risks for certain diseases, patterns of illness and life expectancy. Although differences in risks for and prognoses of several diseases have been well documented, sex-based differences in responses to pharmaceutical treatments and accompanying risks of adverse events are less clear. The objective of this umbrella review was to determine whether clinically relevant differences in efficacy and safety of commonly prescribed medications exist between men and women. We retrieved all available systematic reviews of the Oregon Drug Effectiveness Review Project published before January 2010. Two persons independently reviewed each report to identify relevant studies. We dually abstracted data from the original publications into standardized forms. We synthesized the available evidence for each drug class and rated its quality applying the GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation) approach. Findings, based on 59 studies and data of more than 250,000 patients suggested that for the majority of drugs no substantial differences in efficacy and safety exist between men and women. Some clinically important exceptions, however, were apparent: women experienced substantially lower response rates with newer antiemetics than men (45% vs. 58%; relative risk 1.49, 95% confidence interval 1.35–1.64); men had higher rates of sexual dysfunction than women while on paroxetine for major depressive disorder; women discontinued lovastatin more frequently than men because of adverse events. Overall, for the majority of drugs sex does not appear to be a factor that has to be taken into consideration when choosing a drug treatment. The available body of evidence, however, was limited in quality and quantity, confining the range and certainty of our conclusions
Convergent Evidence from Mouse and Human Studies Suggests the Involvement of Zinc Finger Protein 326 Gene in Antidepressant Treatment Response
OBJECTIVES: The forced swim test (FST) is a commonly used model to predict antidepressant efficacy. Uncovering the genetic basis of the model may unravel the mechanism of antidepressant treatment. METHODS: FVB/NJ (FVB) and C57BL/6J (B6) were first identified as the response and non-response strains to fluoxetine (a serotonin-specific reuptake inhibitor antidepressant) treatment in the mouse FST. Simple-interval (SIM) and composite-interval (CIM) mappings were applied to map the quantitative trait loci (QTLs) of the anti-immobility effect of fluoxetine in FST (FST(FLX)) in 865 male B6×FVB-F2 mice. The brain mRNA expressions of the gene with the maximum QTL-linkage signal for FST(FLX) after the FST were compared between B6 and FVB mice and also compared between fluoxetine and saline treatment. The association of the variants in the human homologue of the mouse FST(FLX)-QTL gene with major depressive disorder (MDD) and antidepressant response were investigated in 1080 human subjects (MDD/control = 582/498). RESULTS: One linkage signal for FST(FLX)-QTL was detected at an intronic SNP (rs6215396) of the mouse Zfp326 gene (maximal CIM-LOD = 9.36). The Zfp326 mRNA expression in the FVB thalamus was significantly down-regulated by fluoxetine in the FST, and the higher FVB-to-B6 Zfp326 mRNA expressions in the frontal cortex, striatum and hypothalamus diminished after fluoxetine treatment. Two coding-synonymous SNPs (rs2816881 and rs10922744) in the human homologue of Zfp326, ZNF326, were significantly associated with the 8-week antidepressant treatment response in the MDD patients (Bonferroni-corrected p = 0.004-0.028). CONCLUSIONS: The findings suggest the involvement of the Zfp326 and ZNF326 genes in antidepressant treatment response
Psychometric properties of responses by clinicians and older adults to a 6-item Hebrew version of the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D6)
Sex differences in mood disorders: Perspectives from humans and rodent models
Mood disorders are devastating, often chronic illnesses characterized by low mood, poor affect, and anhedonia. Notably, mood disorders are approximately twice as prevalent in women compared to men. If sex differences in mood are due to underlying biological sex differences, a better understanding of the biology is warranted to develop better treatment or even prevention of these debilitating disorders. In this review, our goals are to: 1) summarize the literature related to mood disorders with respect to sex differences in prevalence, 2) introduce the corticolimbic brain network of mood regulation, 3) discuss strategies and challenges of modeling mood disorders in mice, 4) discuss mechanisms underlying sex differences and how these can be tested in mice, and 5) discuss how our group and others have used a translational approach to investigate mechanisms underlying sex differences in mood disorders in humans and mice
Etrank:a ranking procedure for handling missing data in clinical trials:application to venlafaxine extended-release depression clinical trial
Leg ulcers in patients with sickle cell disease [see comments]
During the entry examination, leg ulcers were present in 2.5% of 2,075 patients 10 years of age and older with sickle cell disease who entered into the Cooperative Study of Sickle Cell Disease (CSSCD) between 1979 and 1986. Prevalence rates were highest among patients with sickle cell anemia and sickle cell anemia with thalassemia genotypes. Among sickle cell anemia patients free of ulcers at entry, the overall incidence was 5.73 per 100 person years in those having associated alpha-thalassemia and 9.97 for those without. Among sickle cell anemia patients with two alpha genes, the estimated incidence of leg ulcers is 2.38 per 100 person years and 6.12 per 100 person years among sickle cell anemia patients with three alpha genes (P less than .05). In both groups, the incidence was highest among those patients over 20 years of age and considerably higher among males than females (P less than .001). Leg ulcers were nonexistent in patients with sickle beta plus thalassemia and sickle hemoglobin C disease. Low steady-state hemoglobin is associated with a higher incidence of ulcer formation (P less than .0001) in sickle cell anemia patients. The protective effect of hemoglobin F is apparent at all levels of total hemoglobin among sickle cell anemia patients and those with associated alpha-thalassemia.</jats:p
Leg ulcers in patients with sickle cell disease [see comments]
Abstract
During the entry examination, leg ulcers were present in 2.5% of 2,075 patients 10 years of age and older with sickle cell disease who entered into the Cooperative Study of Sickle Cell Disease (CSSCD) between 1979 and 1986. Prevalence rates were highest among patients with sickle cell anemia and sickle cell anemia with thalassemia genotypes. Among sickle cell anemia patients free of ulcers at entry, the overall incidence was 5.73 per 100 person years in those having associated alpha-thalassemia and 9.97 for those without. Among sickle cell anemia patients with two alpha genes, the estimated incidence of leg ulcers is 2.38 per 100 person years and 6.12 per 100 person years among sickle cell anemia patients with three alpha genes (P less than .05). In both groups, the incidence was highest among those patients over 20 years of age and considerably higher among males than females (P less than .001). Leg ulcers were nonexistent in patients with sickle beta plus thalassemia and sickle hemoglobin C disease. Low steady-state hemoglobin is associated with a higher incidence of ulcer formation (P less than .0001) in sickle cell anemia patients. The protective effect of hemoglobin F is apparent at all levels of total hemoglobin among sickle cell anemia patients and those with associated alpha-thalassemia.</jats:p
