Literature DB >> 19954275

Quetiapine XR efficacy and tolerability as monotherapy and as adjunctive treatment to conventional antidepressants in the acute and maintenance treatment of major depressive disorder: a review of registration trials.

Roger S McIntyre1, David J Muzina, Amanda Adams, Maria Teresa C Lourenco, Candy W Y Law, Joanna K Soczynska, Hanna O Woldeyohannes, Jay Nathanson, Sidney H Kennedy.   

Abstract

Results from pivotal registration trials in major depressive disorder cohere with outcomes from effectiveness studies indicating that the majority of individuals receiving single-agent pharmacotherapy fail to achieve and sustain symptomatic remission. Several factors provided the impetus for this review: suboptimal efficacy with existing pharmacotherapy for major depressive disorder, quetiapine XR efficacy in the acute and maintenance treatment of bipolar depression, emerging pharmacodynamic evidence that quetiapine XR (and/or its metabolites) uniquely engages monoaminergic systems salient to symptom relief in depressive syndromes, the increasing use of second-generation antipsychotics in the treatment of major depressive disorder and the recent FDA review of quetiapine XR in major depressive disorder. Studies reviewed herein are pivotal registration trials that evaluated the acute and maintenance efficacy and tolerability of quetiapine XR (as monotherapy and as adjunctive treatment) in major depressive disorder. In addition, we also review recent investigations characterizing the pharmacodynamic effect of quetiapine's principal active metabolite, norquetiapine. All studies were obtained from AstraZeneca (Wilmington, DE, USA) and have been presented at national/international scientific meetings. Taken together, extant studies demonstrated that quetiapine XR (50 - 300 mg) provides rapid and sustained symptomatic improvement in the acute and maintenance treatment of major depressive disorder. Quetiapine XR may also offer advantages relative to duloxetine in time to onset of antidepressant action. The major limitations of quetiapine XR use in major depressive disorder relate to weight gain and disrupted glucose/lipid homeostasis as well as sedation/somnolence. Quetiapine XR has tolerability advantages compared with duloxetine on measures of sexual dysfunction. The data from the studies reviewed herein also indicate that quetiapine XR poses a low risk for extrapyramidal side effects in middle-aged and elderly individuals with major depressive disorder.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19954275     DOI: 10.1517/14656560903448837

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Expert Opin Pharmacother        ISSN: 1465-6566            Impact factor:   3.889


  6 in total

Review 1.  The International College of Neuro-Psychopharmacology (CINP) Treatment Guidelines for Bipolar Disorder in Adults (CINP-BD-2017), Part 2: Review, Grading of the Evidence, and a Precise Algorithm.

Authors:  Konstantinos N Fountoulakis; Lakshmi Yatham; Heinz Grunze; Eduard Vieta; Allan Young; Pierre Blier; Siegfried Kasper; Hans Jurgen Moeller
Journal:  Int J Neuropsychopharmacol       Date:  2017-02-01       Impact factor: 5.176

Review 2.  Efficacy of pharmacotherapy in bipolar disorder: a report by the WPA section on pharmacopsychiatry.

Authors:  Konstantinos N Fountoulakis; Siegfried Kasper; Ole Andreassen; Pierre Blier; Ahmed Okasha; Emanuel Severus; Marcio Versiani; Rajiv Tandon; Hans-Jürgen Möller; Eduard Vieta
Journal:  Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 5.270

3.  Clonidine normalizes levels of P50 gating in patients with schizophrenia on stable medication.

Authors:  Bob Oranje; Birte Y Glenthøj
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2013-10-08       Impact factor: 9.306

4.  Pharmaceutical treatment of acute bipolar depression.

Authors:  Konstantinos N Fountoulakis
Journal:  F1000 Med Rep       Date:  2010-06-23

Review 5.  A neurobiological hypothesis of treatment-resistant depression - mechanisms for selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor non-efficacy.

Authors:  Jeremy D Coplan; Srinath Gopinath; Chadi G Abdallah; Benjamin R Berry
Journal:  Front Behav Neurosci       Date:  2014-05-20       Impact factor: 3.558

Review 6.  Active metabolites as antidepressant drugs: the role of norquetiapine in the mechanism of action of quetiapine in the treatment of mood disorders.

Authors:  Francisco López-Muñoz; Cecilio Alamo
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2013-09-12       Impact factor: 4.157

  6 in total

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