Literature DB >> 23188198

ABCB1 polymorphism predicts escitalopram dose needed for remission in major depression.

A B Singh1, C A Bousman, C H Ng, K Byron, M Berk.   

Abstract

The ATP-binding cassette family of transporter proteins, subfamily B (MDR/TAP), member 1 (ABCB1) (P-glycoprotein) transporter is a key component of the blood-brain barrier. Many antidepressants are subject to ABCB1 efflux. Functional polymorphisms of ABCB1 may influence central nervous system bioavailability of antidepressants subject to efflux. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) at rs1045642 (C3435T) of ABCB1 have been associated with efflux pump efficiency. This may explain part of the interindividual variation in antidepressant dose needed to remit. Individuals (N=113) with DSM-IV (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition) major depressive disorder (MDD) were treated with escitalopram (ESC) or venlafaxine (VEN) over 8 weeks. The17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale was assessed serially, blind to genotype. SNP rs1045642 of ABCB1 along with two SNPs previously reported to be in linkage disequilibrium with it (rs2032582 and rs1128503) were genotyped. Demographic features, clinical features, P450 metabolizer status and 5-HTTLPR (serotonin-transporter-linked promoter region) genotype were controlled for. Carriers of rs1045642 TT needed on average 11 mg of ESC to remit, whereas TC and CC carriers required 24 and 19 mg, respectively (P=0.0001). This equates to a 2.0- (95% confidence interval=1.5-3.4; P<0.001) fold greater ESC dose needed to remit for C carriers compared with TT carriers at rs1045642. Of VEN-treated subjects carrying TT genotype at rs1045642, 73.3% remitted compared with 12.5% for CC genotype (odds ratio=6.69; 95% confidence interval=1.72-25.9, P=0.006). These data suggest that antidepressant dose needed to remit can be predicted by an ABCB1 SNP. This has the potential clinical translation implications for dose selection and remission from MDD.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23188198      PMCID: PMC3565756          DOI: 10.1038/tp.2012.115

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transl Psychiatry        ISSN: 2158-3188            Impact factor:   6.222


Introduction

ATP-binding cassette family of transporter proteins, subfamily B (MDR/TAP), member 1 (ABCB1) was discovered during the study of chemotherapeutic resistance in hamster cancer cells. The involved permeability glycoprotein was then named the P-glycoprotein.[1] Nearly a decade later, the human coding gene was identified on chromosome 7q21.12 and called the multidrug resistance 1 (MDR1) gene.[2, 3] It is now known to be a member of a larger ABCB1, which is involved in multidrug resistance.[4] ABCB1 has been recently shown to be evenly expressed and functionally protective across the entire human brain.[5] As with many other genes, the functions of ABCB1 have been elucidated from the study of abcb1 knockout mice. Such studies demonstrate much greater entry of tracer agent into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).[6, 7] ABCB1 is also expressed in various other tissues, such as the liver, kidney and intestine, but has greatest expression at the blood–brain barrier (BBB).[4] In abcb1 knockout mice, there is an 87-fold greater tracer entry through the BBB and <4-fold greater entry at other tissue sites.[8] It appears that ABCB1 has a key role in CNS bioavailability of several psychotropics.[9] For example, blockage of ABCB1 by verapamil or cyclosporin A enhances the transport of impiramine across the BBB.[10] The importance of ABCB1 in drug bioavailability was emphasized by using human duodenal cells that showed the TT polymorphism of the rs1045642 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) reduced ABCB1 efflux.[11] This is a synonymous SNP producing a codon that does not change the expressed amino acid (isoleucine). These data do not easily explain the potential mechanism by which rs1045642 polymorphism may affect ABCB1 bioactivity. It has been suggested that rs1045642 is in linkage disequilibrium (LD) with the nonsynonymous SNP rs2032582 (Ala893Thr/Ser) on ABCB1, raising the possibility that the Thr/Ser variation could be affecting protein function, with rs1045642 merely acting as a ‘tag-SNP' for it.[12, 13, 14] However, many other studies suggest that rs1045642 is not in LD with rs2032582.[15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23] Furthermore, a study of CSF/serum ratios of the anticonvulsant phenobarbitol in 60 patients found that rs1045642 and not rs2032582 influenced the CSF/serum ratio, with TT carriers at rs1045642 having a significantly higher ratio consistent with reduced ABCB1 efflux.[24] Lastly, a study of 332 epileptic patients demonstrated that carriers of the TT allele at rs1045642 were more responsive to anticonvulsants, with no association found with rs2032582 polymorphism.[15] This association has been replicated in a subgroup of 160 epileptic patients.[16] Taken together, these data suggest that the synonymous rs1045642 SNP has functional effects on ABCB1. In a study utilizing cultured human HeLa cell lines, TT genotype at rs1045642 resulted in use of the rarer isoleucine codon (ATT rarer than ATC), altering ABCB1 conformational folding and efflux functioning.[25] These data suggest that rs1045642 can affect ABCB1 functionality without changes in amino-acid sequence, and provides a mechanism explanation for the association of rs1045642 polymorphisms to ABCB1 functioning. Studies with abcb1 knockout mice have demonstrated that citalopram, escitalopram (ESC), paroxetine, sertraline, venlafaxine (VEN), desvenlafaxine, reboxetine, doxepin, amitriptyline and trimipramine are substrates for ABCB1; however, fluoxetine, mirtazapine, bupropion and melperone are not.[26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31] Polymorphisms of the ABCB1 gene are reported to predict selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor tolerability.[32] However, no association with nortriptyline-induced postural hypotension and ABCB1 polymorphisms were shown.[33] Three studies have found an association between ABCB1 polymorphisms and improvement on antidepressants subject to ABCB1 efflux.[22, 30, 34] Relapse after response (≥50% reduction in 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS)) but not remission (HDRS ≤7) is common, making remission the aim in clinical care.[35] The aims of this study were to investigate for associations between ABCB1 polymorphisms and antidepressant dose needed to remit in MDD. The primary hypothesis of this study was that polymorphism of rs1045642 would predict dose needed to remit from major depression, with C carriers needing significantly higher doses for remission. The secondary hypothesis was that polymorphism of rs1045642 would predict probability of remission, with TT genotype significantly more likely to remit. Finally, the influence of two ABCB1 SNPs previously described to be in LD with rs1045642 (rs2032582 and rs1128503) were also examined to determine if they were in LD with rs1045642 in this study population.

Methods

Subjects and ratings

Subjects where either of Caucasian (European, recruited from two sites in Australia) or Asian (Han Chinese, recruited from a third site in Singapore) background. Patients 18 years and over with a principal diagnosis of MDD (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition criteria, assessed by semistructured clinical interview) were studied. An HDRS score of ≥18 was required to exclude milder cases of MDD, which may be less medication responsive.[36] Patients who had treatment refractory depression (≥3 failed medication trials) were excluded as more aggressive treatments were clinically appropriate. Patients were studied prospectively for 8 weeks with HDRS ratings as the primary outcome. Clinical global impression scales for improvement and severity were used as a secondary outcome measures to guide clinical dose adjustment. Ratings were blinded to genotype. Before commencement, there was a drug washout period (five half-lives of the previous agent) for subjects already receiving an antidepressant. During the first week, all patients received a standard dose of either ESC 10 mg or VEN 75 mg per day. Drug selection was based on patient's preference of side-effect profile. At weeks 1, 4 and 8 of treatment, doses were adjusted on a clinical basis, with the dose escalated if there was no improvement on the clinical global impression scale, or the dose reduced if problematic side effects emerged (elevation of the UKU side effects scale[37] with patient intolerance of the reported side effect). No other psychotropic medications were given and psychotherapy was not commenced during the study period. Genotyping of CYP2D6 and CYP2C19 polymorphisms was conducted to control for metabolized status as a potential confounder for dose needed to remit. In addition, 5-HTTLPR (serotonin-transporter-linked promoter region) genotype was assessed as a potential antidepressant efficacy confounder.[38] Three ABCB1 SNPs (rs1045642, rs2032582 and rs1128503) were assayed. The study was approved by an independent research ethics committee (Study 138; The Melbourne Clinic, Richmond, VIC, Australia).

SNP analysis

DNA was extracted from each sample using QIAamp DNA Mini Kit (Qiagen, Melbourne, VIC, Australia) from venous blood or buccal brush samples. Genotype of candidate SNPs was determined by the polymerase chain reaction followed by single primer extension and analysis on a Sequenom Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (Sequenom, San Diego, CA, USA) 384-well genetic analysis system. For the large duplications and deletions of the CYP2D6 gene, as well as determining the 5-HTTLPR genotype, standard long-range polymerase chain reaction was used.

Statistical analysis

Data were analyzed using SPSS (version 19, IBM, Armonk, NY, USA). Intention-to-treat analysis was applied. Repeated-measures analysis of variance was used to determine changes in HDRS scores and antidepressant dose over time by each of three genotypes of the ABCB1 SNPs studied. Genotype-wise differences were examined using a post hoc pairwise analysis with a Bonferroni correction (P=0.017). Logistic regression was used to estimate the odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals for each ABCB1 polymorphism on symptom remission. To examine differences in dose among responders and remitters by ABCB1 genotype, χ2 analysis was performed. The CubeX program[39] was applied to detect departures from Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium and estimate pairwise LD measures r2 and D′. SNPs with Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium >0.01 were considered to be in equilibrium. LD was assumed if a pair of SNPs had r2 and D′ values >0.80.

Results

Of 113 subjects screened, 107 were enrolled in the study. Two patients withdrew consent early for undetermined reasons. Seven patients disengaged before either week 4 or 8, preventing remission assessment. Thus, 98 subjects of the 107 enrolled had sufficient data to analyze response, remission, dose and genotype. In all, 57 subjects were prescribed ESC and 41 VEN. Demographic and clinical variables (including baseline HDRS and duration of episode), CYP2D6 and CYP2C19 metabolizer status and 5-HTTLPR genotype among the three ABCB1 loci studied is displayed in Table 1. Among subjects treated with ESC, there was a significant difference in the mean duration of depressive episode between the three possible rs2032582 genotypes (Table 1). There was also a significant difference between the three possible rs1128503 genotypes and the proportion of female patients in each group (Table 1). However, there were no significant differences among these characteristics between the three rs1045642 genotype groups (Table 1). Importantly, significant ethnic differences by ABCB1 polymorphisms were not observed. Thus, we did not perform analysis stratified by ethnicity. In addition, all three ABCB1 SNPs were in Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium and pairwise LD analysis showed that all three SNPs were at independent loci (r2 and/or D′ <0.80; Table 2). Thus, haplotype analysis was not performed.
Table 1

Patient characteristics by ABCB1 genotype

 Full samplers1045642 (C3435T)rs2032582 (G2677T/A)rs1128503 (C1236T)
 
 
CC
TC
TT
P-value
GG
GT/A
TT
P-value
CC
TC
TT
P-value
VEN sample (n)4181815 92012 91418 
  Age, mean (s.d.)41 (13)38 (13)41 (13)42 (13)0.75138 (15)41 (10)43 (14)0.64537 (14)42 (12)42 (12)0.618
  Sex, % (n) female63 (26)50 (4)72 (13)60 (9)0.52344 (4)70 (14)67 (8)0.40256 (5)71 (10)61 (11)0.716
  Education, % (n) tertiary49 (20)43 (3)47 (8)60 (9)0.65350 (4)37 (7)75 (9)0.18038 (3)39 (5)67 (12)0.491
  Ethnicity, % (n) European73 (30)75 (6)65 (11)87 (13)0.35982 (9)77 (27)67 (6)0.718100 (9)69 (9)67 (12)0.142
  Baseline HDRS, mean (s.d.)24 (3)23 (3)24 (4)24 (3)0.81624 (4)24 (3)25 (3)0.72923 (4)25 (3)24 (4)0.341
  MDE, mean (s.d.)38 (67)30 (35)50 (82)27 (62)0.60421 (35)45 (77)38 (72)0.69617 (34)39 (77)47 (72)0.568
 CYP2D6    0.073   0.135   0.844
  Poor metabolizer, % (n)15 (6)25 (2)11 (2)13 (2) 33 (3)0 (0)25 (3) 22 (2)14 (2)11 (2) 
  Intermediate metaboliser, % (n)29 (12)25 (2)11 (2)53 (8) 22 (2)35 (7)25 (3) 33 (3)21 (3)33 (6) 
  Extensive metaboliser, % (n)54 (22)50 (4)78 (14)27 (4) 44 (4)65 (13)42 (5) 44 (4)64 (9)50 (9) 
  Ultra metabolizer, % (n)2 (1)0 (0)0 (0)0 (0) 0 (0)0 (0)0 (0) 0 (0)0 (0)6 (1) 
              
 CYPC19    0.429   0.831   0.846
  Poor metaboliser, % (n)7 (3)0 (0)6 (1)13 (2) 11 (1)5 (1)8 (1) 11 (1)7 (1)6 (1) 
  Intermediate metaboliser, % (n)29 (12)50 (4)33 (6)13 (2) 44 (4)25 (5)25 (3) 33 (3)21 (3)33 (6) 
  Extensive metaboliser, % (n)61 (25)50 (4)61 (11)67 (10) 44 (4)65 (13)67 (8) 57 (5)64 (9)61 (11) 
  Ultra metabolizer, % (n)2 (1)0 (0)0 (0)7 (1) 0 (0)5 (1)0 (0) 0 (0)7 (1)0 (0) 
              
 5-HTTLPR    0.939   0.898   0.242
  Long/long, % (n)17 (7)25 (2)17 (3)13 (2) 22 (2)15 (3)17 (2) 33 (3)7 (1)17 (3) 
  Long/short, % (n)46 (19)38 (3)44 (8)53 (8) 56 (5)45 (9)42 (5) 44 (4)64 (9)33 96) 
  Short/short, % (n)37 (15)38 (3)39 (7)33 (5) 22 (2)40 (8)42 (5) 22 (2)29 (4050 (9) 
              
ESC sample (n)57132915 12359 143013 
  Age, mean (s.d.)38 (13)36 (14)39 (11)39 (16)0.83439 (13)38 (13)34 (14)0.64741 (16)39 (12)34 (12)0.305
  Sex, % (n) female60 (34)54 (7)66 (19)53 (8)0.65575 (9)54 (19)67 (6)0.41386 (12)43 (13)69 (9)0.021a
  Education, % (n) tertiary58 (33)46 (6)59 (16)79 (11)0.26764 (7)56 (19)75 (6)0.80662 (8)62 (18)58 (7)0.427
  Ethnicity, % (n)  European74 (42)62 (8)79 (22)80 (12)0.43989 (8)63 (12)83 (10)0.24877 (10)83 (25)54 (7)0.121
  Baseline HDRS, mean (s.d.)23 (5)24 (4)24 (5)21 (3)0.07323 (3)23 (5)21 (3)0.29125 (5)23 (5)22 (4)0.285
  MDE, mean (s.d.)43 (78)49 (74)46 (96)31 (33)0.787104 (138)27 (46)24 (22)0.008a67 (122)38 (68)27 (21)0.375
 CYP2D6b    0.709   0.381   0.533
  Poor metabolizer, % (n)5 (3)0 (0)10 (3)0 (0) 17 (2)3 (1)0 (0) 14 (2)3 (1)0 (0) 
  Intermediate metabolizer, % (n)30 (17)31 (4)31 (9)27 (4) 42 (5)23 (8)33 (3) 36 (5)30 (9)23 (3) 
  Extensive metabolizer, % (n)60 (34)69 (9)52 (15)67 (10) 33 (4)69 (24)67 (6) 50 (7)57 (17)77 (10) 
  Ultra metabolizer, % (n)4 (2)0 (0)3 (1)7 (1) 8 (1)3 (1)0 (0) 0 (0)7 (2)0 (0) 
 CYPC19    0.501   0.356   0.487
  Poor metabolizer, % (n)5 (3)8 (1)3 (1)7 (1) 0 (0)3 (1)11 (1) 7 (1)3 (1)8 (1) 
  Intermediate metabolizer, % (n)32 (18)46 (6)31 (9)20 (3) 42 (5)29 (10)33 (3) 43 (6)30 (9)23 (3) 
  Extensive metabolizer, % (n)61 (35)46 (6)66 (19)67 (10) 50 (6)69 (24)56 (5) 43 (6)17 (6)69 (9) 
  Ultra metabolizer, % (n)2 (1)0 (0)0 (0)7 (1) 8 (1)0 (0)0 (0) 7 (1)0 (0)0 (0) 
 5-HTTLPR    0.91   0.537   0.488
  Long/long, % (n)28 (16)23 (3)31 (9)27 (4) 25 (3)29 (10)33 (3) 36 (5)23 (7)31 (4) 
  Long/short, % (n)40 (23)46 (6)41 (12)33 (5) 58 (7)40 (14)22 (2) 36 (5)50 (15)23 (3) 
  Short/short, % (n)32 (18)31 (4)28 (8)40 (6) 17 (2)31 (11)44 (4) 29 (4)27 (8)46 (6) 

Abbreviations: ABCB1, ATP-binding cassette family of transporter proteins, subfamily B (MDR/TAP), member 1; ESC, escitalopram; HDRS, 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; 5-HTTLPR, serotonin-transporter-linked promoter region; MDE, Major Depressive Episode duration; VEN, venlafaxine.

For subjects treated with ESC significant differences between baseline major depressive episodes duration and proportion of female subjects between the different rs2032582 and rs1128503 genotypes was noted.

Bold values denote significant difference at P=0.05 level.

One subject on ESC CYP2D6 genotyping assay failed.

Table 2

Linkage disequilibrium for ABCB1 SNPs

PositiondbSNPLD123 
87 138 645rs1045642 (C3435T)10.620.39 
87 160 618rs2032582 (G2677T/A)20.310.83D
87 179 601rs1128503 (C1236T)30.150.57 
    r2  

Abbreviations: ABCB1, ATP-binding cassette family of transporter proteins, subfamily B (MDR/TAP), member 1; LD, linkage disequilibrium; SNP, single-nucleotide polymorphism.

There was a Bonferroni-corrected significant finding for the TT genotype of rs1045642 to better odds of remitting (odds ratio=6.69; 95% confidence interval=1.72–25.9, P=0.006) among subjects treated with VEN but not ESC (Table 3 and Figure 1a). No association between polymorphisms of rs2032582 or rs1128503 to antidepressant remission rate was observed.
Table 3

Symptom remission by antidepressant and ABCB1 genotype

dbSNP IDNSymptom remission (HDRS≤7) according to genotypeORa95% CIP-value
Escitalopram
 rs1045642 (C3435T)57CC: 8/13 (61.5%)CT: 16/29 (55.2%)TT: 11/15 (73.3%)1.250.52–3.020.614
 rs2032582 (G2677T/A)57CC: 6/12 (50.0%)CT: 22/35 (61.0%)TT: 8/10 (80.0%)1.840.44–4.630.192
 rs1128503 (C1236T)57CC: 8/14 (57.1%)CT: 18/30 (60.0%)TT: 9/13 (69.2%)1.160.46–2.920.748
        
Venlafaxine
 rs1045642 (C3435T)41CC: 1/8 (12.5%)CT: 11/18 (61.1%)TT: 11/15 (73.3%)6.691.72–25.90.006b
 rs2032582 (G2677T/A)41CC: 4/9 (44.4%)CT: 8/20 (40.0%)TT: 10/12 (83.3%)4.041.27–12.80.018
 rs1128503 (C1236T)41CC: 4/9 (44.4%)CT: 6/14 (42.9%)TT: 12/18 (66.6%)1.920.77–4.800.165

Abbreviations: ABCB1, ATP-binding cassette family of transporter proteins, subfamily B (MDR/TAP), member 1; CI, confidence interval; HDRS, 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; OR, odds ratio; SNP, single-nucleotide polymorphism.

Adjusted for ethnicity and education.

Significant after Bonferroni correction (P<0.017 needed).

Figure 1

Symptom remission and dose needed for remission by ABCB1 genotype. (a) A larger proportion of TT genotype carriers achieve symptom remission with venlafaxine over 8 weeks (*P=0.006). (b) TT genotype carriers required a significantly lower average dose of escitalopram compared with C allele carriers to remit (**P=0.0001). Bars represent standard error of the mean.

There was a Bonferroni-corrected significant association of the TT genotype to a lower average dose of ESC needed to remit for all three ABCB1 SNPs examined (Table 4). Carriers of rs1045642 TT needed on average 11 mg of ESC to remit, whereas TC and CC carriers required 24 and 19mg, respectively (P=0.0001). This equates to a 2.0- (95% confidence interval=1.5–3.4; P<0.001) fold greater ESC dose needed to remit for C carriers compared with TT carriers at rs1045642 (Figure 1b). At rs2032582, TT carriers needed on average 10 mg to remit and TC carriers 22 mg (P=0.008). At rs1128503, TT carriers needed on average 11 mg to remit and TC carriers 23 mg (P=0.0002).
Table 4

Average antidepressant dose (mg) among remitters by ABCB1 genotypea

SNPNVenlafaxineNEscitalopram
rs1045642 (C3435T)
 CC1150 (0)819 (8)
 CT11150 (70)1624 (7)
 TT11120 (72)1111 (3)
P-value 0.639 0.0001b (TT<CT and CC)
     
rs2032582 (G2677T/A)    
 CC4131 (38)620 (6)
 CT8150 (95)2122 (8)
 TT10130 (68)710 (0)
P-value 0.851 0.003b (TT<CT and CC)
     
rs1128503 (C1236T)    
 CC4131 (38)818 (7)
 CT6165 (98)1823 (8)
 TT12125 (67)911 (3)
P-value 0.577 0.001b (TT<CT and CC)

Abbreviations: ABCB1, ATP-binding cassette family of transporter proteins, subfamily B (MDR/TAP), member 1; HDRS, 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; SNP, single-nucleotide polymorphism.

Remission defined as an HDRS score ≤7.

Significant after Bonferroni correction (P<0.017 needed).

Discussion

These data demonstrate that the ABCB1 rs1045642 polymorphism predicts ESC dose needed for remission controlled for various demographic, clinical and genetic confounders. C carriers at rs1045642 needed a 2.0-fold higher dose of ESC to remit. As 69% of all subjects were C carries at rs1045642, this polymorphism represents a substantial proportion of subjects with translational implications if replicated. As rs1045642 was not in LD with rs2032582 or rs1128503, it does not appear that rs1045642 is acting as a ‘tag-SNP' to these ABCB1 SNPs, but has a direct association to VEN remission rate and ESC dose needed to remit. Similar findings for ESC dose needed to remit were made for the other two ABCB1 SNPs studied, but with the potential confounder of a significantly different mean duration of depressive episode among the rs2032582 genotypes, and a significant difference in the gender distribution among the rs1128503 genotypes. There were no such potential confounders of baseline features among the three rs1045642 genotypes analyzed for associations to antidepressant dose needed to remit. The association of rs1045642 polymorphism to dose needed to remit on ESC was not seen for subjects treated with VEN. This may be explained by the longer process of dose titration needed for VEN compared with ESC. During the 8 weeks of the study, it was easier to escalate the dose of ESC to its maximum of 30 mg than to escalate the dose of VEN to its maximum of 450 mg due to the much smaller clinical dose range of ESC. In fact, during the 8 weeks of this study, the highest dose of VEN reached was 300 mg. Some subjects treated with VEN may have been inadvertently under-dosed, with subsequent inadequate CNS bioavailability and reduced remission rates. This may explain why the only significant finding for genotype to remission rate was for subjects treated with VEN, with those carrying the TT allele at rs1045642 showing a significantly greater remission rate. This lower ABCB1 efflux group may have greater CNS bioavailability of VEN at the lower doses reached during this 8-week study, and hence a significantly greater remission rate. Conversely, as ESC could be escalated to an adequate dose faster, C carriers could have their dose escalated to enable adequate CNS bioavailability with no significant remission rate differences between groups discernible. These findings appear to support the hypothesis that C carriers at the rs1045642 may have higher ABCB1 efflux and reduced CNS bioavailability of the antidepressants studied. Furthermore, this suggests that C carriers at rs1045642 treated with VEN could become remitters if their medication dose was escalated further. Longer follow-up could have helped answer this question by enabling greater doses of VEN to be attained. A strength of this study was controlling for P450 metabolizer status and 5-HTTLPR genotype, both of which may impact the efficacy of antidepressants.[38, 40] As serum levels of ESC and VEN will influence CNS bioavailability, not controlling for antidepressant serum levels was a limitation. Trough serum antidepressant level covariance analysis to the ABCB1 SNPs examined could be explored in future studies to help control for this factor. This study analyzed P450 metabolizer status in an attempt to address this issue. Having subject CSF samples would enable a serum to CSF ratio to be determined and correlated to ABCB1 genotype. Such studies are difficult to establish, but they would provide robust evidence of the role of ABCB1 polymorphisms to antidepressant CNS bioavailability. This study would have also benefited from a greater sample size to improve power, but by the same token clinically translatable effect sizes should emerge in moderate samples. A further limitation of this study was not controlling for early life and recent stressors as such seem to influence antidepressant responsiveness putatively by epigenetic mechanisms.[41, 42] Previous positive studies demonstrating a significant association between ABCB1 polymorphisms and HDRS score reduction, response and remission[22, 30, 32] reflect results akin to the VEN group finding in this study. Namely, that certain ABCB1 genotypes needed a higher dose to remit but were inadequately dosed during the study period, and thus had a significantly lower remission rate than the TT carriers at rs1045642. This study has potential clinical translation and compliments the recent understanding of how synonymous SNPs can have functional outcomes through conformational folding of ABCB1 due to rs1045642 polymorphism.
  42 in total

Review 1.  Pharmacogenetics of antidepressant response.

Authors:  Stefano Porcelli; Antonio Drago; Chiara Fabbri; Sara Gibiino; Raffaella Calati; Alessandro Serretti
Journal:  J Psychiatry Neurosci       Date:  2011-03       Impact factor: 6.186

2.  The genetic variability of MDR1 C3435T polymorphisms in four Southern Chinese populations.

Authors:  Qingming Dong; Bingying Xu; Yi Tan; Zheng Liu; Linwei Tian; Bao Zhang; Che-Kit Lin; Hsiang-fu Kung; Joseph J Y Sung; Ming-Liang He
Journal:  Biomed Pharmacother       Date:  2008-09-25       Impact factor: 6.529

3.  Association analysis of intractable epilepsy with C3435T and G2677T/A ABCB1 gene polymorphisms in Iranian patients.

Authors:  Mohammad Sayyah; Fateme Kamgarpour; Mehri Maleki; Morteza Karimipoor; Kourosh Gharagozli; Ahmad Reza Shamshiri
Journal:  Epileptic Disord       Date:  2011-06       Impact factor: 1.819

4.  Genetic variability and haplotype profile of MDR1 (ABCB1) in Roma and Hungarian population samples with a review of the literature.

Authors:  Csilla Sipeky; Veronika Csongei; Luca Jaromi; Eniko Safrany; Anita Maasz; Istvan Takacs; Judit Beres; Lajos Fodor; Melinda Szabo; Bela Melegh
Journal:  Drug Metab Pharmacokinet       Date:  2010-12-17       Impact factor: 3.614

Review 5.  ABC transporters in the CNS - an inventory.

Authors:  A M S Hartz; B Bauer
Journal:  Curr Pharm Biotechnol       Date:  2011-04       Impact factor: 2.837

6.  Lack of association of ABCB1 haplotypes on five loci with response to treatment in epilepsy.

Authors:  B S Haerian; K S Lim; E H M Mohamed; H J Tan; C T Tan; A A Raymond; C P Wong; S W Wong; Z Mohamed
Journal:  Seizure       Date:  2011-05-06       Impact factor: 3.184

7.  Blood-brain barrier penetration of the enantiomers of venlafaxine and its metabolites in mice lacking P-glycoprotein.

Authors:  Louise Karlsson; Ulrich Schmitt; Martin Josefsson; Björn Carlsson; Johan Ahlner; Finn Bengtsson; Fredrik C Kugelberg; Christoph Hiemke
Journal:  Eur Neuropsychopharmacol       Date:  2010-05-13       Impact factor: 4.600

8.  ABCB1 gene polymorphisms are associated with the severity of major depressive disorder and its response to escitalopram treatment.

Authors:  Keh-Ming Lin; Yen-Feng Chiu; I-Ju Tsai; Chia-Hui Chen; Winston W Shen; Shu Chih Liu; Shao-Chun Lu; Chia-Yih Liu; Mei-Chun Hsiao; Hwa-Sheng Tang; Shen-Ing Liu; Liang-Huey Chang; Chi-Shin Wu; Hsiao-Hui Tsou; Ming-Hsien Tsai; Chun-Yu Chen; Su-Mei Wang; Hsiang-Wei Kuo; Ya-Ting Hsu; Yu-Li Liu
Journal:  Pharmacogenet Genomics       Date:  2011-04       Impact factor: 2.089

Review 9.  Antidepressant drug effects and depression severity: a patient-level meta-analysis.

Authors:  Jay C Fournier; Robert J DeRubeis; Steven D Hollon; Sona Dimidjian; Jay D Amsterdam; Richard C Shelton; Jan Fawcett
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2010-01-06       Impact factor: 56.272

10.  Regional P-glycoprotein activity and inhibition at the human blood-brain barrier as imaged by positron emission tomography.

Authors:  S Eyal; B Ke; M Muzi; J M Link; D A Mankoff; A C Collier; J D Unadkat
Journal:  Clin Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2010-03-24       Impact factor: 6.903

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  21 in total

Review 1.  Pharmacogenetics and Imaging-Pharmacogenetics of Antidepressant Response: Towards Translational Strategies.

Authors:  Tristram A Lett; Henrik Walter; Eva J Brandl
Journal:  CNS Drugs       Date:  2016-12       Impact factor: 5.749

Review 2.  Systems biology approaches to adverse drug effects: the example of cardio-oncology.

Authors:  Sherry-Ann Brown; Nicole Sandhu; Joerg Herrmann
Journal:  Nat Rev Clin Oncol       Date:  2015-10-13       Impact factor: 66.675

3.  A common polymorphism in the ABCB1 gene is associated with side effects of PGP-dependent antidepressants in a large naturalistic Dutch cohort.

Authors:  P M Bet; E C Verbeek; Y Milaneschi; D B M Straver; T Uithuisje; M R Bevova; J G Hugtenburg; P Heutink; B W J H Penninx; W J G Hoogendijk
Journal:  Pharmacogenomics J       Date:  2015-05-19       Impact factor: 3.550

4.  ABCB1 variants and sex affect serotonin transporter occupancy in the brain.

Authors:  Leo R Silberbauer; Lucas Rischka; Chrysoula Vraka; Annette M Hartmann; Godber Mathis Godbersen; Cécile Philippe; Daniel Pacher; Lukas Nics; Manfred Klöbl; Jakob Unterholzner; Thomas Stimpfl; Wolfgang Wadsak; Andreas Hahn; Marcus Hacker; Dan Rujescu; Siegfried Kasper; Rupert Lanzenberger; Gregor Gryglewski
Journal:  Mol Psychiatry       Date:  2022-09-07       Impact factor: 13.437

5.  ABCB1 (MDR1) predicts remission on P-gp substrates in chronic depression.

Authors:  A Ray; L Tennakoon; J Keller; J E Sarginson; H S Ryan; G M Murphy; L C Lazzeroni; M H Trivedi; J H Kocsis; C DeBattista; A F Schatzberg
Journal:  Pharmacogenomics J       Date:  2014-12-09       Impact factor: 3.550

6.  P-glycoprotein inhibition increases the brain distribution and antidepressant-like activity of escitalopram in rodents.

Authors:  Fionn E O'Brien; Richard M O'Connor; Gerard Clarke; Timothy G Dinan; Brendan T Griffin; John F Cryan
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2013-05-14       Impact factor: 7.853

Review 7.  Innovative drugs to treat depression: did animal models fail to be predictive or did clinical trials fail to detect effects?

Authors:  Catherine Belzung
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2013-12-18       Impact factor: 7.853

8.  Clinical Implementation of Pharmacogenetic Decision Support Tools for Antidepressant Drug Prescribing.

Authors:  Zane Zeier; Linda L Carpenter; Ned H Kalin; Carolyn I Rodriguez; William M McDonald; Alik S Widge; Charles B Nemeroff
Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  2018-04-25       Impact factor: 18.112

9.  Influence of eight ABCB1 polymorphisms on antidepressant response in a prospective cohort of treatment-free Russian patients with moderate or severe depression: An explorative psychopharmacological study with naturalistic design.

Authors:  Lisanne M Geers; Taichi Ochi; Natalya M Vyalova; Innokentiy S Losenkov; Diana Z Paderina; Ivan V Pozhidaev; German G Simutkin; Nikolay A Bokhan; Bob Wilffert; Daniël J Touw; Anton J M Loonen; Svetlana A Ivanova
Journal:  Hum Psychopharmacol       Date:  2021-11-17       Impact factor: 2.130

10.  Effects of ABCB1 gene polymorphism on the efficacy of antidepressant drugs: A protocol for systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Xiaoying Zheng; Zejuan Fu; Xiaomei Chen; Mingxia Wang; Rixia Zhu
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2021-07-16       Impact factor: 1.817

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