| Literature DB >> 23765220 |
Domenico De Berardis1, Stefano Marini, Michele Fornaro, Venkataramanujam Srinivasan, Felice Iasevoli, Carmine Tomasetti, Alessandro Valchera, Giampaolo Perna, Maria-Antonia Quera-Salva, Giovanni Martinotti, Massimo di Giannantonio.
Abstract
Melatonin exerts its actions through membrane MT1/MT2 melatonin receptors, which belong to the super family of G-protein-coupled receptors consisting of the typical seven transmembrane domains. MT1 and MT2 receptors are expressed in various tissues of the body either as single ones or together. A growing literature suggests that the melatonergic system may be involved in the pathophysiology of mood and anxiety disorders. In fact, some core symptoms of depression show disturbance of the circadian rhythm in their clinical expression, such as diurnal mood and other symptomatic variation, or are closely linked to circadian system functioning, such as sleep-wake cycle alterations. In addition, alterations have been described in the circadian rhythms of several biological markers in depressed patients. Therefore, there is interest in developing antidepressants that have a chronobiotic effect (i.e., treatment of circadian rhythm disorders). As melatonin produces chronobiotic effects, efforts have been aimed at developing agomelatine, an antidepressant with melatonin agonist activity. The present paper reviews the role of the melatonergic system in the pathophysiology of mood and anxiety disorders and the clinical characteristics of agomelatine. Implications of agomelatine in "real world" clinical practice will be also discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23765220 PMCID: PMC3709794 DOI: 10.3390/ijms140612458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Mechanism of action of agomelatine (adapted from Srinivasan et al. [105]).
Published placebo-controlled and/or active comparator studies of agomelatine in the treatment of major depression. HAMD, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale.
| Authors | Reference | Study Design | Comparator/Active Control | Number of Patients | Duration | Agomelatine Dosage (mg/day) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loo | Placebo-controlled dose range study | Placebo/Paroxetine 20 mg/day | 711 | 8 weeks | 1, 5 and 25 | Agomelatine at 25 mg was statistically more effective than placebo | |
| Montgomery | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled discontinuation study | Placebo/Paroxetine 20 mg/day | 335 | 12 weeks | 25 | Agomelatine was effective and had less potential to cause discontinuation symptoms than paroxetine | |
| Kennedy & Emsley, 2006 | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study | Placebo | 212 | 6 weeks | 25 and 50 | Agomelatine at 25 mg was effective, but 50 mg may be beneficial for some patients without reducing tolerability | |
| Lemoine | Randomized, double-blind comparison with venlafaxine study | Venlafaxine 75–150 mg/day | 334 | 6 weeks | 25 and 50 | Agomelatine showed similar antidepressant efficacy earlier and greater efficacy in improving subjective sleep as compared to venlafaxine | |
| Olié & Kasper, 2007 | Double-blind, flexible dose, parallel-group, placebo controlled study | Placebo | 238 | 6 weeks | 25 (with dose adjustment at two weeks to 50 mg/day in patients with insufficient improvement) | Agomelatine was significantly more efficacious than placebo. Agomelatine had a safety profile similar to placebo | |
| Kennedy | Randomized, double-blind comparison with venlafaxine study | Venlafaxine XR 150 mg/day | 277 | 12 weeks | 50 | Agomelatine showed similar antidepressant efficacy with a superior sexual side effect profile to venlafaxine | |
| Goodwin | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study | Placebo | 339 | 24 weeks | 25 and 50 | Agomelatine was more effective than placebo and prevented relapses without evidence of discontinuation symptoms | |
| Hale | Randomized, double-blind comparison with fluoxetine study on severely depressed patients (HAMD ≥ 25) | Fluoxetine 20–40 mg/day | 515 | 8 weeks | 25 and 50 | Agomelatine was statistically more effective than fluoxetine | |
| Kasper | Randomized, double-blind comparison with sertraline study | Sertraline 50–100 mg/day | 313 | 6 weeks | 25 and 50 | Agomelatine was more effective than sertraline. Agomelatine improved the circadian rest-activity cycle more than sertraline | |
| Zajecka | Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study | Placebo | 511 | 8 weeks | 25 and 50 | Agomelatine at 50 mg showed greater and rapid reduction in all core symptoms of depression compared with placebo | |
| Stahl | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study | Placebo | 503 | 8 weeks | 25 and 50 | Agomelatine at 25 mg was more effective than placebo over the course of the study, whereas agomelatine at 50 mg provided evidence for its antidepressant efficacy until week six, but not at study end | |
| Quera-Salva | Randomized, double-blind comparison with escitalopram study | Escitalopram 10–20 mg/day | 138 | 24 weeks | 25 and 50 | Agomelatine was as effective as escitalopram. Treatment with agomelatine improved morning condition and reduced daytime sleepiness compared with escitalopram | |
| Martinotti | Open-label parallel-group, randomized comparison with venlafaxine study | Venlafaxine 75–150 mg/day | 60 | 8 weeks | 25 and 50 | Agomelatine antidepressant efficacy proved to be similar to that of venlafaxine during an eight-week treatment period | |
| Karaiskos | Observational open label, randomized, comparison with sertraline study | Sertraline 50–100 mg/day | 40 depressed patients with non-optimally controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) | 4 months | 25 and 50 | Agomelatine was effective in the treatment of depression and anxiety, as well as in the improvement of health-related behaviors, in depressed patients with non-optimally controlled type 2 DM |