| Literature DB >> 25932327 |
Silka Dawn Freiesleben1, Karolina Furczyk1.
Abstract
Agomelatine is an antidepressant with a unique mechanism of action. Since its marketing in 2009, concerns have been raised regarding its potential to induce liver injury. The authors therefore address the need to comprehensively evaluate the potential risk posed by agomelatine of inducing liver injury by reviewing data from published and unpublished clinical trials in both the pre- and postmarketing settings, as well as data from non-interventional studies, pharmacovigilance database reviews and one case report. Recommendations for clinicians are also provided. In this review, agomelatine was found to be associated with higher rates of liver injury than both placebo and the four active comparator antidepressants used in the clinical trials for agomelatine, with rates as high as 4.6% for agomelatine compared to 2.1% for placebo, 1.4% for escitalopram, 0.6% for paroxetine, 0.4% for fluoxetine, and 0% for sertraline. The review also provides evidence for the existence of a positive relationship between agomelatine dose and liver injury. Furthermore, rates of liver injury were found to be lower in non-interventional studies. Findings from pharmacovigilance database reviews and one case report also highlight the risk of agomelatine-induced liver injury. As agomelatine does pose a risk of liver injury, clinicians must carefully monitor liver function throughout treatment. However, agomelatine's unique mechanism of action and favourable safety profile render it a valuable treatment option. A quantitative analysis of agomelatine-induced liver injury is lacking in the literature and would be welcomed.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse event; Antidepressant; Clinical recommendations; Depression; Hepatotoxicity; Melatonin analogue
Year: 2015 PMID: 25932327 PMCID: PMC4407422 DOI: 10.1186/s40303-015-0011-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Psychiatry ISSN: 2049-9256
Agomelatine-induced liver injury in pre- and postmarketing clinical trials and non-interventioal studies
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| European clinical trials (2008) [ | 40681 | up to 52 weeks | All indications (Overall safety set) | Ago25: 1.04%2 Ago50: 1.39%2 Pbo: 0.72% | • >10X ULN: 1:1000-10 0003 1 case hepatitis4 |
| Zajecka et al. (2010) [ | 511 | 8 | MDD | Ago25: 0% Ago50: 4.5% Pbo: 0% | 0% |
| Stahl et al. (2010) [ | 503 | 8 | MDD | Ago25: 0.6% Ago50: 3.0% Pbo: 0.6% | 0% |
| CAGO178A2303 [ | 503 | 8 | MDD | Ago25: 1.3% Ago50: 0.6% Par20: 0.6% Pbo: 0% | 0% |
| Hale et al. (2010) [ | 515 | 8 | MDD | Ago25/50: 1.6%5 Flx20/40: 0.4% | 0% |
| Kasper et al. (2010) [ | 313 | 6 | sleep in MDD | Ago25/50: 0.7%5 Ser50/100: 0% | 0% |
| CAGO178A2301E1 (2009) [ | 329 | 52 | MDD | Ago25/50: 2.0% | 0% |
| CAGO178A2302E1 (2009) [ | 358 | 52 | MDD | Ago25/50: 2.0% | 0% |
| CAGO178A2303E1 (2010) [ | 334 | 52 | MDD | Ago25: 1.2%6 Ago50: 2.0%6 | 0% |
| CAGO178A2304 [ | 633 | 52 | MDD | Ago25/50: 4.6% (open-label phase) Pbo: 2.1% (double-blind continuation phase)7 | 0% |
| Calabrese et al. (2007) [ | 21 | 6, plus optional 46 (total 52) | bipolar I disorder | Ago25: N/A | 0% |
| Olié & Kasper (2007) [ | 238 | 6 | MDD | Ago25/50 and Pbo: N/A | 0% |
| Goodwin et al. (2009) [ | 339 | 34 | MDD | Ago25/50 and Pbo: N/A | 0% |
| Demyttenaere et al. (2013) [ | 8628 | up to 24 | MDD | Ago25: 1.79% Ago50: 2.61% SSRIs: 0.34% | 0% |
| Bruno et al. (2013) [ | 15 | 12 | Fibromyalgia | Ago25: 0% | 0% |
| Martinotti et al. (2012) [ | 60 | 8 | MDD | Ago25/50 and Vlx75/150: N/A | 0% |
| Stein et al. (2012) [ | 477 | 43 | GAD | N/A | 0% |
| Stein et al. (2014) [ | 412 | 12 | GAD | N/A | 0% |
| Heun et al. (2013) [ | 222 | 8 | MDD | Ago25/50: 1.3%5 Pbo: 0% | 0% |
| Laux and the VIVALDI Study Group (2012) [ | 3356 | 12 | MDD | Ago25/50: 0.2%8 | 0% |
| Sparshatt et al. (2013) [ | 110 | 12 | MDD | Ago25/50: -Baseline: 0.9%9 -Week 8: 0% | 0% |
| Karaistos et al. (2013) [ | 40 | 16 | Depression in type II diabetes | Ago25/50 and Ser50/100: N/A | 0% |
| Quera-Slava et al. (2011) [ | 138 | 24 | MDD | Ago25/50 and Esci10/20: N/A | 0% |
| Montejo et al. (2010) [ | 92 | 8 | healthy volunteers | Ago25/50, Par20, and Pbo: N/A | 0% |
Ago25 = 25 mg agomelatine; Ago50 = 50 mg agomelatine; Ago25/50 = entire agomelatine treatment group; Pbo = placebo; Par20 = 20 mg paroxetine, Flx20/40 = entire fluoxetine treatment group; Ser50/100 = entire sertraline treatment group; Vlx75/150 = entire venlafaxine treatment group; Esci10/20 = entire escitalopram treatment group; SSRIs: selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors; MDD = Major Depressive Disorder; GAD = Generalized Anxiety Disorder; Slp = sleep; N/A = non-vailable.
1: Number of patients receiving agomelatine; the number of patients receiving placebo is not clear.
2: Classified as a common event.
3: Classified as a rare event.
4: Case did not recover at follow-up (2.5 years after end of study).
5: Percentage calculated from safety set (i.e., enrolled patients who received at least one dose of the study treatment).
6: Percentage calculated from all treated patients enrolled in the extension phase.
7: Percentages calculated from information provided in Novartis Clinical Trial Results Database, 2010—study CAGO178A2.
304.
8: It is not mentioned by the authors if other ADs were taken concurrently.
9: Percentage calculated from information provided in the article.