| Literature DB >> 28179816 |
John J Sramek1, Michael F Murphy2, Neal R Cutler1.
Abstract
Although a number of studies have observed that females respond better to serotonergic antidepressants than males and that postmenopausal females have a diminished response to antidepressants compared with younger females, there are also studies that conflict with both of these findings, making any generalizations regarding sex differences difficult to make. Sex variance in antidepressant efficacy and pharmacokinetics profiles have been attributed to sex-based physiological differences, behavioral differences, related disorders, and sex-specific conditions, including pregnancy and menopause. This paper will review the history and current research on sex effects of antidepressant treatment.Entities:
Keywords: SSRi; antidepressant; depression; efficacy; estrogen; hormone; menopause; pharmacokinetics; sex
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28179816 PMCID: PMC5286730
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dialogues Clin Neurosci ISSN: 1294-8322 Impact factor: 5.986
Table I. Factors that may contribute to sex differences in antidepressant efficacy.
| Body fat and weight distribution |
| Liver metabolism rates |
| Changes in physiology and hormone levels during puberty, menstruation, and menopause |
| Gastric emptying, acid production, and splanchnic blood flow |
| Plasma volume, protein levels, and enzyme activity |
| Drug transport and clearance rates |
| Adherence |
| Side-effect profile differences |
| Interactions between estrogen and serotonin in the brain |
| Brain monoamine functioning |
Studies finding greater antidepressant efficacy in females than in males.
| Haykal and Akiskal,[ | SSRIs, TCAs | TCA-type antidepressants or fluoxetine | 25 Male and 17 female primary dysthymic patients | Females responded better than males to SSRIs |
| Kornstein et al,[ | SSRIs, TCAs | 12-Wk double-blind trial with sertraline or imipramine | 235 Male and 400 female outpatients with chronic major depression or double depression | Females responded better to SSRI sertraline; differences observed primarily in premenopausal females |
| Martenyi et al,[ | SSRIs, TCAs | 6-Wk, double-blind trial of SSRI (fluoxetine) and a norepinephrinergic TCA (maprotiline) | 105 Male and female depressed patients | Females in their reproductive period were more responsive to SSRIs than norepinephrinergic TCAs |
| Quitkin et al,[ | TCAs, MAOIs, SSRIs | 20-Y review of 8 placebocontrolled antidepressant trials and 1 open-label study | 1746 Depressed patients aged between 18 and 65 y | Older females had superior response to TCAs than younger females; females had statistically superior response to MAOIs than males |
| Khan et al,[ | SSRIs, SNRIs | Review of 15 randomized, placebo-controlled trials for sex differences in antidepressant efficacy | 323 Depressed patients | Females had a significantly greater response than males to SSRI and (to a lesser extent) SNRI treatment |
| Berlanga and Flores-Ramos,[ | SSRIs, SNRIs | 8-Wk, double-blind clinical trial for sex differences with SSRI citalopram and SNRI reboxetine | 86 Depressed patients (48 females, 38 males) aged 18 to 40 y | Premenopausal females responded better than males to serotonergic antidepressants |
| Naito et al,[ | SSRIs, SNRIs | 6-Wk study of the clinical effects of fluvoxamine and milnacipran in Japanese major depressive patients | 103 Patients with MDD (66 females, 37 males) | Fluvoxamine was more effective in younger female patients than older female patients and male patients |
| Young et al,[ | SSRI | 12- to 14-Wk study of citalopram | 1043 Male and 1833 female patients with single or recurrent nonpsychotic MDD | Females had a better response to the SSRI citalopram than males |
| Yang et al,[ | Variety of antidepressants | 12-Wk naturalistic study | 723 Depressive patients (535 females, 188 males) | Females had a better response to antidepressant treatment than males |
Studies finding greater antidepressant efficacy in males than in females.
| Kornstein et al,[ | SSRIs, TCAs | 12-Wk double-blind trial with sertraline or imipramine | 235 Male and 400 female outpatients with chronic major depression or double depression | Males responded better to TCA imipramine than females |
| Hamilton et al,[ | TCAs | Meta-analysis of 35 studies that reported imipramine response rates | 342 Males and 711 females with depression | Imipramine response rates were significantly better for males than females |
| Old Age Depression Interest Group,[ | TCAs | 24-Mo, double-blind placebo-controlled study of continuation/prophylaxis therapy with dothiepin | 19 Males and 50 females with major depression | Males taking dothiepine were less likely to experience a recurrence of depression than females |
| Frank et al,[ | TCAs | 16-Wk trial with imipramine and interpersonal psychotherapy | 50 Males and 180 females with recurrent major depression | Males showed a more rapid and sustained clinical response to imipramine than females |
| Raskin,[ | TCAs and MAOIs | 3-Wk trial with chlorpromazine, imipramine, diazepam, phenelzine, or placebo | 268 Males and 612 females with moderate depression | Older males responded more positively to active drug than older females |
Studies finding no sex-based efficacy differences with antidepressants.
| Himmelhoch et al,[ | MAOIs, TCAs | Controlled, double-blind comparison: tranylcypromine vs imipramine | 56 Outpatients who met operationalized criteria for anergic bipolar depression | Males and females responded comparably to both drugs |
| Entsuah et al,[ | SSRIs, SNRIs | Meta-analysis of 8 comparable double-blind, active-controlled, randomized SSRI or venlafaxine clinical trials | 2045 Patients with major depression or MDD, aged 18-83 y | Males and females have comparable responses to SSRIs and SNRIs across various age groups |
| Quitkin et al,[ | SSRIs, TCAs, MAOIs | Retrospective analysis of patients treated with TCAs, MAOIs, fluoxetine, or placebo | 1746 Depressed patients aged 18-65 y | No sex- or menopausal status-based difference in drug efficacy |
| Hildebrandt et al,[ | SSRIs, TCAs, MAOIs | Review of 3 Danish doubleblind randomized, controlled trials | 292 Inpatients (96 males, 196 females) with major and predominantly melancholic depression | No relationship between plasma concentrations, sex, and therapeutic outcome |
| Parker et al,[ | SSRIs, TCAs | Review of retrospective and prospective naturalistic uncontrolled studies | Patients with melancholic and nonmelancholic depression | No sex difference in response to either drug class |
| Baca et al,[ | SSRIs, TCAs | 8-Wk, multicenter, randomized, open-label, parallel group comparative trial of sertraline vs imipramine | 234 Patients with major depression or dysthymia (50 males, 184 females) | Overall, statistically significant differences in effectiveness between men and women were not found |
| Wohlfarth et al,[ | TCAs | Review of 30 randomized, placebo-controlled trials of antidepressant efficacy | 3886 Patients (1555 males, 2331 females) with depression | TCA response is independent of sex |
| Thiels et al,[ | SSRIs | Review of data from a 6-mo prospective sertraline utilization observation study | 1594 Male and 3858 female depressed patients | No sex difference in sideeffects, treatment termination, or treatment response to SSRI |
| Pinto-Meza et al,[ | SSRIs | 6-Mo follow-up study of antidepressant treatment with a SSRI (citalopram, fluoxetine, paroxetine, or sertraline) | 242 Females (95 in menopause) and 59 males with major depression | No sex differences were observed in treatment response, depression severity, and symptomatology |
| Kornstein et al,[ | SNRIs | Review of 9 studies comparing desvenlafaxine or placebo for 8 weeks | 2913 Outpatients (1108 males, 1805 females) with MDD | Desvenlafaxine generally improved depressive symptoms across sex subgroups |
| Kornstein et al,[ | SSRIs, SNRIs | Follow-up review of a 2-y study of acute-phase venlafaxine extended release or fluoxetine | 670 Female (168 in menopause) and 377 male outpatients with recurrent MDD | No sex differences were observed in treatment response |
| Cuijpers et al,[ | SSRIs, TCAs, other antidepressants | Meta-analysis of 14 eligible randomized trials comparing CBT with pharm, and comparing CBT or pharm with pill placebo | 1202 females and 564 males with depression, subjects from 14 eligible randomized trials | No sex differences were observed in treatment response |