| Literature DB >> 28286537 |
Pedro Oliveira1, Joana Ribeiro1, Helena Donato2, Nuno Madeira1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite an increasingly recognized relationship between depression and smoking, little is known about how smoking influences antidepressant response and treatment outcomes. The aim of this study was to systematically review the evidence of the impact of smoking on new-generation antidepressants with an emphasis on the pharmacokinetic perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Antidepressant agents; Depressive disorder; Pharmacokinetics; Smoking
Year: 2017 PMID: 28286537 PMCID: PMC5340025 DOI: 10.1186/s12991-017-0140-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Gen Psychiatry ISSN: 1744-859X Impact factor: 3.455
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of the study selection process
Impact of smoking on main antidepressants (SSRI and SNRI) pharmacokinetics
| Study | Drug | Country | N total/N smokers | Age | Men (%) | Main findings | Study limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lundmarck et al. [ | Fluoxetine | Sweden | 291/138 | 43 | 39 | No significant correlation between serum levels of FLX and smoking habits was found | Possibility of interactions with other medications |
| Koelch et al. [ | Fluoxetine | Germany | 65/13 | 14.6 | 37.0 | Serum concentrations of the active moiety and NORFLX were significantly correlated with smoking status | Possibility of interactions with other medications |
| Serum levels of the active moiety of FLX were 44% lower in smokers than in nonsmokers | Due to the ethnic polymorphism of CYP2D6 [ | ||||||
| No significant correlation between serum levels of FLX and smoking habits was found | Population younger than 19 | ||||||
| Lundmarck et al. [ | Sertraline | Sweden | 319/89 | 54.4 | 31 | Smokers had significantly lower concentration-to-dose (C/D) mean ratios of serum sertraline and its main metabolite desmethylsertraline than nonsmokers | Possibility of interactions with other medications |
| Taurines et al. [ | Sertraline | Germany | 85/5 | 14.8 | 45.1 | No significant correlation between serum levels of Sertraline and smoking habits was found | Possibility of interactions with other medications |
| No standardization of timing of blood withdrawal and length of treatment as well as patient compliance | |||||||
| Low number of subjects taking high doses of sertraline | |||||||
| Population younger than 19 | |||||||
| Reis et al. [ | Escitalopram | Sweden | 130/31 | 51 | 32 | No significant correlation between serum levels of Escitalopram and smoking habits was found | 76% of the patients took one or more drugs in addition to escitalopram |
| Reis et al. [ | Citalopram | Sweden | 19/10 | <21 | 18.8 | No significant correlation between serum levels of Citalopram and smoking habits was found | Possibility of interactions with other medications |
| Population younger than 21 | |||||||
| Spigset et al. [ | Fluvoxamine | Sweden | 24/12 | 36.7 | 58.3 | Cmax, and AUC were significantly lower in the smokers than in the nonsmokers | Only 50 mg/day of FLV was tested |
| There were no group differences in elimination half-life | Small sample size | ||||||
| Carrillo et al. [ | Fluvoxamine | Sweden | 14/6 | 33.9 | 50 | Among extensive metabolizers (CYP1A2 e CYP 2D6) there was no difference in FLV kinetics between smokers and nonsmokers | Only 50 mg/day of FLV was tested |
| Small sample size | |||||||
| Limited to extensive metabolizers | |||||||
| Yoshimura et al. [ | Fluvoxamine | Japan | 30/11 | 52 | 36.7 | Serum levels of FLV were significantly higher in nonsmokers than smokers | Small sample size |
| Some subjects also took benzodiazepines | |||||||
| Gerstenberg et al. [ | Fluvoxamine | Japan | 49/15 | 49.9 | 69.0 | No significant difference between nonsmokers and smokers in the Css of FLV and FLA and FLA/FLV ratio was found | Thirty-nine patients also took benzodiazepines |
| Small sample size | |||||||
| Sugahara et al. [ | Fluvoxamine | Japan | 49/13 | w.i. | w.i. | The mean C/D ratio of FVX in smokers was reduced by more than 30% in comparison with that in nonsmokers | No information about age or sex of patients |
| Katoh et al. [ | Fluvoxamine | Japan | 32/6 | 39.0 | 46.9 | The steady-state plasma C/D ratio of FLV in patients who smoked was significantly lower than that in nonsmoker patients | Possibility of interactions with other medications |
| Small sample size | |||||||
| Suzuki et al. [ | Fluvoxamine | Japan | 87/22 | 36.6 | 65.5 | Heavy smokers had significantly lower FLV concentration than nonsmokers in the FLV 50 mg/d dose group | Possibility of interactions with other medications |
| At 150 mg/day and 200 dose groups, no significant differences in FLV concentration were observed between nonsmokers and heavy smokers | Small sample size | ||||||
| Reis et al. [ | Venlafaxine | Sweden | 141/58 | 61.3 | 33 | The steady-state plasma C/D ratio of ODV and DDV in patients who smoked was significantly lower than that in nonsmoker patients | Possibility of interactions with other medications |
| No differences in C/D VEN values or in any of the metabolite/VEN ratios were found | |||||||
| Unterecker et al. [ | Venlafaxine | Germany | 227/87 | 49.1 | 36.4 | In smokers, mean serum levels of ODV were 21% lower than in nonsmokers | Possibility of interactions with other medications |
| No differences in C/D VEN values between two groups | |||||||
| Fric et al. [ | Duloxetine | Germany | 23/8 | 47.3 | 75 | Smokers show significantly lower duloxetine serum level than nonsmokers | Possibility of interactions with other medications |
| Small sample size | |||||||
| Lobo et al. [ | Duloxetine | USA | 594/123 | 48.8 | 26 | Serum levels of duloxetine were significantly lower in smokers than in nonsmokers | Possibility of interactions with other medications |
| Nonsmokers have a 43% higher Css than smokers | |||||||
| Ishida et al. [ | Trazodone | Japan | 43/16 | 43 | 44.2 | Smokers show significantly lower duloxetine serum level than nonsmokers | Small sample size |
| No differences in mCPP concentrations between two groups | Some subjects also took benzodiazepines | ||||||
| Lind et al. [ | Mirtazapine | Sweden | 56/36 | 50 | 34 | Smokers show significantly lower S-mirtazapine and R-N-desmethylmirtazapine serum levels than nonsmokers | No information about the number of cigarettes consumed daily |
| Sirot et al. [ | Mirtazapine | France/Switzerland | 45/17 | 51 | 18.9 | Smokers show significantly lower mirtazapine, S-mirtazapine and R-N-desmethylmirtazapine serum levels than nonsmokers | Possibility of interactions with other medications |
| Hsyu et al. [ | Bupropion | USA | 34/17 | 26.2 | 52.9 | No significant correlation between serum levels of bupropion and smoking habits was found | Almost every subjects are caucasian |
| Small sample size | |||||||
| Only evaluates 150 mg daily |
Assessment of risk of bias in individual studies
| Study | Selection bias | Performance bias | Detection bias | Attrition bias | Reporting bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lundmarck et al. [ | − | − | − | ? | − |
| Koelch et al. [ | ? | ? | − | − | + |
| Lundmarck et al. [ | − | − | − | ? | − |
| Taurines et al. [ | ? | ? | − | − | + |
| Reis et al. [ | ? | ? | − | ? | + |
| Reis et al. [ | + | ? | − | ? | ? |
| Spigset et al. [ | − | − | − | − | − |
| Carrillo et al. [ | − | − | − | − | ? |
| Yoshimura et al. [ | − | + | − | − | ? |
| Gerstenberg et al. [ | − | − | − | ? | ? |
| Sugahara et al. [ | ? | ? | − | − | ? |
| Katoh et al. [ | + | − | − | − | ? |
| Suzuki et al. [ | + | − | − | − | − |
| Reis et al. [ | + | ? | − | ? | ? |
| Unterecker et al. [ | − | − | − | ? | − |
| Fric et al. [ | + | − | − | ? | − |
| Lobo et al. [ | − | − | − | − | − |
| Ishida et al. [ | ? | − | − | − | − |
| Lind et al. [ | − | − | − | − | − |
| Sirot et al. [ | + | − | ? | − | − |
| Hsyu et al. [ | + | − | − | − | + |
+ high risk of bias, – low risk of bias, ? unclear risk of bias