| Literature DB >> 28757598 |
John K Yue1,2, John F Burke3,4, Pavan S Upadhyayula5,6, Ethan A Winkler7,8, Hansen Deng9,10, Caitlin K Robinson11,12, Romain Pirracchio13, Catherine G Suen14,15, Sourabh Sharma16,17, Adam R Ferguson18,19,20, Laura B Ngwenya21, Murray B Stein22,23, Geoffrey T Manley24,25, Phiroz E Tarapore26,27.
Abstract
The prevalence of neuropsychiatric disorders following traumatic brain injury (TBI) is 20%-50%, and disorders of mood and cognition may remain even after recovery of neurologic function is achieved. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI) block the reuptake of serotonin in presynaptic cells to lead to increased serotonergic activity in the synaptic cleft, constituting first-line treatment for a variety of neurocognitive and neuropsychiatric disorders. This review investigates the utility of SSRIs in treating post-TBI disorders. In total, 37 unique reports were consolidated from the Cochrane Central Register and PubMed (eight randomized-controlled trials (RCTs), nine open-label studies, 11 case reports, nine review articles). SSRIs are associated with improvement of depressive but not cognitive symptoms. Pooled analysis using the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale demonstrate a significant mean decrease of depression severity following sertraline compared to placebo-a result supported by several other RCTs with similar endpoints. Evidence from smaller studies demonstrates mood improvement following SSRI administration with absent or negative effects on cognitive and functional recovery. Notably, studies on SSRI treatment effects for post-traumatic stress disorder after TBI remain absent, and this represents an important direction of future research. Furthermore, placebo-controlled studies with extended follow-up periods and concurrent biomarker, neuroimaging and behavioral data are necessary to delineate the attributable pharmacological effects of SSRIs in the TBI population.Entities:
Keywords: cognition; depression; meta-analysis; postconcussive disorder; selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; sleep disturbance; traumatic brain injury
Year: 2017 PMID: 28757598 PMCID: PMC5575613 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci7080093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Figure 1Flowchart of included studies. CENTRAL, Cochrane Central Register for Controlled Trials; SSRI, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; TBI, traumatic brain injury.
Summary of studies.
| Ansari et al., 2014 [ | Sertraline | 80 adult male patients with post-TBI depression. 40 patients given sertraline 50 mg/day, 40 patients given placebo. | 80 | PHQ-9 | Sertraline group showed significant improvement in mood and QOL domains (PHQ-9: 14.88 ± 3.60 vs. 5.33 ± 2.98, | Depression |
| Ashman et al., 2009 [ | Sertraline | 10-week program studying 52 patients with TBI and MDD treated with sertraline or placebo. | 52 | Ham-D | Both groups significantly improved (59% treatment group, 32% placebo group) with Ham-D reduction by 50%. | Depression |
| Banos et al., 2010 [ | Sertraline | Three-month study of 99 subjects with moderate/severe TBI randomized to sertraline 50 mg ( | 99 | WMS, TMT, NFI | No sertraline treatment effect was observed for cognitive performance. | Cognition |
| Jorge et al., 2016 [ | Sertraline | 94 patients administered sertraline vs. placebo at 100 mg/day for 24-weeks. | 94 | MINI | Number needed to treat to prevent depression after TBI at 24-weeks is 5.9 for sertraline vs. placebo ( | Depression |
| Lee et al., 2005 [ | Sertraline | Four-week study of 30 patients with MDD treated with sertraline 25–100 mg/day ( | 30 | Ham-D, ESS, RPQ | Methylphenidate and sertraline showed improvement in depressive symptomatology. Methylphenidate and placebo showed improvement in cognitive function vs. sertraline. | Cognition, Depression, PCS |
| Meythaler et al., 2001 [ | Sertraline | Two-week study of 11 patients with severe TBI post MVA. Patients received sertraline 100 mg/day or placebo. | 11 | OL, ABS, GOAT | No effect of sertraline treatment was identified. | Cognition |
| Novack et al., 2009 [ | Sertraline | One-year study of 99 non-depressed TBI subjects received either sertraline 50 mg/day ( | 99 | Ham-D, NFI | Placebo group developed more depressive symptoms ( | Depression |
| Rapoport et al., 2010 [ | Citalopram | 21 patients in remission from depression after TBI were randomized to same-dose citalopram ( | 21 | Ham-D | Relapse occurred in 11 subjects (52.4%). Treatment groups did not differ in relapse rates (citalopram: 50% vs. placebo: 54.5%; | Depression |
| Dolberg et al., 2002 [ | Fluoxetine, Citalopram, Paroxetine, Sertraline | 17 TBI patients were given SSRIs. All complained of sexual dysfunction which was resolved with mianserin (tetracyclic anti-depressant). | 17 | Occurrence of sexual dysfunction | SSRI use associated with sexual dysfunction. 15 patients (88%) reported improvement of symptoms with mianserin. | Sexual dysfunction |
| Fann et al., 2000 [ | Sertraline | 15 patients with mild TBI within the past 3–24 months. Placebo in-run design where all subjects received 1-week placebo followed by 8-week single-blind course of sertraline. | 15 | Ham-D | Sertraline significantly improved depressive symptoms (Ham-D 25.0 ± 4.4 to 7.2 ± 5.3 at Week 8 ( | Cognition, Depression |
| Horsfield et al., 2002 [ | Fluoxetine | 5 TBI patients with no to moderate depressive symptoms followed for 8 months. | 5 | TMT, AMT, WAIS-III, USCREMT, MMSE, Ham-D | Fluoxetine improved mood and performance on some but not all cognitive measures. More studies needed. | Cognition |
| Lanctot et al., 2010 [ | Citalopram | 90 patients with major depressive episode following TBI in a six week study also examining six serotonergic SNPs. | 90 | Ham-D | MTHFR and BDNF SNPs predicted greater treatment response (r2 = 0.098, F = 4.65, | Depression |
| Luo et al., 2015 [ | Citalopram, prednisone | 68 patients with depression following TBI. | 68 | Glasgow Coma Scale, Ham-D | Over 60% of patients who did not respond to psychotherapy alone (60/68) responded to citalopram treatment. Patients with hypocortisolism also were treated with prednisone | Depression |
| Muller et al., 1999 [ | Paroxetine, Citalopram | 26 patients with brain damage and pathological crying. Only 2 TBI related. | 2 | Clinical interviews related to pathological crying | Both paroxetine and citalopram improved symptoms for 24/26 (92.3%) patients within 3 days. | Emotional incontinence |
| Perino et al., 2001 [ | Citalopram, Carbamazepine | 20 patients with MDD following TBI were divided into two groups: group A with recent TBI (<6 months), and group B with long-term TBI (24–36 months). | 20 | BPRS | BPRS and CGI scores of the total sample showed significant improvement between baseline and 12 weeks (BPRS baseline: 62.3 ± 17.6 vs. 12 weeks: 51.7 ± 12.8; | Depression |
| Rapoport et al., 2008 [ | Citalopram | 54 patients with mild to moderate depression post-TBI. 29 patients underwent 6 week fixed dose treatment; 36 underwent 10-week flexible dose treatment. | 54 | Ham-D | The mean Ham-D at baseline and 6 weeks were 23.66 (SD 6.8) and 16.30 (SD 9.3), respectively ( | Depression, PCS |
| Turner-Stokes et al., 2002 [ | Sertraline | 27 patients with depression due to brain injury - 5 due to TBI. | 27 | BDI-II | The BDI-II was assessable in 17/21 patients, showing a mean improvement of 14.5 ± 9.7 ( | Depression |
| Hensley et al., 2010 [ | Sertraline, Paroxetine | 22-year-old female with MVA-related TBI. | 1 | -- | Treatment of alcohol withdrawal related anxiety with SSRIs led to akathisia that resolved with TCA treatment. | Akathisia, Anxiety |
| Nahas et al., 1998 [ | Fluoxetine | 21-year-old male with MVA-related TBI leading to pathological crying. | 1 | -- | Fluoxetine treatment led to complete resolution of pathological crying within 1 week. | Emotional incontinence |
| Patterson et al., 1997 [ | Sertraline, Trazodone | 43-year-old male with TBI following fall prescribed trazodone for chronic pain and sleep disturbance, and fluoxetine for treatment of depression. | 1 | -- | Fluoxetine addition led to dysarthria that resolved with fluoxetine discontinuation. | Depression |
| Scheutzow et al., 1999 [ | Sertraline | 60-year-old male with TBI following MVA experiencing panic attacks. | 1 | -- | Sertraline improved mood and appetite but did not resolve all panic and anxiety symptoms. | Anxiety, Panic |
| Slaughter et al., 1999 [ | Sertraline | 2 male patients with Kluver-Bucy syndrome from MVA related TBI. | 2 | -- | Resolution of symptoms (hyperorality, hyper-sexuality) with high dose SSRI similar to OCD. | Emotional incontinence, OCD |
| Sloan et al., 1992 [ | Fluoxetine | 28-year-old assault victim with TBI related pathological laughter, dysarthria and hemiataxia. | 1 | -- | Fluoxetine plus speech therapy helped with emotional lability grading and was well tolerated. | Emotional incontinence |
| Spinella et al., 2002 [ | Fluoxetine, Buspirone, Ginkgo Biloba | 42-year-old female with mild TBI following MVA. | 1 | -- | Herbal supplements plus SSRI led to hypomania, highlighting the need to study SSRI interactions with other medications following TBI. | Depression |
| Stanislav et al., 1999 [ | Sertraline | 24-year-old with severe TBI following MVA presenting with PTSD. | 1 | -- | Clinical case of dystonia following SSRI treatment. | Depression, PTSD |
| Stengler-Wenzke et al., 2002 [ | Fluoxetine | 18-year-old male with severe TBI following MVA. | 1 | -- | Fluoxetine treatment drastically reduced OCD symptoms and increased quality of life. | OCD |
| Workman et al., 1992 [ | Sertraline, Lithium | 56-year-old female with severe TBI from fall requiring bilateral frontal lobectomies. | 1 | -- | Sertraline plus lithium treatment reduced patients Ham-D score from 15 to 4. Symptoms of mood lability and conceptual disorganization resolved. | Emotional incontinence |
| Wroblewski et al., 1992 [ | Fluoxetine, Phenytoin | 23-year-old TBI patient with seizures following TCA treatment of depression. | 1 | -- | Resolution of seizures and improvement of mood with fluoxetine treatment with phenytoin. | Depression |
| Fann et al., 2009 [ | Review | -- | -- | -- | Serotonergic system modulation through antidepressants has high tolerability in treatment of TBI patients with depression. | General |
| Fleminger et al., 2003 [ | Review | -- | -- | -- | Three- to four-fold increase in suicide rates following TBI, suggested heightened surveillance for TBI subpopulations. Little conclusive evidence for SSRI use highlights need for longitudinal care. | Depression |
| Jorge et al., 2003 [ | Review | -- | -- | -- | Mood disorders are frequent complications of TBI and are often overlooked. Further research is needed for the neuropsychiatric sequelae of these disorders. | Anxiety, OCD, Panic |
| Lee et al., 2003 [ | Review | -- | -- | -- | Up to 60% of TBI patients are affected by neuropsychiatric sequelae. Drugs exist to treat specific conditions but RCTs are needed to delineate true treatment effects following TBI. | Anxiety, Cognition, Depression |
| Lombardi et al., 2008 [ | Review | -- | -- | -- | Symptomatic treatment studies that understand and address underlying neurobiological recovery processes are needed. | Cognition, PCS |
| Silver et al., 2009 [ | Review | -- | -- | -- | Depression and cognitive impairment are common neuropsychiatric symptoms after TBI. Several small studies suggest that SSRIs and tricyclic antidepressants may improve depression in this population. | Cognition, Depression |
| Tenovuo et al., 2006 [ | Review | -- | -- | -- | Lack of large scale RCTs place burden on clinician for pharmacologic treatment of TBI-related depression. | Cognition |
| Wheaton et al., 2011 [ | Review | -- | -- | -- | Pharmacological treatments that are administered to adults in the postacute stage (≥4 weeks) after TBI have the potential to reduce persistent cognitive and behavioral problems. Sertraline can possibly impair cognition and psychomotor speed. | Cognition |
| Zafonte et al., 2002 [ | Review | -- | -- | -- | Limited studies exist among patients with TBI, but serotonin agents including SSRIs seem to be effective for a variety of behavioral disorders. Care should be used when combining agents, and rapid withdrawal should be avoided. | Anxiety, Cognition, Depression |
ABS = Agitated Behavioral Scale; AMT = attentional motor task; BDI-II = Beck Depression Inventory, Second Edition; BPRS = Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale; ESS = Epworth Sleepiness Scale; GCS = Glasgow Coma Scale; Ham-D = Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; GOAT = Galveston Orientation and Amnesia Test; MDD = major depressive disorder; MINI = Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview; MMSE = Mini-Mental State Examination; MVA = motor vehicle accident; NFI = Neurobehavioral Functioning Inventory; OCD = Obsessive Compulsive Disorder; OL = Orientation Log; PHQ-9 = Patient Health Questionnaire-9; RPQ = Rivermead Post-Concussional Symptoms Questionnaire; SNP = single nucleotide polymorphism; SSRI = selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; TBI = traumatic brain injury; TCA = tricyclic antidepressant; TMT = Trailmaking Test; USCREMT = University of Southern California Repeatable Episodic Memory Test; WAIS-III = Wechsler Adult Intelligence Test, Third Edition; WMS = Wechsler Memory Scale.
Figure 2Meta-analysis of all double-blind, randomized controlled trials of sertraline versus placebo (n = 2), using the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale as the outcome. Effect sizes are reported for the treatment group (sertraline). CI, confidence interval; Ham-D, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; RCT, randomized controlled trial.