| Literature DB >> 28760142 |
João Vian1,2, Círia Pereira1,2, Victor Chavarria3, Cristiano Köhler4, Brendon Stubbs5,6,7,8, João Quevedo9,10,11,12, Sung-Wan Kim13, André F Carvalho4, Michael Berk14,15, Brisa S Fernandes16.
Abstract
Depression remains a debilitating condition with an uncertain aetiology. Recently, attention has been given to the renin-angiotensin system. In the central nervous system, angiotensin II may be important in multiple pathways related to neurodevelopment and regulation of the stress response. Studies of drugs targeting the renin-angiotensin system have yielded promising results. Here, we review the potential beneficial effects of angiotensin blockers in depression and their mechanisms of action. Drugs blocking the angiotensin system have efficacy in several animal models of depression. While no randomised clinical trials were found, case reports and observational studies showed that angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers had positive effects on depression, whereas other antihypertensive agents did not. Drugs targeting the renin-angiotensin system act on inflammatory pathways implicated in depression. Both preclinical and clinical data suggest that these drugs possess antidepressant properties. In light of these results, angiotensin system-blocking agents offer new horizons in mood disorder treatment.Entities:
Keywords: ATR1; ATR2; Angiotensin; Angiotensin receptor blockers; Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors; Depression; Inflammation; Mas; Psychiatry; Renin–angiotensin system
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28760142 PMCID: PMC5537940 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-017-0916-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Pathways involved in neuronal damage of angiotensin II through AT1 receptor agonism. Ang II, angiotensin II; AT1R, angiotensin II receptor type 1; PGE2, prostaglandin E2; Cox-2, Cyclooxygenase-2; PPAR-γ, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma; NF-kB, nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase; NO, nitric oxide; ROS, reactive oxygen species
Fig. 2Pathway from angiotensinogen to AT1, AT2 and Mas receptors. ACE, Angiotensin-converting enzyme
Summary of clinical evidence
| Studies | Findings | Conclusion | Limitations | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MDD | ||||
| Zubenko et al., 1984 | Case report of mood-elevating effect of captopril in three MDD patients | 3 patients: | Mood elevation of the 3 cases with captopril | 3rd case developed psychotic symptoms |
| Deicken, 1986 | Case report of captopril treatment of MDD | 52-year-old man with HT and D | Improvement of MDD symptoms with captopril | |
| Germain & Chouinard, 1988 | Case report of treatment of MDD with captopril | 41-year-old man with D and posterior diagnosis of HT | Total remission of the MDD episode with captopril | |
| Hertzman et al., 2005 | Collection of case reports of lisinopril augmenting antidepressant response (9 MDD + 1 BD) | Mood elevation of MDD and stabilised mood of the BD patient with lisonopril in patients already on antidepressants or MSs | Improved mood with a combination of antidepressants and lisinopril | |
| Rathmann et al., 1999 | Case-control study of 972 diabetic patients | OR for MDD: | ACEI associated with reduced risk of MDD | Screening for MDD made by general practitioners |
| Williams et al., 2016 | Case-control study of a 5-year cohort of 961 men with osteoporosis | Exposure to ACEIs yields reduced risk of MDD (OR: 0.15, 95% | ACE inhibitors were associated with a reduced likelihood for MD onset | Recall bias, unrecognised confounding and limited generalisability |
| Boal et al., 2016 | 5-year cohort of 144,660 patients | ACEI/ARB: 53% decreased risk of MD admissions | ACEI/ARB therapy had a neutral effect (or reduced risk) on MDs | Results do not include milder levels of MDs treated in the community |
| Negative findings in MDD | ||||
| Habra et al., 2010 | RCT of citalopram in 284 | Use of ACEIs associated with mean HAMD response of 1.36 versus 6.42 for non-ACEI use | ACEI use predicted worse response to antidepressant | Bias for more severe coronary disease |
| Mood effects in non-depressed population | ||||
| Cohen et al., 1984 | Case report of mood elation with enalapril | Produced elation in normal volunteers (33% controls and 27% HT subjects) | Mood elation effect | |
| Croog et al., 1986 | RCT on the quality of life of captopril versus methyldopa versus propranolol in 626 male HT patients for 24 weeks | Captopril: fewer side effects, and better scores for work performance, visual–motor functioning, and measures of life satisfaction versus methyldopa ( | Captopril group had better scores in tests of general well-being | |
| Testa et al., 1993 | RCT on the quality of life of captopril versus enalapril in 379 HT men for 24 weeks | Captopril: more favourable reports of overall quality of life, general perceived health, vitality, health status, sleep, emotional control ( | The centrally acting ACEI (captopril) showed superior quality of life reports despite equal anti-HT response | |
| Johansen et al., 2012 | HUNT study (Norway) | OR for depressive symptoms: | Depressive symptoms were reduced in ACEI, compared to BB and CCB group | Self-reported data |
| Pavlatou et al., 2008 | Open-label study of candesartan in 17 diabetic patients for ≥ 3 months | Significant improvement in interpersonal sensitivity ( | Candesartan (an ARB) improves affect | No control group |
| Negative findings in mood effects in non-depressed population | ||||
| Callender et al., 1983 | Double-blind placebo-controlled crossover trial with captopril in 8 HT patients for 6 weeks | Mood was slightly lower during captopril administration | No evidence of mood effects of captopril during the trial | Small sample and duration of study |
| Deary et al., 1991 | Double-blind crossover trial of atenolol and captopril in 18 HT patients for 12 weeks (6 weeks each drug) | Patients reported feeling less anxious during treatment with atenolol (a BB) ( | A BB was superior to an ACEI in self-reported anxiety | BBs are known to have an effect in somatic anxiety |
| Omvik et al., 1993 | RCT on the quality of life of amlodipine versus enalapril in 461 HT patients for 50 weeks | Indices on quality of life were unchanged or increased in both groups | No difference between a CCB and an ACEI in quality of life | |
| Fletcher et al., 1992 | RCT on the quality of life of cilazapril versus atenolol versus nifedipine in 540 HT patients for 6 months | Little difference between quality of life measures in the cilazapril and atenolol groups. Both superior to nifedipine | No significant differences in quality of life observed between an ACEI and a BB during the trial. Both were superior to a CCB. | More nifedipine dropouts (17%) compared with atenolol (8%) and cilazapril (5%) |
| Weir et al., 1996 | RCT on the quality of life of losartan versus nifedipine in 223 HT patients for 12 weeks | No significant differences in quality of life reports between groups | No significant differences in quality of life were observed between an ACEI and a CCB | Nifedipine had significantly more dropouts (12%) than losartan (5%) |
Abbreviations: ACEIs, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors; ARBs, angiotensin receptor blockers; BB, beta-blockers; BD, bipolar disorder; CCB, calcium channel blockers; CHF, congestive heart failure; CI, confidence interval; D, depression; HAMD, Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression; HT, hypertensive; MDD, major depressive disordersl; MDs, mood disorders; MS, mood stabilisers; NT, non-treatment group; OR, odds ratio; RCT, randomised clinical trial; TZ, thiaziades