| Literature DB >> 30135031 |
Chiara Fabbri1, Katherine E Tansey2, Roy H Perlis3, Joanna Hauser4, Neven Henigsberg5, Wolfgang Maier6, Ole Mors7, Anna Placentino8, Marcella Rietschel9, Daniel Souery10, Gerome Breen11, Charles Curtis11, Sang-Hyuk Lee11, Stephen Newhouse11, Hamel Patel11, Michael O'Donovan12, Glyn Lewis13, Gregory Jenkins14, Richard M Weinshilboum15, Anne Farmer11, Katherine J Aitchison16, Ian Craig11, Peter McGuffin11, Koen Schruers17, Joanna M Biernacka18, Rudolf Uher19, Cathryn M Lewis20.
Abstract
Cytochrome (CYP) P450 enzymes have a primary role in antidepressant metabolism and variants in these polymorphic genes are targets for pharmacogenetic investigation. This is the first meta-analysis to investigate how CYP2C19 polymorphisms predict citalopram/escitalopram efficacy and side effects. CYP2C19 metabolic phenotypes comprise poor metabolizers (PM), intermediate and intermediate+ metabolizers (IM; IM+), extensive and extensive+ metabolizers (EM [wild type]; EM+) and ultra-rapid metabolizers (UM) defined by the two most common CYP2C19 functional polymorphisms (rs4244285 and rs12248560) in Caucasians. These polymorphisms were genotyped or imputed from genome-wide data in four samples treated with citalopram or escitalopram (GENDEP, STAR*D, GenPod, PGRN-AMPS). Treatment efficacy was assessed by standardized percentage symptom improvement and by remission. Side effect data were available at weeks 2-4, 6 and 9 in three samples. A fixed-effects meta-analysis was performed using EM as the reference group. Analysis of 2558 patients for efficacy and 2037 patients for side effects showed that PMs had higher symptom improvement (SMD = 0.43, CI = 0.19-0.66) and higher remission rates (OR = 1.55, CI = 1.23-1.96) compared to EMs. At weeks 2-4, PMs showed higher risk of gastro-intestinal (OR = 1.26, CI = 1.08-1.47), neurological (OR = 1.28, CI = 1.07-1.53) and sexual side effects (OR = 1.52, CI = 1.23-1.87; week 6 values were similar). No difference was seen at week 9 or in total side effect burden. PMs did not have higher risk of dropout at week 4 compared to EMs. Antidepressant dose was not different among CYP2C19 groups. CYP2C19 polymorphisms may provide helpful information for guiding citalopram/escitalopram treatment, despite PMs being relatively rare among Caucasians (∼2%).Entities:
Keywords: Antidepressant; CYP2C19; Gene; Major depression; Response; Side effects
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30135031 DOI: 10.1016/j.euroneuro.2018.05.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Neuropsychopharmacol ISSN: 0924-977X Impact factor: 4.600