| Literature DB >> 30690935 |
Francesca De Cagna1, Laura Fusar-Poli1,2, Stefano Damiani1, Matteo Rocchetti1, Gianluca Giovanna1, Alessia Mori1, Pierluigi Politi1, Natascia Brondino1.
Abstract
Several studies have demonstrated the neuromodulating function of oxytocin (OT) in response to anxiogenic stimuli as well as its potential role in the pathogenesis of depression. Consequently, intranasal OT (IN-OT) has been proposed as a potential treatment of anxiety and depressive disorders. The present systematic review aimed to summarize the randomized controlled trials (RCTs) evaluating the effect of IN-OT on anxiety and depressive symptoms. Overall, 15 studies were included, involving patients with social anxiety disorders (7 studies), arachnophobia (1), major depression (3) or post-natal depression (4), and mainly evaluating single-dose administrations of IN-OT. Results showed no significant effects on core symptomatology. Five crossover studies included functional magnetic resonance imaging investigation: one trial showed reduced amygdala hyper-reactivity after IN-OT in subjects with anxiety, while another one showed enhanced connectivity between amygdala and bilateral insula and middle cingulate gyrus after IN-OT in patients but not in healthy controls. More studies are needed to confirm these results. In conclusion, up to date, evidence regarding the potential utility of IN-OT in treating anxiety and depression is still inconclusive. Further RCTs with larger samples and long-term administration of IN-OT are needed to better elucidate its potential efficacy alone or in association with standard care.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; Depression; Functional magnetic resonance imaging; Oxytocin; Social behavior
Year: 2019 PMID: 30690935 PMCID: PMC6361048 DOI: 10.9758/cpn.2019.17.1.1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Psychopharmacol Neurosci ISSN: 1738-1088 Impact factor: 2.582
Fig. 1PRISMA flow-diagram of selection process.
RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Characteristics of randomized controlled trials evaluating the effect of intranasal oxytocin (OT) on patients with anxiety disorders
| First author, year | Study design | Randomized/OT, control | Sex, male | Age (yr) | Psychiatric diagnosis | OT dose/duration | Outcome (measures) | Time of outcome assessment | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acheson, 2015 | Parallel | 23/10, 13 | 5 (21.7) | 29.5 | Arachnophobia | 24 IU/SA | Self-report phobia (BAT, SPQ, FSQ). | 1 wk and 1 mo post-treatment | No significant differences for any outcome. |
| Dodhia, 2014 | Crossover | 18 | 18 (100) | 29.4 (19–55) | GSAD | 24 IU/SA | Resting-state fMRI. | 45 min post-treatment | OT enhanced rsFC of the left and right amygdala with rostral anterior cingulate cortex/mPFC. |
| Fang, 2014 | Parallel | 54/27, 27 | 54 (100) | 24.4 (18–45) | SAD | 24 IU/SA | Tasks (Cyberball, Modified Posner Task). Attachment style (IPSM, ECR). Mood and anxiety (SIAS, PANAS). | 45 min post-treatment | Among participants who received OT, only individuals with low attachment avoidance displayed more social affiliation and cooperation, and only those with high attachment avoidance showed faster detection of disgust and neutral faces. |
| Fang, 2017 | Parallel | 54/27, 27 | 54 (100) | 24.4 (18–45) | SAD | 24 IU/SA | Task (“Pay-it-forward” EEfRT). Attachment style (ECR). Mood and anxiety (SIAS). | 60 min post-treatment | Among participants who received OT, only individuals with low levels of social interaction anxiety showed an increased other-oriented reward motivation. No main effect of OT on social behavior. |
| Gorka, 2015 | Crossover | 18 | 18 (100) | 29.8 | GSAD | 24 IU/SA | fMRI while performing the EFMT. | 45 min post-treatment | Within individuals with GSAD, OT enhanced functional connectivity between the amygdala and the bilateral insula and middle cingulate/dorsal anterior cingulate gyrus during the processing of fearful faces. |
| Guastella, 2009 | Parallel | 25/12, 13 | 25 (100) | 42.3 (25–65) | SAD | 24 IU/once weekly for 4 wk plus exposure therapy (public speech) | Self-report anxiety (SPAI, LSAS, BFNE, LIS). Appraisals of speech appearance and performance (AS, SPQ-2, Likert scale). | Immediately after last administration; 1 mo post-treatment. Exposure therapy outcome: 45 min after each administration | Participants administered with OT showed improved positive evaluations of appearance and speech performance as exposure treatment sessions progressed. No differences in SAD symptoms from pre- to post-treatment. |
| Labuschagne, 2010 | Crossover | 18 | 18 (100) | 29.39 (18–55) | GSAD | 24 IU/SA | fMRI while performing the EFMT. | 45 min post-treatment | OT attenuated the heightened amygdala reactivity to fearful faces in the GSAD group, such that the hyperactivity observed during the placebo session was no longer evident following OT. No effects of OT on the VAMS factors. |
| Labuschagne, 2012 | Crossover | 18 | 18 (100) | 29.39 (18–55) | GSAD | 24 IU/SA | fMRI while performing an emotion recognition task. Mood and anxiety (POMS, STAI). | 45 min post-treatment | In response to sad vs. neutral faces, OT attenuated regions hyperactive in the placebo condition including in several clusters in bilateral mPFC and ACC. OT reduced activity in bilateral premotor, right parietal and left visual cortices. No significant effects on mood and anxiety. |
Values are presented as number only, number (%), or mean age (range).
ACC, anterior cingulate cortex; AS, appearance scale; BAT, behavioral approach task; BFNE, Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation Scale; CGI, clinical global impression; CGI-I, CGI-improvement; CGI-S, CGI-severity; ECR, Experience in Close Relationships Inventory; EEfRT, Effort Expenditure for Rewards Task; EFMT, Emotional Face Matching Task; fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging; FSQ, Fear of Spider Questionnaire; GSAD, generalized social anxiety disorder; IPSM, Interpersonal Sensitivity Measure; LIS, Life Interference Scale; LSAS, Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale; mPFC, medial prefrontal cortex; m-WAI, Working Alliance Inventory-Client-Short Form; PANAS, Positive and Negative Affective Scales; POMS, Profiles of Mood Scale; SA, single administration; SAD, social anxiety disorder; SIAS, Social Interaction and Anxiety Scale; SPAI, Social Phobia and Anxiety Inventory; SPQ, Spider Phobia Questionnaire; SPQ-2, Speech Performance Questionnaire 2; STAI, Spielberg Trait-State Anxiety Inventory; VAMS, Visual Analogue Mood Scale.
Characteristics of randomized controlled trials evaluating the effect of intranasal oxytocin (OT) on patients with depressive disorders
| First author, year | Study design | Randomized/OT, control | Sex, male | Age (yr) | Psychiatric diagnosis | OT posology/duration | Outcome (measures) | Time of outcome assessment | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clarici, 2015 | Parallel | 16/5, 11 | 0 | 36.5 (33–41) | PND | 16 IU plus psychodynamic psychotherapy/once daily for 12 wk | Depressive symptoms (EPDS, HDRS) | End of treatment | No significant differences. |
| Domes, 2016 | Parallel | 43/22, 21 | 18 (42) | 46.9 | Depressive episode, recurrent depressive disorder, dysthymia | 24 IU/SA | Reaction time, attention (Dot-probe task) | 60 min post-treatment | OT reduced the initial allocation of attention towards angry faces and increased sustained attention towards happy faces |
| MacDonald, 2013 | Crossover | 18 | 18 (100) | 43.6 (20–64) | MDD | 40 IU/SA plus a psychotherapy session | Vital signs (HR, BP, salivary cortisol) | 70–75 min post-OT treatment | OT increased subjective anxiety. No significant differences in behavioral and vital signs. |
| Mah, 2013 | Crossover | 25 | 0 | 28.2 (19–38) | PND | 24 IU/SA | Mood (SAM) | 45 min post-treatment | After OT mothers with PND commenced their description of their baby more negatively but rated the quality of their relationship with their babies as more positive. After OT mood was rated as poorer. No effect on verbal fluency. |
| Mah, 2015 | Crossover | 16 | 0 | 26.5 (19–33) | PND | 24 IU/SA | Enthusiastic Stranger Paradigm (protectiveness, gaze duration) | 45 min post-treatment | In OT condition mothers were more protective of their baby in the presence of a stranger, but their gaze duration was reduced. |
| Mah, 2017 | Crossover | 25 | 0 | 28.2 (19–38) | PND | 24 IU/SA | Maternal sensitivity (play video-recorded session) | 45 min post-treatment | Mothers with PND rated a naturalistic newborn cry as more urgent after OT. In OT condition subjects were more likely to choose a harsh caregiving strategy in response to the cry sound. No effect of OT on observed maternal sensitivity. |
| Pincus, 2010 | Crossover | 10 | 10 (100) | 35.5 (26–60) | MDD | 20 IU/SA | fMRI while performing a paradigm (RMET, reaction time and motor-cued response) | 10 min post-treatment | During RMET, there was significant activation with OT compared to placebo in bilateral superior temporal gyrus, right insula, right precentral gyrus, bilateral cingulate gyri, left anterior cingulum, left supramarginal gyrus, right inferior frontal gyrus, right superior and middle frontal gyri. On motor cues, OT led to significant increases in bilateral superior and medial frontal gyri. No differences in gender identifications. |
Values are presented as number only, number (%), or mean age (range).
ANPS, Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales; BP, blood pressure; COWAT, Controlled Oral Word Association Test; ECSI, Ethological Coding System for Interviews; EPDS, Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale; FMSS, Five Minute Speech Sample; HDRS, Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression; HR, heart rate; MDD, major depressive disorder; PANAS, Positive and Negative Affective Scales; PND, postnatal depression; RMET, Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test; SA, single administration; SAM, Self-Assessment Manikin; STAI, Spielberg Trait-State Anxiety Inventory; SWAP, Shedler-Westen Assessment Procedure.
Fig. 2Risk of bias assessment of included studies evaluating intra-nasal oxytocin in anxiety disorders.
Fig. 3Risk of bias assessment of included studies in depressive disorders.