| Literature DB >> 31780961 |
Djamila Bennabi1, Emmanuel Haffen1, Vincent Van Waes2.
Abstract
Objectives: Vortioxetine has already shown its efficacy in the acute and long-term treatment of major depressive disorder (MDD) and its potential interest in the prevention of relapse. The aim of this study was to review the current status of knowledge regarding its cognitive effects.Entities:
Keywords: animals; cognition; humans; major depressive disorder; vortioxetine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31780961 PMCID: PMC6851880 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00771
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Studies exploring the cognitive effects of vortioxetine in mice and rats.
| Authors | Animals | Treatment | Cognitive assessment | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mork et al., 2013 ( | Healthy male Sprague–Dawley rats | 1–10 mg/kg of vortioxetine administered subcutaneously 1 hour before the NOR or 1 hour before or immediately after acquisition of contextual fear conditioning. | Recognition (NOR)Contextual fear conditioning | Improvement in the NOR test. Increase in freezing time during the retention test in the contextual fear conditioning assessment. |
| du Jardin et al., 2014 ( | Female Long–Evans rats with 5-HT depletion | Acute injections of vehicle or vortioxetine at 0.0001, 0.1, 3, or 10 mg/kg 1 hour prior to behavioral test.Chronic p.o. vortioxetine administration: | Recognition (NOR)Spatial memory (SA) | Acute injection of vortioxetine dose-dependently reversed 5-HT depletion-induced memory deficits in both tests.Chronic p.o. vortioxetine administration significantly improved memory performance only in the NOR. |
| Jensen et al., 2014 ( | Female Long–Evans rats with 5-HT depletion | Acute injections of vehicle or vortioxetine at 10 mg/kg 1 hour prior to behavioral test. | Recognition (NOR)Spatial memory (SA) | At similar SERT occupancies (> 90%) vortioxetine, but not escitalopram or duloxetine, restored memory performance deficits induced by 5-HT depletion. |
| Wallace et al., 2014 ( | Male Sprague–Dawley rats with 5-HT depletion exposed to chronic intermittent cold stress | Acute injections of vehicle or vortioxetine at 10 mg/kg immediately prior to behavioral test (i.p.).Chronic p.o. vortioxetine administration: | Reversal learning (AS) | A single acute injection of vortioxetine significantly attenuated the 5-HT depletion-induced reversal learning impairment. Chronic intermittent cold stress impaired reversal learning. Chronic vortioxetine administration prevented the reversal-learning deficit. |
| Bétry et al., 2015 ( | Male Sprague–Dawley OFA rats | Acute injections of vehicle or vortioxetine at 10 mg/kg immediately prior to behavioral test (i.p.). | Recognition (NOR) | Enhanced short-term episodic memory.Vortioxetine also prevented the effect of stress on hippocampal LTP and increased rapidly hippocampal cell proliferation. |
| Li et al., 2015 ( | Healthy middle-aged C57BL/6 female mice (11 months old) |
| Spatial memory (OP) | Chronic treatment with vortioxetine, but not fluoxetine, improved visuospatial memory and reduced depression-like behavior in the forced swim test.This was associated with change in the expression of multiple genes involved in neuronal plasticity. Vortioxetine did not reverse the age-associated decrease in stem cell proliferation in the hippocampus. |
| du Jardin et al., 2016 ( | Male Flinders Sensitive Line (FSL) rats, a genetic model of depression, depleted of 5-HT | One injections of vehicle or vortioxetine at 10 mg/kg (i.p.) 1 hour (acute) or 24 hours (sustained) prior to behavioral test. | Recognition (NOR) | Vortioxetine, but not fluoxetine or S-ketamine, acutely ameliorated the memory deficits of FSL rats in the NOR irrespective of 5-HT tone (1 hour). No sustained effects were observed in the NOR (24 hours). |
| Pehrson et al., 2016 ( | Male Wistar and Sprague–Dawley rats (adults and juveniles) | One injections of vehicle or vortioxetine at 0.1–10 mg/kg (s.c.) 1 hour (acute) prior to behavioral tests. Subchronic studies: food infused with 1.8 g vortioxetine per kg of food. | Social and object recognition memory | Acute vortioxetine reversed scopolamine-induced impairments in social and object recognition memory, but did not alter scopolamine-induced impairments in attention. Subchronic vortioxetine treatment failed to reverse scopolamine-induced social recognition memory deficits. |
| Hatherall et al., 2017 ( | Male Sprague–Dawley rats exposed to chronic stress (intermittent cold stress, social defeat, immobilization, swim stress) | Vortioxetine was administered in the diet prepared to contain 0.33 g/kg chow corresponding to a dose of approximately 24 mg/kg per day. | Fear conditioning (with a tone; fear memory and extinction) | Chronic stress exaggerated the expression of conditioned fear memory. Vortioxetine restored fear memory to control levels and rendered extinction in stressed rats comparable with that in controls. |
| Li et al., 2017 ( | Healthy middle-aged C57BL/6 female mice (12 months old) |
| Spatial memory (OP)Recognition (NOR) | After 1-month treatment, vortioxetine improved visuospatial memory (OP) and reduced depression-like behavior. After 3 months, vortioxetine reduced depression-like behavior without affecting recognition memory (NOR). |
| Pehrson et al., 2018 ( | Adult male Long–Evans and Sprague–Dawley rats; adult male C57BL/6NCrlBr mice | Acute vortioxetine doses ranged from 1 to 10 mg/kg (s.c.).Subchronic studies: food infused with 0.18–1.8 g vortioxetine per kg food | Attentional set-shifting test | Acute or subchronic vortioxetine treatment attenuated phencyclidine-induced deficits in attentional set-shifting performance. Subchronic vortioxetine reversed phencyclidine-induced object recognition and object placement impairments in mice. |
| Felice et al., 2018 ( | C57BL/6J Rj male mice; GFAP-thymidine kinase (TKC) male mice (for neurogenesis inhibition) | Vortioxetine was administered in the diet (1.8 g/kg of food weight; corresponding to ∼10 mg/kg) during 3–4 weeks. | Context discrimination | Vortioxetine improves context discrimination in mice through a neurogenesis independent mechanism. |
AS, attentional set-shifting test; NOR, novel object recognition test; OP, novel object placement test; SA, Y-maze spontaneous alternation test.
Meta-analysis exploring the cognitive effects of vortioxetine in human.
| Authors | Design | Population | Treatment(number of patients) | Cognitive assessment | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| McIntyre et al., 2016 ( | Meta-analysis of 3 RCTs | Current MDD | Vortioxetine 5–20 mg/d | DSST | Vortioxetine > placebo for DSST after correcting for change in depression severity |
| Rosenblat et al., 2015 ( | Meta-analysis of 17 RCTs | 2,550 | Vortioxetine (728) | DSST or combined speed TMT-B; | Vortioxetine > other antidepressants for DSST |
| Baune et al., 2018 ( | Network meta-analysis of 12 RCTs | MDD ( | Vortioxetine (725) | DSST | Vortioxetine > placebo for DSST |
CRT, choice reaction time; DSST, Digit Symbol Sign Test; MDD, major depressive disorder; MADRS, Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale; PDQ, Perceived Deficit Questionnaire; RAVLT, Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test; SRT, simple reaction time; TMT-A or -B, Trails Making Test; UPSA-B, San Diego Performance-Based Skills Assessment.
Randomized controls and open-label trials exploring the cognitive effects of vortioxetine in human.
| Authors | Design | Population | Treatment | Cognitive assessment | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Katona et al., 2012 ( | Double-blind | MDD > 3 months | Vortioxetine 5 mg/day (156) | DSST | Significant improvement in DSST and RAVLT |
| McIntyre et al., 2014 ( | Double blind | MDD > 3 months | Vortioxetine 10 mg/d (192) | DSST | Vortioxetine > placebo for all measures with the exception of CRT for vortioxetine 20 mg |
| Mahableshwarkar et al., 2015 ( | Double blind | MDD > 3 months | Vortioxetine 10 or 20 mg/day (168) | DSST | Vortioxetine > placebo for DSST, TMT-A, PDQ, attention/concentration and planning/organization subscores of PDQ |
| Harrison et al., 2016 ( | Double blind | MDD > 3 months | Vortioxetine 10 mg/day (192) | DSST | At 8 weeks, vortioxetine 10 mg > placebo for executive function, attention/speed of processing, memory, and DSST after correcting for change in depression severity |
| McIntyre et al., 2017 ( | Post hoc analysis of 5 RCT at 8 weeks | 2,206 MDD | Vortioxetine 10 mg/day | DSST | Vortioxetine > paroxetine for DSST, |
| Baune et al., 2018 ( | Double blind | MDD > 3 months | Vortioxetine | DSST | Vortioxetine = paroxetine = placebo for DSST |
| Vieta et al., 2018 ( | Double blind | MDD | Vortioxetine 10–20 mg/day ( | DSST | Vortioxetine = escitalopram |
| Freeman et al., 2017 ( | Open-label study | 21 early postmenopausal and perimenopausal women with MDD | Vortioxetine | DSST | Improvement in DSST and CPFQ |
| Smith et al., 2018 ( | Double blind | Remitted depressed ( | Vortioxetine 20 mg/day | N-back working memory task | Vortioxetine: improvement in TMT-A and PDQ |
| Levada and Troyan, 2019 ( | Open-label study | MDD | Vortioxetine ( | DSST | Vortioxetine > escitalopram for RAVLT |
| Nierenberg et al., 2019 ( | Double blind | MDD (151) | Current SSRI + placebo | DSST | Improvement of cognitive performances in the three groups |
| Yan et al., 2019 ( | Double blind | MDD (81) | Vortioxetine 10 mg ( | WCST | Vortioxetine+ CBT > vortioxetine for CPT scores |
| Chokka et al., 2019 ( | Open-label study 52 weeks | MDD (199) | Vortioxetine | PDQ | Improvement in cognitive symptoms |
CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy; CPFQ, Cognitive and Physical Functioning Questionnaire; CRT, choice reaction time; dlPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; DSST, Digit Symbol Sign Test; FAST, Functioning Assessment Short Test; MDD, Major depressive disorder; MADRS, Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale; PDQ, Perceived Deficit Questionnaire; QIDS, Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology–Self-report; RAVLT, Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test; SRT, simple reaction time; TMT-A or -B, Trails Making Test; UPSA-B, San Diego Performance-Based Skills Assessment; WCST, Wisconsin Card Sorting Test.