| Literature DB >> 32205866 |
Kara Dempster1, Peter Jeon2, Michael MacKinley3, Peter Williamson3,4,5, Jean Théberge2,3,5,6, Lena Palaniyappan7,8,9,10.
Abstract
Early response to antipsychotic medications is one of the most important determinants of later symptomatic and functional outcomes in psychosis. Glutathione and glutamate have emerged as promising therapeutic targets for patients demonstrating inadequate response to dopamine-blocking antipsychotics. Nevertheless, the role of these neurochemicals in the mechanism of early antipsychotic response remains poorly understood. Using a longitudinal design and ultrahigh field 7-T magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) protocol in 53 subjects, we report the association between dorsal anterior cingulate cortex glutamate and glutathione, with time to treatment response in drug naive (34.6% of the sample) or minimally medicated first episode patients with schizophreniform disorder, schizophrenia, and schizoaffective disorder. Time to response was defined as the number of weeks required to reach a 50% reduction in the PANSS-8 scores. Higher glutathione was associated with shorter time to response (F = 4.86, P = 0.017), while higher glutamate was associated with more severe functional impairment (F = 5.33, P = 0.008). There were no significant differences between patients and controls on measures of glutamate or glutathione. For the first time, we have demonstrated an association between higher glutathione and favorable prognosis in FEP. We propose that interventions that increase brain glutathione levels may improve outcomes of early intervention in psychosis.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32205866 PMCID: PMC7387300 DOI: 10.1038/s41380-020-0704-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Psychiatry ISSN: 1359-4184 Impact factor: 15.992
Fig. 1Dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) voxel for MRS glutamate and glutathione estimation.
The coronal, sagittal and axial views of the MRS voxel (red square) are displayed on a single subject’s T1 structural image.
Sample demographic and clinical characteristics.
| Characteristic | Patient group ( | Healthy controls ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender (male/female) | 21/5 | 17/10 | 2.07 | 0.150 |
| Diagnosis (S/SA/SF) | 21/2/3 | |||
| Marital status (Mar/S) | 3/23 | 1/26 | 1.17 | 0.280 |
| Inpatient (Y/N) | 13/13 | |||
| Family Hx (Y/N/DN) | 10/12/4 | |||
| AP Dur (M/SD, days) | 6.94/3.3 | |||
| Total DDD-days at scan (M/SD) | 2.27/2.7 | |||
| DUP (weeks) (M/SD/median) | 28.34/65.03/10 | |||
| Ethnicity (Black/White/Other) | 2/20/4 | 0/18/9 | 0.68 | 0.41a |
| Age (M/SD) | 24.04/5.4 | 21.48/3.57 | −2.05 | 0.045b |
| SOFAS (M/SD) | 38.12/10.29 | 80.56/4.41 | 19.07 | 0.000b |
| PANSS-8 total (M/SD) | 25.23/5.08 | |||
| Time to res (M/SD; weeks) | 6.6/5.4 | |||
| On LAI 1 month (Y/N) | 12/14 | |||
| AP 1 month (O/A/P/B/M/S/C/NM) | 7/2/3/1/4/7/1/1 | |||
| Smoker (yes/no) | 0/27 | 9/17 | 8.94 | 0.001b |
| Cannabis user (yes/no) | 18/8 | 8/19 | 8.31 | 0.004 |
| Glutamate (M/SD) | 8.51/2.05 | 8.35/2.30 | −0.266 | 0.791 |
| Glutathione (M/SD) | 1.74/0.39 | 1.68/0.52 | −0.412 | 0.682 |
P values for differences between groups were calculated using chi-square analyses for categorical variables, and independent t tests for continuous variables.
S schizophrenia, SA schizoaffective disorder, SF schizophreniform disorder, Mar married, S single, Hx history, Y yes, N no, DN don’t know, AP antipsychotic, Dur duration, DDD defined daily dose, M mean, SD standard deviation, DUP duration untreated psychosis, res response, O olanzapine, A Aripiprazole, P paliperidone, B brexpiprazole, M Aripiprazole LAI, S paliperidone LAI, C risperidone LAI, NM not taking meds.
aWhite vs non-White comparison.
bChi-square with Yates continuity correction.
Fig. 2Association of dorsal anterior cingulate metabolites with outcome measures.
a Relationship between the estimated concentration of glutathione in millimolar units and the time taken to reach 50% reduction in the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS-8 items) score among patients with first-episode psychosis. b Relationship between estimated concentration of glutamate in millimolar units and baseline functioning assessed using Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale (SOFAS) score among patients with first-episode psychosis.
Fig. 3Correlation between glutamate and glutathione in patients and healthy controls.
Left panel (circles): Relationship between the estimated concentration of glutathione in millimolar units and glutamate in millimolar units among healthy control subjects. Right panel (diamonds): Relationship between the estimated concentration of glutathione in millimolar units and glutamate in millimolar units among patients with first-episode psychosis.
ACC glutamate and GSH levels in patients in remission, not in remission, and healthy controls.
| Metabolite | All Patients (M/SD) ( | Remission (M/SD) ( | No Remission(M/SD) ( | HC (M/SD) ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glutamate (mM) | 8.51/2.05 | 8.73/2.30 | 8.34/1.91 | 8.35/2.30 |
| GSH (mM) | 1.74/0.39 | 1.85/0.48 | 1.65/0.30 | 1.68/0.52 |
Remission status was calculated at 1 month.
HC healthy controls.