| Literature DB >> 33800403 |
Marco Carli1, Shivakumar Kolachalam1, Biancamaria Longoni1, Anna Pintaudi1, Marco Baldini1, Stefano Aringhieri1, Irene Fasciani2, Paolo Annibale3, Roberto Maggio2, Marco Scarselli1.
Abstract
Atypical antipsychotics (AAPs) are commonly prescribed medications to treat schizophrenia, bipolar disorders and other psychotic disorders. However, they might cause metabolic syndrome (MetS) in terms of weight gain, dyslipidemia, type 2 diabetes (T2D), and high blood pressure, which are responsible for reduced life expectancy and poor adherence. Importantly, there is clear evidence that early metabolic disturbances can precede weight gain, even if the latter still remains the hallmark of AAPs use. In fact, AAPs interfere profoundly with glucose and lipid homeostasis acting mostly on hypothalamus, liver, pancreatic β-cells, adipose tissue, and skeletal muscle. Their actions on hypothalamic centers via dopamine, serotonin, acetylcholine, and histamine receptors affect neuropeptides and 5'AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) activity, thus producing a supraphysiological sympathetic outflow augmenting levels of glucagon and hepatic glucose production. In addition, altered insulin secretion, dyslipidemia, fat deposition in the liver and adipose tissues, and insulin resistance become aggravating factors for MetS. In clinical practice, among AAPs, olanzapine and clozapine are associated with the highest risk of MetS, whereas quetiapine, risperidone, asenapine and amisulpride cause moderate alterations. The new AAPs such as ziprasidone, lurasidone and the partial agonist aripiprazole seem more tolerable on the metabolic profile. However, these aspects must be considered together with the differences among AAPs in terms of their efficacy, where clozapine still remains the most effective. Intriguingly, there seems to be a correlation between AAP's higher clinical efficacy and increase risk of metabolic alterations. Finally, a multidisciplinary approach combining psychoeducation and therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) is proposed as a first-line strategy to avoid the MetS. In addition, pharmacological treatments are discussed as well.Entities:
Keywords: G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs); atypical antipsychotics (AAPs); clozapine; dyslipidemia; metabolic syndrome (MetS); olanzapine; type 2 diabetes; weight gain
Year: 2021 PMID: 33800403 PMCID: PMC8001502 DOI: 10.3390/ph14030238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1The concept of spectrum of atypia was recently introduced to classify atypical antipsychotics (AAPs). They can be divided in three categories, where risperidone is least atypical (Level I) and clozapine is most atypical (Level III), while all others fall within these two extremes of the spectrum (Level II). The molecular targets shown on the right add up, beginning with the D2 and 5-HT2A,C receptors that are common targets for all AAPs, extending to additional mechanisms such as M1 positive allosterism and GlyT (glycine transporter) activity that seem specific to clozapine. Other targets, such as H1 and α2 receptors and BDNF, are relevant to both Level II and III of atypia [7].
Figure 2The AAPs-induced metabolic syndrome (MetS) is the consequence of a broad activity of these drugs on the central nervous system (CNS) and peripheral organs. In the CNS, the most important target is the hypothalamus, while in the periphery, the liver, pancreatic β-cells, adipose tissue and skeletal muscle are implicated in AAPs-induced MetS. By interfering with the activity of different GPCRs expressed in these regions, AAPs significantly alter glucose and lipid homeostasis.
Clinical differences between AAPs in terms of negative/cognitive symptoms improvement, MetS (gain, T2D, dyslipidemia) and parkinsonism. Based on reviews and meta-analysis studies [8,107], values are reported as very high (++++), high (+++), moderate (++), low (+), very rare (+/−), and with no effect (0).
| AAPs | Negative/Cognitive | Weight Gain | Diabetes (T2D) | Dyslipidemia | Parkinsonism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clozapine | ++++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | 0 |
| Olanzapine | +++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | +/− |
| Quetiapine | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | +/− |
| Risperidone | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ |
| Amisulpride | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ |
| Asenapine | ++ | + | + | + | + |
| Lurasidone | ++ | + | + | + | + |
| Ziprasidone | ++ | + | + | + | + |
| Aripiprazole | ++ | + | + | + | + |
Clinical studies evaluating pharmacological interventions against AAPs-induced MetS.
| Added Treatment | AAP | Study | Pharmacological Response | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Double-blind study: 25 patients randomly assigned to olanzapine plus metformin or olanzapine plus placebo for 24 weeks. | Metformin-group gained 3% of body weight compared to 7% for placebo group. BMI change was 0.85 in metformin-group vs. 2.02 in placebo-group. | [ |
| 40 patients randomly assigned treatment with olanzapine plus metformin or olanzapine plus placebo for 12 weeks. | Metformin-group vs. placebo group resulted in lower increase in body weight (1.90 vs. 6.87), fasting insulin level (0.81 vs. 6.78) and insulin resistance index (0.22 vs. 1.49). | [ | ||
| 80 patients taking olanzapine were randomized metformin or placebo comedication treatment for 12 weeks. | Body weight change was −1.4 in metformin-group and non-significant in placebo. Insulin resistance increased after placebo and not after metformin. | [ | ||
| 40 patients taking olanzapine were assigned to metformin or placebo for 14 weeks. | No significant improvements for treated vs. placebo group. | [ | ||
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| 55 subjects taking clozapine for at least 3 months, were assigned to metformin or placebo for 24 weeks. | Body weight, BMI, fasting plasma glucose, HDL, insulin level had significant changes in the metformin-group. | [ | |
| 61 patients treated with clozapine were randomly assigned to metformin extended release or placebo for 14 weeks. | Mean change in body weight was −1.87 kg for metformin-group and 0.16kg for placebo-group Insulin and the triglyceride/HDL ratio significantly decreased after metformin. | [ | ||
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| 12-week double blind study on 30 patients treated with olanzapine were allocated to rosiglitazione or placebo. | Insulin and the insulin resistance significantly decreased after rosiglitazone, while no effect was seen on weight gain and lipid profile. | [ |
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| 8-week double blind, placebo-controlled trial of rosiglitazone 4 mg/day in 18 clozapine-treated schizophrenia subjects with insulin resistance. | Non-significant improvement on glucose utilization and insulin sensitivity index; significant reduction in LDL level in rosiglitazone group. | [ | |
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| 103 patients with a BMI > 27 and prediabetes randomly assigned to liraglutide or placebo for 16 weeks. | Liraglutide-group (63.8%) developed normal glucose tolerance compared with placebo-group (16%). Liraglutide induced a placebo-subtracted body weight loss of 5.3 kg. | [ |
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| 28 patients treated with clozapine randomly assigned to exenatide extended release or standard care for 24 weeks. | 6 people on exenatide achieved >5% weight loss vs. 1 usual care. Participants on exenatide had greater weight loss (−5.29 kg vs. −1.12 kg), BMI reduction (−1.78 vs. −0.39), reduced fasting glucose (−0.34 vs. 0.39) and HbA1c (−0.21 vs. 0.03) compared to control. | [ |