| Literature DB >> 35831706 |
Tanja Veselinović1,2, Irene Neuner3,4,5.
Abstract
Cognitive impairments associated with schizophrenia (CIAS) represent a central element of the symptomatology of this severe mental disorder. CIAS substantially determine the disease prognosis and hardly, if at all, respond to treatment with currently available antipsychotics. Remarkably, all drugs presently approved for the treatment of schizophrenia are, to varying degrees, dopamine D2/D3 receptor blockers. In turn, rapidly growing evidence suggests the immense significance of systems other than the dopaminergic system in the genesis of CIAS. Accordingly, current efforts addressing the unmet needs of patients with schizophrenia are primarily based on interventions in other non-dopaminergic systems. In this review article, we provide a brief overview of the available evidence on the importance of specific systems in the development of CIAS. In addition, we describe the promising targets for the development of new drugs that have been used so far. In doing so, we present the most important candidates that have been investigated in the field of the specific systems in recent years and present a summary of the results available at the time of drafting this review (May 2022), as well as the currently ongoing studies.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35831706 PMCID: PMC9345797 DOI: 10.1007/s40263-022-00935-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Drugs ISSN: 1172-7047 Impact factor: 6.497
Brief overview of the main targets for the development of new drugs, the most important candidates that have been investigated in the field of the specific systems in recent years, and a summary of the results available at the time of drafting this review (May 2022), as well as the currently ongoing studies
| Acting mechanism | Substances | Dosage | Usage | Safety aspects | Current findings regarding the effects on cognition | Ongoing investigations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glutamatergic system | ||||||
| Direct co-activation of the NMDA-R via GlyMS | Glycine | 0.14–0.8 g/kg/day | Add on | Well tolerated in low dosages High-dose glycine can result in unwanted adverse effects, such as nausea and sensorimotor gating deficits [ | Heterogeneous results [ Negative overall evaluation by two reviews suggesting that none of the three agents is a generally effective therapeutic option for treating negative symptoms or cognitive impairments in schizophrenia [ Positive reports indicating beneficial effects of higher dosages of D-serine on some cognitive parameters and neuroplasticity [ | |
| 25–250 mg/day | Add on | Generally unfavorable benefit-risk ratio [ | ||||
| Up to 60 mg/kg (~ 4 g/day) | Add on | Well tolerated in low dosages High concentrations can lead to peripheral neuropathies, such as oxidative damage, neurotoxicity, and renal toxicity [ | NCT04140773 NCT05046353 | |||
| Indirect co-activation of the NMDA-R via glycine reuptake inhibition by GlyT-1 inhibition | Sarcosine | 1–2 g/day | Add on | Well tolerated without dropouts because of severe adverse reactions or death [ | Insufficient evidence for positive effects on cognitive impairment associated with schizophrenia despite the evidence of positive effects on overall symptomatology [ | |
| Bitopertin | 5–60 mg/day | Add on | Generally well tolerated; common AEs (incidence ≥ 5%) included somnolence, dizziness, and headache [ Reduction in mean hemoglobin levels in some patients [ | No evidence for positive effects on cognitive impairment in schizophrenia despite the evidence of positive effects on negative symptoms [ | ||
| BI 425809 | 10–25 mg | Add on | Generally well tolerated; most commonly reported AEs: headache, back pain, nausea, vomiting, and neck pain [ | Positive results from a phase I study [ Improved cognition after 12 treatment weeks in one phase II study [ BTD for BI 425809 for the treatment of CIAS was granted in May 2021 by the FDA [ | NCT03859973 NCT04846868 (CONNEX-1) NCT04846881 (CONNEX-2) NCT04860830 (CONNEX-3) NCT05211947 | |
| PF-03463275 | 40–60 mg | Add on | Not reported | Lack of attenuation of any ketamine-induced effects but improvement of working memory accuracy in healthy control subjects and increased long-term potentiation in patients with schizophrenia, indicating an increase in neuroplastic capacity during cognitive remediation and other rehabilitative treatment [ However, the substance was not listed in Pfizer’s pipeline released in February 2022 [ | NCT01911676 | |
| Indirect modulation of NMDA-R function by reducing the | Sodium benzoate | 1–2 g/day | Add on | Well tolerated; only mild AE: weight gain, insomnia, tachycardia, concentration impairments [ Classified as ‘generally recognized as safe’ by the FDA [ | Heterogeneous results showing positive effects on neurocognition and positive and negative symptoms in patients with chronic schizophrenia [ | NCT01908192 NCT03094429 ACTRN12621000327886 |
| TAK-831 (luvadaxistat) | 50–500 mg | Add on | Generally well tolerated; only mild AEs were reported: headache, insomnia, and weight gain [ | Positive phase II study: beneficial effects on cognition in participants with schizophrenia with luvadaxistat 50 mg vs placebo but not with luvadaxistat 125 mg or 500 mg [ | NCT05182476 | |
| Direct positive allosteric modulation of NMDA-R receptors | CAD-9303 | 3–1000 mg | Add on | Not reported | Under development by Cadent Therapeutics (in the meantime, part of Novartis) to address the negative and cognitive symptoms of schizophrenia (one completed phase I study, no results posted up to now [NCT04306146]) | |
| Enhancement of NMDA-R activity via redox/glutathione sensitive site by increasing the glutathione levels | 600–3600 mg/day | Add on | Well tolerated; no significant side effects; beneficial metabolic effects [ | Positive evidence for significant cognitive improvements following N-acetylcysteine treatment reported in a comprehensive systematic review [ | NCT02505477 NCT05142735 NCT03149107 NCT04013555 | |
| Non-competitive NMDA-R antagonism | Memantine | Up to 20 mg/day | Add on | Well tolerated; no significant side effects [ | Heterogeneous results Two comprehensive meta-analyses reported adjunctive therapy with memantine to have a beneficial effect, mainly on negative symptoms, but also on neurocognitive functions [ | NCT04857983 NCT03860597 NCT04789915 |
| AVP-786 (d6), a combination of dextromethorphan hydrobromide and ultra-low-dose quinidine sulfate | 34/4.9 mg twice a day | Add on | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: dry mouth, diarrhea, dizziness headache, and nasopharyngitis [ | A promising treatment option for Alzheimer’s disease, including agitation [ Trend-like beneficial effects on cognition in schizophrenia (NCT02477670) | NCT03896945 | |
| Allosteric potentiators of AMPA receptors (AMPAkines) | BIIB104 (PF-04958242) | 0.15–0. 5 mg/twice a day | Add on | Well tolerated [ | Reduction in ketamine-induced impairments in immediate recall and the 2-Back and spatial working memory tasks in 29 healthy male subjects [ | NCT05152485 NCT05148481 NCT04079101 NCT03745820 |
| CX-516 | 900 mg three times daily | Add on | Generally well tolerated with more fatigue, insomnia, and epigastric discomfort compared with placebo treatment [ | Beneficial effects on memory and attention in patients treated with clozapine in a pilot trial [ Negative results in a later larger study with CX-516 as an add-on to a standard antipsychotic treatment [ | ||
| mGlu-R- 2/3 agonist | Pomaglumetad methionil (LY2140023 monohydrate, prodrug of the mGlu 2/3 agonist, LY404039) | 80–160 mg/day | Monotherapy | Well tolerated; AEs with highest incidence: gastrointestinal symptoms and headache [ | Despite an earlier study showing positive effects [ Hints that the substance was more effective in certain populations, including early-in-disease patients [ Encouraging results from a pharmaco-MRI study in healthy controls [ | |
| mGlu-R-2 selective PAMs | JNJ40411813/ADX71149 | 100–450 mg/day | Add on | Well tolerated; most common AEs: headache, dizziness, and fatigue [ | A generally good tolerability demonstrated in two randomized, double-blind phase I studies [ Trend towards a reduction of cognitive deficits in attention and episodic memory precipitated by smoking withdrawal in a subpopulation of healthy volunteers, but without a statistical significance [ | |
| AZD8529 | 40–80 mg/day | Monotherapy/add on | Well tolerated; most common AEs: headache, akathisia, sedation, anxiety, and increased appetite [ | No improvement of symptoms in schizophrenia in a proof-of-principle study [ Increased activation in task-activated fronto-striatal regions, as a hint that the substance may be beneficial for an important subset of individuals with schizophrenia [ | ||
| Cholinergic system | ||||||
| AChE-Is | Donepezil | 5–10 mg/day | Add on | Well tolerated. No significant differences between patients receiving AChE-I and placebo regarding occurrence of AEs [ | Weak evidence for a beneficial effect of the use of AChE-Is in combination with antipsychotics on a few domains of mental state and cognition [ Lack of evidence [ Evidence for a small positive effect of galantamine [ | |
| Rivastigmine | 3–12 mg/day | Add on | ||||
| Galantamine | 6–24 mg/day | Add on | ||||
| Muscarinic agonists | Xanomeline | 25–75 mg | Monotherapy | Frequent AEs, mostly associated with the gastrointestinal system [ | Positive effect on psychotic symptoms and cognitive effects in patients with schizophrenia [ | |
| KarXT (xanomeline + trospium chloride) | 50/20 mg to 125/30 mg twice a day | Monotherapy/add on | Generally well tolerated; most common AEs: constipation, nausea, dry mouth, dyspepsia, and vomiting [ | Positive results regarding improvement of psychotic symptoms originating from a phase II study [ Trends towards improvement in cognition in an exploratory analysis in cognition [ | NCT04659161 NCT04659174 NCT04820309 NCT05145413 NCT04738123 NCT05304767 | |
| Selective agonist of muscarinic M1 receptors | 100–200 mg twice a day | Monotherapy | Generally well tolerated; most common AEs: increased salivation, tachycardia, and dyspepsia, which were noted to be dose related [ | Lack of efficacy showed in a phase IIb trial [ | ||
| PAM of M1 receptors | ACP-319 | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Early development for the improvement of cognitive function and other neuropsychiatric symptoms in patients with CNS disorders [ | |
| PAM of M4 receptors | CVL-231 (emraclidine) | 10–30 mg/day | Monotherapy | Well tolerated; most common AEs gastrointestinal, similar to placebo [ | Positive top-line results for CVL-231 in a phase Ib clinical trial in patients with schizophrenia [ | NCT05106309 NCT04787302 NCT05245539 NCT05227703 NCT05227690 [ |
| Selective alpha7-nACh-Rs partial agonist | Encenicline (EVP-6124) | 1–2 mg | Add on | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AE: mild constipation negative [ | Positive effects of encenicline on cognition in schizophrenia were observed in studies with a small number of participants [ | |
| ABT-126 | 25 or 75 mg | Add on | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: diarrhea, dizziness, headache, nausea, fatigue, and nasopharyngitis [ | Pro-cognitive effects limited to non-smokers in a phase II study [ A lack of beneficial effects on cognition in light smokers [ | ||
| Positive allosteric modulators of the alpha7-nAChRs | AVL-3288 | 10–30 mg | Add on | Not reported | Some promising effects on cognition in schizophrenia in preclinical and first clinical studies, but a lack of positive effects in a larger phase Ib study [ | |
| JNJ-39393406 | 200 mg | Add on | Well tolerated [ | Absence of a cognitive improvement in schizophrenia [ | ||
| Serotonergic system | ||||||
| Partial inverse agonist and antagonist at serotonergic 5-HT2A receptors | Pimavanserin | 10–34 mg | Add on | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: headache and somnolence [ | Enhancement of the efficacy of low-dose risperidone [ Add on to clozapine reduced therapy-refractory hallucinations and delusions after several months of treatment [ Significant improvement of the negative symptoms, but not of the general symptoms in a large phase II study in stable outpatients with schizophrenia [ | NCT03121586 NCT04531982 |
| Antagonist 5-HT2A receptors and at sigma-2 receptors | Roluperidone (MIN-101) | 32–64 mg/day | Monotherapy | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: headache, anxiety, insomnia, nausea, somnolence, and agitation | Statistically significant efficacy in reducing negative symptoms and good tolerability in a phase IIb study in 244 stable patients with schizophrenia [ In a post hoc analysis: some pro-cognitive effects of MIN-101 that correlated significantly with the improvement of negative symptoms [ Improvement of negative symptoms (marginally missing statistical significance), and statistically significant improvements in the Personal and Social Performance Scale total score under roluperidone 64 mg/day (phase II study, After a type C meeting with the FDA, Minerva Neurosciences announced in April 2022 further steps towards a new drug application (FDA) for roluperidone as a monotherapy for patients diagnosed with schizophrenia with moderate-to-severe negative symptoms and stable positive symptoms [ | |
| Selective 5-HT6 receptor antagonist | AVN-211 | 4–8 mg | Add on | Well tolerated [ | Pro-cognitive effects (attention improvement) as an add-on to antipsychotic medication in a pilot 4-week trial in patients with schizophrenia [ One later study on a larger sample showed positive sex-related effects on the positive and negative symptoms favoring female individuals [ | According to the pharmaceutical manufacturer (Avineuro), there are ongoing phase II/III clinical trials with AVN-211 (AVISETRON) [ |
| ANV-322, AVN-101 | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | Early development, precognitive effects in animal models [ | According to the manufacturer, ready to enter phase II clinical trials for treating diseases associated with cognitive dysfunction [ | |
| Dopaminergic system | ||||||
| PAM at the D1 receptors | Mevidalen (LY-3154207) | 25–200 mg/day | Add on | Dose-proportional increases in blood pressure, pulse, and activation [ | Some pro-cognitive effects originating from preclinical experiments [ A lack of beneficial effects on cognition in Lewy body dementia [ | |
| ASP4345 | 3–150 mg | Add on | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: headache and somnolence [ | Pro-cognitive effects shown in a phase I study [ Further development stopped because the primary endpoint of the assay was not reached [ | ||
| Selective dopamine D1/D5 receptor partial agonist | PF-06412562 (CVL-562) | 1–45 mg/day | Add on | Generally well tolerated with only mild-to-moderate side effects including tiredness, headache, nausea, vomiting, and dizziness [ | No clinical benefit relative to placebo on assessments of cognition or reward processing in symptomatically stable patients over a 15-day treatment period [ Hints of a beneficial effects if cognition following an inversed U-shape relationship [ | NCT04457310 |
| Activity on serotonergic, dopaminergic, and α-adrenergic receptors, with a significantly higher affinity to the D1 than for the D2 receptor | Lu AF35700 | 10–20 mg/day | Add on | Generally well tolerated [ | No significant difference from placebo an add-on to treatment with an atypical antipsychotic in a recent phase III study (NCT03230864) [ | |
| Preferential D3- vs D2-receptor antagonism and partial agonism at 5HT1A receptors | F17464 | 20–40 mg/day | Monotherapy | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: insomnia, agitation, and increased triglycerides [ | Pro-cognitive effects demonstrated in a phase II study [ | |
| Dopamine-serotonin system stabilizer with an optimum balance of potent partial agonist activity at the dopamine D2, D3, D4, serotonin 5-HT1A and 5-HT2A receptors, and antagonist activity at the serotonin 5-HT6 and 5-HT7 receptors | RP5063 (brilaroxazine) | Monotherapy | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: insomnia and agitation [ | Trends toward cognitive improvement in a phase II trial [ Improved social functioning and cognition [ | NCT05184335 | |
| Cannabinoid 1 receptor antagonism | Cannabidiol | 300–1280 mg/day | Add on or monotherapy | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: mild sedation, mild transient, GI discomfort, and hyperlipidemia | Two systematic reviews found some evidence for the potential of cannabidiol in alleviating psychotic symptoms and cognitive impairment in patients with a variety of conditions [ A lack of clinical evidence for beneficial effects of cannabidiol against cognitive impairments was stated from other systematic reviews [ | NCT02926859 NCT04605393 NCT02088060 NCT02504151 NCT03608137 NCT04700930 NCT04411225 NCT02492074 NCT04105231 |
| Phosphodiesterase 4 inhibitors | Roflumilast | 100 µg and 250 µg | Add on | Not reported | Cognitive-enhancing effects in both animal studies [ Improvement of some EEG biomarkers with 250 μg of roflumilast has been reported [ | |
| PD10A inhibitors | TAK-063 | 20 mg | Monotherapy | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: akathisia, somnolence, dyspepsia, headache, and nausea [ | Pro-cognitive effects in preclinical studies [ Negative results from a phase II study [ In one additional neuroimaging study on healthy male participants, TAK-063 attenuated ketamine-induced changes in functional MRI signals were found in multiple regions of the brain during the resting state and working memory tasks [ | |
| MK-8189 | 4–24 mg | Monotherapy | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: diarrhea, akathisia, nausea, and headache [ | Negative phase II study results (NCT03055338) [ | NCT04624243 NCT04506905 | |
| Phosphodiesterase 9 inhibitors | BI 409306 | 10–100 mg/day | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: eye disorders, nasopharyngitis, diarrhea, insomnia, nausea, and headache [ | Lack of significant effects on cognitive function in patients with schizophrenia in a phase II trial [ | NCT03230097 | |
| Agonism at TAAR1 and serotonin 5-HT1A receptors | Ulotaront (SEP-363856 or SEP-856) | 50–75 mg/day | Monotherapy | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: somnolence, agitation, nausea, diarrhea, and dyspepsia [ | Positive results from randomized controlled trials regarding positive and negative symptoms [ Positive results from the 26-week, open-label extension study regarding PANSS total and CGI [ Positive evidence regarding pro-cognitive effects from preclinical studies [ BTD by the FDA for the treatment of patients with schizophrenia in in May 2019 [ | NCT04109950 NCT04038957 NCT04865835 NCT04825860 NCT04072354 NCT04092686 NCT04115319 |
| Voltage-gated sodium channel blocker | Evenamide (NW-3509) | 30–50 mg/day | Add on | Generally well tolerated; two patients taking evenamide discontinued treatment because of AEs (atrial fibrillation and seizure) | Positive results from a phase II study [ Pro-cognitive effects shown in animal studies [ | EudraCT Number: 2020-006062-36 (phase II/III) |
| Broad-spectrum antibiotic from the tetracycline family | Minocycline | 50–200 mg | Add on | Generally well tolerated; most frequent AEs: nausea, headache, dizziness, anorexia, vomiting, tooth discoloration and visual disturbances, skin discoloration, vertigo, and psychosis [ Some concerns were raised regarding a possible antibiotic-resistance [ | Beneficial effects on the cognitive domains of visual learning, executive function and attention [ More beneficial in first-episode psychosis or early-phase schizophrenia [ Negative results regarding negative symptoms and cognitive impairments in patients with recent-onset psychosis [ | |
| Downregulation of the key inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-16, and interleukin-12 | Davunetide | 5–30 mg | Add on | Well tolerated [ | Some pro-cognitive effects; more beneficial in first-episode psychosis or early-phase schizophrenia [ | |
| Interleukin-6 receptor antibody | Tocilizumab | 3-monthly infusions of 8 mg/kg | Add on | Generally well tolerated and all adverse events were mild [ | Positive effects on cognitive impairments in schizophrenia, open-label pilot trial [ Negative results from a larger randomized controlled trial ( | NCT02874573 |
| Anti-interleukin-6 chimeric monoclonal antibody | Siltuximab | Three infusions of 11 mg/kg in 3-week intervals | Add on | Not reported | Preclinical evidence [ | NCT02796859 |
| Neurosteroids and neuroactive steroids | Pregnenolone | 50–200 mg/day | Add on | Well tolerated | Significant reduction in the deficits in visual attention, sustained attention, and executive functions [ Improvement in functional capacity and communication [ More beneficial in first-episode psychosis or early-phase schizophrenia [ | |
| Dehydroepiandrosterone | 200 mg/day | Add on | Well tolerated | Significant improvement in cognitive functions of visual sustained attention and visual and movement skills [ | ||
| Oxytocin | 10–48 IU/day up to 40 IU twice daily intranasal | Add on | Well tolerated | A comprehensive meta-analysis that included 17 studies showed a small significant effect on theory of mind in patients with neurodevelopmental disorders (including schizophrenia) [ Additionally, positive effects of oxytocin have been reported on emotional recognition [ | NCT03900754 NCT04177719 NCT03245437 | |
AChE-I acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, AEs adverse events, AMPA-R a-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoazolepropionic acid receptors, BTD breakthrough therapy designation, CGI Clinical Global Impression, CNS central nervous system, DAO D-amino acid oxidase, EEG electroencephalogram, FDA US Food and Drug Administration, GlyMS glycine modulatory site, GlyT-1 glycine transporter 1, mGlu-R metabotropic glutamate receptors, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, nACh-Rs nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, NMDA-R N-methyl- D-aspartate receptors, PAM positive allosteric modulator, PANSS Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, RCT randomized controlled trial, TAAR1 Trace Amine-Associated Receptor 1, VGSCs voltage-gated sodium channels
| Current efforts to address cognitive impairments associated with schizophrenia are primarily based on interventions in non-dopaminergic systems. |
| Among the numerous compounds currently under investigation, the development of the selective glycine transporter inhibitor BI 425809 and the TAAR1 agonist ulotaront (SEP-363856) is the most advanced. Both compounds have been granted a breakthrough therapy designation by the US Food and Drug Administration. |
| Other substances in advanced stages of development are the combined muscarinergic agonist/antagonist formulation KarXT, the serotonin 5HT2A receptor antagonists roluperidone (MIN-101) and pimavanserin, the selective 5-HT6 receptor antagonist AVN-211 as well as the dopamine-serotonin system stabilizer RP5063 (brilaroxazine). |
| Finally, the large phenotypic heterogeneity of the schizophrenia symptomatology implies an associated high neurobiological diversity that can only be adequately addressed by individualized treatment approaches. |