| Literature DB >> 36045588 |
Crystal Zhou1,2, David J Nutt3, Simon Jc Davies1.
Abstract
Drugs used to treat psychotic disorders ('antipsychotics') have been widely used in psychiatry since the introduction of chlorpromazine in the mid-1950s. The categorization of these drugs evolved in a piecemeal way, relying initially on grouping by chemical structure (e.g. phenothiazines, butyrophenones), then by epoch of introduction (e.g. first generation ('conventional') vs second generation ('atypical')). As psychopharmacological expertise has advanced, it has become possible to quantify affinities for each drug in this class for relevant receptors including dopamine D2, 5HT2A, 5HT2C, histamine H1 and others. However, until the recent emergence of a new generation of agents known collectively as dopamine D2 receptor partial agonists (e.g. aripiprazole, brexpiprazole and cariprazine), there had been little reference in drug classification to specific pharmacological properties. An overview of data on receptor affinities across multiple drugs and receptor types would permit categorization according to binding affinities and putative pharmacological mechanisms. In this paper, we have attempted to construct a 'subway map' of 32 drugs used for treatment of psychotic disorders. This design allows a visualization of both the historical classifications by structure and epoch of introduction, and of the binding affinities for key receptors based on appraisal of scientific literature. The map represents a step towards categorization by mechanism, allowing prescribers and patients to understand which drugs share common biological features and the extent to which drugs may have similarities and differences in their mechanisms. In addition, this approach may encourage more logical groupings of drugs to be used in systematic reviews and meta-analyses.Entities:
Keywords: Antipsychotics; classification; dopamine; drugs for psychosis; psychopharmacology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36045588 PMCID: PMC9516596 DOI: 10.1177/02698811221115758
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Psychopharmacol ISSN: 0269-8811 Impact factor: 4.562
Map design principles.
| The following principles determined drug locations, colours, groupings,
connections and additional mechanistic information for the simplified ( |
Figure 1.Map of 32 drugs used in treatment of psychosis (simplified version). As described in Table 1, drug locations are determined by affinity for the dopamine D2 receptor (vertical) and year first came to market (horizontal). Drugs are grouped by zone (‘conventional’/first generation vs ‘atypical’/second generation vs D2 receptor partial agonists/third generation). Solid connecting lines represent grouping by chemical structure (first-generation drugs) versus second or third generation. Dashed connecting lines represent potential (but rarely used) grouping by chemical structure for second-generation drugs. Double lines connect drugs closely related through chirality or metabolism.
Figure 2.Map of 32 drugs used in treatment of psychosis (full version). This figure contains all of the information described for Figure 1. In addition, for 27 drugs remaining in common use (excluding the five shown in italics), affinities for six additional receptors: 5HT2A and 5HT2C receptors, alpha 2 adrenoceptor, histamine H1 receptor and acetyl choline M4/M1 receptors are illustrated by the appropriate symbols.
Receptors and ligands searched in PDSP and where necessary from other sources as specified.
| Receptors* | Ligands where Ki for dopamine D2 receptor listed in PDSP | Ligands where alternative sources were required for Ki for dopamine D2 receptor |
|---|---|---|
| Dopamine D2 | Amisulpride | Blonanserin ( |
For drugs of historical interest which are no longer available in most markets (clopenthixol, droperidol, iloperidone, sertindole and thioridazine) only dopamine D2 was searched.
PDSP: Psychoactive Drug Screening Project.
Missing data for drug/receptor pairs from PDSP Ki database or alternative sources referenced in Table 2, illustrated by dark grey rectangles.
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