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Home » Bipolar Disorder

Psychiatric Times. Vol. 26 No. 8
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DEPRESSION 

Treatment-Resistant Depression

Management Strategies

By James G. Barbee, MD | July 27, 2009
Dr. Barbee is George C. Dunn, MD professor of psychiatry, professor of neurology and pharmacology at the Louisiana State University Medical Center in New Orleans. The author reports that he is a consultant for Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS) and Jazz Pharmaceuticals; and he has received research support from BMS, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, PamLab, and Wyeth Ayerst.

What we need are agents with novel mechanisms of action. As indicated in Table 2, there is a rich pipeline of candidates. Some of these agents, such as agomelatine, are relatively far along in the clinical trial process with human subjects. Others, such as amibegron and sipatrigine, have been shown to be efficacious only in animal models of depression and their benefit is therefore highly speculative.15-17 Some of the drugs have been tried as augmentation agents as well (eg, riluzole(Drug information on riluzole)). Agents such as pramipexole(Drug information on pramipexole), memantine, riluzole, and ketoconazole(Drug information on ketoconazole) are already available in the United States.

Proposed mechanisms of action vary widely, but 2 development strategies are generating a great deal of activity:

• Agents are being developed that affect corticosteroid function at various levels. (Glucocorticoids have figured prominently in recent theories as major agents in stress-induced neuronal injury and cell death leading to depression.18)

• Compounds are being developed that induce the synthesis of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), particularly through their effects on glutamate receptors.

(MORE: Treatment-Resistant Schizophrenia)

Click to EnlargeIn a sense, these 2 strategies are related: it has been proposed that BDNF acts as a modulator of neuronal repair and even neurogenesis in response to cortisol-induced brain injury. The findings with ketamine(Drug information on ketamine) are particularly exciting. A recent study reported that ketamine, through its activity as an N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-receptor antagonist, increases synaptic glutamate and therefore stimulates a-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptors (both NMDA and AMPA receptors are subtypes of glutamate receptors).19 AMPA potentiators are known to induce BDNF production more rapidly than current antidepressants.20 It has been hypothesized that a more rapid induction of BDNF would lead to a faster onset of antidepressant action. In a study by Zarate and colleagues,21 the onset of the antidepressant effect of ketamine occurred within 2 hours. Unfortunately, the drug must be given by intravenous infusion, but because the effect persisted for 7 days, ketamine treatment may be useful if given as a series.

Another NMDA-receptor antagonist now available in the United States is memantine (FDA-approved for Alzheimer disease). Memantine was shown to be effective in an open-label study in major depression. In a double-blind, randomized trial it showed comparable effects to escitalopram(Drug information on escitalopram) in patients with major depression and alcohol(Drug information on alcohol) dependence.22,23 However memantine(Drug information on memantine) failed to separate from placebo in a double-blind, placebo-controlled study in major depression.24 The less robust antidepressant properties of memantine when compared with those of ketamine may be due to differing NMDA receptor binding properties between the 2 compounds.21

Combining agents

In this category there are 2 similar strategies: (1) combination, that is, combining 2 FDA-approved antidepressants with presumably complementary mechanisms of action; and (2) augmentation, in which a drug not approved as an antidepressant is used with an FDA-approved antidepressant. Such pairings can be used either at the beginning of therapy to speed the response (an accelerator strategy) or to improve the overall response, thereby enhancing the odds of achieving remission. As noted, when combining agents, one must be aware of possible CYP450-based pharmocokinetic interactions or other pharmacological interactions, such as the risk of serotonin syndrome when an SSRI is combined with an MAOI.

Combination strategies. Of the 2 strategies, the addition of a second antidepressant is the more intuitively obvious. Randomized controlled trials have supported the superior efficacy of a TCA/SSRI combination, as well as a mirtazapine(Drug information on mirtazapine)/SSRI combination; open studies have done the same for TCA/MAOI and SSRI/bupropion combinations.25 A positive retrospective chart review of 10 patients treated with a combination of duloxetine(Drug information on duloxetine) and bupropion has also been published.26

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by meck skate | March 24, 2010 4:11 AM EDT

So, if those depressed patients that simply don't get better on current medications that mainly work on 3 or so types of neurotransmitters, but do get dramatically better as soon as they receive an agent like buprenorphine, yet it gets No mentioning. No mentioning. Despite that many may be suicidal, the info about it, let alone treatment with it, is not being presented to them, despite overwhelming positive results in at least two studies, albeit small, but yet. And many anecdotal reports of its efficiency apparently exist. If everything else fails, and at least two studies show something else to be overwhelmingly helpful, shouldn't it at least be a last option?


As for buprenorphine being the 'only' agent able to correct that subgroup's biochemical deficiency. Well, at least as of currently. In the future an opioid may not be needed at all, but it seems the great majority of research still focuses on the same biochemical areas, despite wide spread knowledge that they don't cover for all depressive illnesses. What's the matter.


by meck skate | March 24, 2010 3:57 AM EDT

Ok, the millions of treatment resistant depressed patients should read articles like these with suspicion, in the cases where you've heard the story before. Try one ssri, combined with another ssri, or snri, and repeat, and repeat. Until it looks like they're just doing it to seem 'nice' not because it helps.

Read up studies on "buprenorphine"in the treatment of treatment resistant depressed patients, some that had even undergone ECT, without success. An overwhelming majority of subjects saw remission of their depressive symptoms. How hard is it to strongly suspect, in lack of any strong contradicting data, that those patients din't have any serotonin or norepinephrine deficencies? But had deficiencies that only agents like buprenorphine are able to correct.
It's just a travesty when even the top tier of the psychatric community appears to put taboo before healing.



Also in this Special Report

Introduction Underlying Causes and Implications

Chronic Eating Disorders

Treatment-Resistant Bipolar Disorder

Treatment-Resistant Depression

Borderline Personality Disorder and Resistance to Treatment

Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology

Treatment-Resistant Schizophrenia






 
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