Extending the specificity of mood stabilizers from clinical response to mortality reduction

IF 5.3 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Mirko Manchia
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An attempt to formulate some evidence-based taxonomic criteria suggested that an ideal mood stabilizer should be effective in: (a) treating acute manic symptoms; (b) treating acute depressive symptoms; (c) preventing manic symptoms; and (d) preventing depressive symptoms.<span><sup>1</sup></span> Lithium is probably the only mood stabilizer satisfying all these criteria, although it is less effective in treating bipolar depression.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Similarly, the clinical profile of anticonvulsants appears to be specific depending on the illness phase (acute and/or continuation/maintenance) and on the mood polarity. Indeed, lamotrigine is more effective in preventing depression, but not mania, and possibly in treating acute bipolar depression and rapid cycling.<span><sup>3</sup></span> Conversely, carbamazepine and valproic acid are effective in the treatment of acute mania, as well as in maintenance.<span><sup>3, 4</sup></span> The latter also shows more effectiveness in certain subgroups of patients presenting with mixed mania or mania with irritability, compared with other treatments.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span> Finally, antipsychotics also show effectiveness in preventing mood relapses,<span><sup>6</sup></span> with possibly higher efficacy in treating acute mixed episodes in bipolar disorder.<span><sup>7</sup></span> These patterns of efficacy/effectiveness appear to be associated with distinct clinical presentations that also show a degree of predictive power. This has indeed been demonstrated for lithium, where specific clinical characteristics, namely an episodic (mania-depression-interval) clinical course sequence, absence of rapid cycling, absence of psychotic symptoms, family history of bipolar disorder, shorter pre-lithium illness duration and later age of onset,<span><sup>8</sup></span> predict a good clinical response to lithium. Interestingly, a recent machine learning study, evaluated whether lithium responsiveness was predictable using clinical markers in a large multicenter sample of patients with bipolar disorder.<span><sup>9</sup></span> The authors showed that lithium responsiveness was predictable in the pooled sample with good accuracy area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.80 and a particularly low false-positive rate (0.91).<span><sup>9</sup></span> More importantly, features related to clinical course and the absence of rapid cycling appeared consistently informative in predicting lithium responsiveness.<span><sup>9</sup></span> Although identified with less robust analytical methodology, similar patterns of clinical features have been associated to valproic acid (mixed or dysphoric mania, early age at onset, rapid-cycling, concurrent substance abuse)<span><sup>10</sup></span> or lamotrigine (earlier onset of symptoms, non-episodic course of illness, rapid cycling, comorbidity with panic or substance use disorder, fewer hospitalizations, fewer prior medication trials and male gender) responsiveness.<span><sup>11</sup></span> Of note, these clinical (phenotypic) patterns of response appear to be underlined by specific genetic architectures as shown for lithium<span><sup>12</sup></span> and, more recently, for lamotrigine and valproic acid.<span><sup>13</sup></span> In this context, it is plausible to ask whether these agent-specific clinical properties (possibly regulated by distinct neurobiological mechanisms) extend beyond the resolution of acute symptoms and/or the control of mood recurrences. In this issue of the Journal, Chen and co-authors explored the hypothesis that the use of mood stabilizers could modulate the risks of all-cause mortality, suicide, and natural mortality in individuals affected by bipolar disorder.<span><sup>14</sup></span> To this end, they studied a cohort of 25,787 patients with bipolar disorder whose data were available in the Taiwan's National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD). Of these, 4,000 died after the index admission between February 1, 2001, and December 31, 2016, with suicide accounting for 760 cases (19.0%), and natural causes accounting for 2,947 cases (73.7%).<span><sup>14</sup></span> Importantly, the authors showed that mood stabilizers significantly decreased the risks of all-cause mortality, suicide and natural mortality in the initial 5-year period. This protective effect was particularly high for lithium, and to a lesser extent for valproic acid, while lamotrigine and carbamazepine did not influence the risk of mortality. In addition, lithium exerted a dose-dependent effect on mortality risk reduction, which was detected in patients with a longer duration of lithium use as well as in those using a higher cumulative dose of the drug. This dose dependent risk reduction was also observable with valproic acid use. Importantly, the sensitivity analysis accounted for the immortal time bias, which can influence the results of this type of epidemiological cohort studies.</p><p>These findings are really timely as they come out during a period of ongoing debate on the effectiveness of mood stabilizers, and lithium above all, in reducing mortality, particularly when suicide related. Indeed, a 52-week recent double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized control trial (RCT) of add-on lithium in veterans with bipolar disorder or major depressive disorder and substantial comorbidities (substance use disorders, post-traumatic stress disorders) was stopped for futility being unable to detect a clear antisuicidal effect in this complex population of patients. Although affected by significant limitations, particularly the low level of adherence with lithium,<span><sup>15</sup></span> there is a question on whether RCT might be the most appropriate design to detect its mortality-reducing effect that may take up to 2 year to establish.<span><sup>16</sup></span> In this context, well-conducted and adequately powered epidemiological studies, such as Chen's work, provide a sufficient temporal window to observe the possible effects of treatments on suicide outcome, and in general on the reduction of mortality. Notably, the dose-dependent analysis between exposure to mood stabilizers and risk of mortality showed that a longer duration of lithium use was associated with lower risks of all-cause mortality, including suicide.<span><sup>14</sup></span></p><p>Another important point is that the all-cause, suicide and natural mortality reduction, was detected also in patients treated with valproic acid. This is in agreement with other cohort studies<span><sup>17</sup></span> and RCT<span><sup>18</sup></span> indicating that valproic acid might be effective in reducing suicide mortality. A point of novelty is, however, the association of use of this anticonvulsant with the reduction in the risk of natural mortality. This finding, observed also in lithium-treated patients, suggests that biological pathways perturbed by both lithium and valproic acid might underlie this clinical effect. Indeed, if, as observed previously, lithium and valproic acid responders have very distinct clinical profiles, biologically these drugs share some common molecular effects such as the inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase 3 beta (GSK-3β).<span><sup>19</sup></span> Further exploration of the role of this pathway should be purported, since GSK-3β is a key regulator of neuronal survival. In addition, there is paucity of data on the possible effects of valproic acid on the telomere shortening, a marker of biological aging, that has been shown to be reduced by lithium treatment.<span><sup>20</sup></span></p><p>The observation of a dose dependent effect (in terms of duration of exposure) is of great relevance, although limited by the lack of measurement of serum levels. The latter aspect is certainly of primary importance for ensuring adequate treatment adherence and, consequently, to establish whether the exposure to the drug is uniform during the period of observation. But the analysis of serum levels can also allow to detect therapeutic windows specific for a certain clinical effect. For instance, neuroprotective effects of lithium might be exerted at low doses,<span><sup>21</sup></span> while its antiviral properties show greater potency at higher serum levels.<span><sup>22</sup></span></p><p>A final question concerns the possibility that the all-cause mortality reduction effect is coupled to the clinical effectiveness exerted by mood stabilizers. Although there is notion that the anti-suicidal effects of lithium might be to some extent independent from its mood stabilizing properties,<span><sup>23</sup></span> it is not clear if this is true also for mortality from natural causes. This area of research is of great interest and needs to be developed in future studies. Mood stabilizers play a fundamental role in the pharmacological armamentarium of the clinicians. Their clinical effectiveness appear to extend beyond the area of mood disorders,<span><sup>24</sup></span> and is observable also in pediatric population.<span><sup>25</sup></span> The presence of such a rich spectrum of effects motivates further clinical and translational research to clarify biological mechanisms, identify more accurately patients that can benefit from the use of these drugs as well as to develop pharmacological analogues that could be tested in clinical trials.</p><p>The author declares no conflict of interest.</p>","PeriodicalId":108,"journal":{"name":"Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica","volume":"147 3","pages":"231-233"},"PeriodicalIF":5.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-02-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/acps.13533","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/acps.13533","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"PSYCHIATRY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Mood stabilizers are a heterogeneous class of drugs including pharmacological agents with diverse mechanisms of actions (anticonvulsants, second generation antipsychotics, and lithium) but sharing one fundamental clinical property: the ability to treat and prevent episode recurrences in patients affected by major affective disorders. An attempt to formulate some evidence-based taxonomic criteria suggested that an ideal mood stabilizer should be effective in: (a) treating acute manic symptoms; (b) treating acute depressive symptoms; (c) preventing manic symptoms; and (d) preventing depressive symptoms.1 Lithium is probably the only mood stabilizer satisfying all these criteria, although it is less effective in treating bipolar depression.2 Similarly, the clinical profile of anticonvulsants appears to be specific depending on the illness phase (acute and/or continuation/maintenance) and on the mood polarity. Indeed, lamotrigine is more effective in preventing depression, but not mania, and possibly in treating acute bipolar depression and rapid cycling.3 Conversely, carbamazepine and valproic acid are effective in the treatment of acute mania, as well as in maintenance.3, 4 The latter also shows more effectiveness in certain subgroups of patients presenting with mixed mania or mania with irritability, compared with other treatments.4, 5 Finally, antipsychotics also show effectiveness in preventing mood relapses,6 with possibly higher efficacy in treating acute mixed episodes in bipolar disorder.7 These patterns of efficacy/effectiveness appear to be associated with distinct clinical presentations that also show a degree of predictive power. This has indeed been demonstrated for lithium, where specific clinical characteristics, namely an episodic (mania-depression-interval) clinical course sequence, absence of rapid cycling, absence of psychotic symptoms, family history of bipolar disorder, shorter pre-lithium illness duration and later age of onset,8 predict a good clinical response to lithium. Interestingly, a recent machine learning study, evaluated whether lithium responsiveness was predictable using clinical markers in a large multicenter sample of patients with bipolar disorder.9 The authors showed that lithium responsiveness was predictable in the pooled sample with good accuracy area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.80 and a particularly low false-positive rate (0.91).9 More importantly, features related to clinical course and the absence of rapid cycling appeared consistently informative in predicting lithium responsiveness.9 Although identified with less robust analytical methodology, similar patterns of clinical features have been associated to valproic acid (mixed or dysphoric mania, early age at onset, rapid-cycling, concurrent substance abuse)10 or lamotrigine (earlier onset of symptoms, non-episodic course of illness, rapid cycling, comorbidity with panic or substance use disorder, fewer hospitalizations, fewer prior medication trials and male gender) responsiveness.11 Of note, these clinical (phenotypic) patterns of response appear to be underlined by specific genetic architectures as shown for lithium12 and, more recently, for lamotrigine and valproic acid.13 In this context, it is plausible to ask whether these agent-specific clinical properties (possibly regulated by distinct neurobiological mechanisms) extend beyond the resolution of acute symptoms and/or the control of mood recurrences. In this issue of the Journal, Chen and co-authors explored the hypothesis that the use of mood stabilizers could modulate the risks of all-cause mortality, suicide, and natural mortality in individuals affected by bipolar disorder.14 To this end, they studied a cohort of 25,787 patients with bipolar disorder whose data were available in the Taiwan's National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD). Of these, 4,000 died after the index admission between February 1, 2001, and December 31, 2016, with suicide accounting for 760 cases (19.0%), and natural causes accounting for 2,947 cases (73.7%).14 Importantly, the authors showed that mood stabilizers significantly decreased the risks of all-cause mortality, suicide and natural mortality in the initial 5-year period. This protective effect was particularly high for lithium, and to a lesser extent for valproic acid, while lamotrigine and carbamazepine did not influence the risk of mortality. In addition, lithium exerted a dose-dependent effect on mortality risk reduction, which was detected in patients with a longer duration of lithium use as well as in those using a higher cumulative dose of the drug. This dose dependent risk reduction was also observable with valproic acid use. Importantly, the sensitivity analysis accounted for the immortal time bias, which can influence the results of this type of epidemiological cohort studies.

These findings are really timely as they come out during a period of ongoing debate on the effectiveness of mood stabilizers, and lithium above all, in reducing mortality, particularly when suicide related. Indeed, a 52-week recent double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized control trial (RCT) of add-on lithium in veterans with bipolar disorder or major depressive disorder and substantial comorbidities (substance use disorders, post-traumatic stress disorders) was stopped for futility being unable to detect a clear antisuicidal effect in this complex population of patients. Although affected by significant limitations, particularly the low level of adherence with lithium,15 there is a question on whether RCT might be the most appropriate design to detect its mortality-reducing effect that may take up to 2 year to establish.16 In this context, well-conducted and adequately powered epidemiological studies, such as Chen's work, provide a sufficient temporal window to observe the possible effects of treatments on suicide outcome, and in general on the reduction of mortality. Notably, the dose-dependent analysis between exposure to mood stabilizers and risk of mortality showed that a longer duration of lithium use was associated with lower risks of all-cause mortality, including suicide.14

Another important point is that the all-cause, suicide and natural mortality reduction, was detected also in patients treated with valproic acid. This is in agreement with other cohort studies17 and RCT18 indicating that valproic acid might be effective in reducing suicide mortality. A point of novelty is, however, the association of use of this anticonvulsant with the reduction in the risk of natural mortality. This finding, observed also in lithium-treated patients, suggests that biological pathways perturbed by both lithium and valproic acid might underlie this clinical effect. Indeed, if, as observed previously, lithium and valproic acid responders have very distinct clinical profiles, biologically these drugs share some common molecular effects such as the inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase 3 beta (GSK-3β).19 Further exploration of the role of this pathway should be purported, since GSK-3β is a key regulator of neuronal survival. In addition, there is paucity of data on the possible effects of valproic acid on the telomere shortening, a marker of biological aging, that has been shown to be reduced by lithium treatment.20

The observation of a dose dependent effect (in terms of duration of exposure) is of great relevance, although limited by the lack of measurement of serum levels. The latter aspect is certainly of primary importance for ensuring adequate treatment adherence and, consequently, to establish whether the exposure to the drug is uniform during the period of observation. But the analysis of serum levels can also allow to detect therapeutic windows specific for a certain clinical effect. For instance, neuroprotective effects of lithium might be exerted at low doses,21 while its antiviral properties show greater potency at higher serum levels.22

A final question concerns the possibility that the all-cause mortality reduction effect is coupled to the clinical effectiveness exerted by mood stabilizers. Although there is notion that the anti-suicidal effects of lithium might be to some extent independent from its mood stabilizing properties,23 it is not clear if this is true also for mortality from natural causes. This area of research is of great interest and needs to be developed in future studies. Mood stabilizers play a fundamental role in the pharmacological armamentarium of the clinicians. Their clinical effectiveness appear to extend beyond the area of mood disorders,24 and is observable also in pediatric population.25 The presence of such a rich spectrum of effects motivates further clinical and translational research to clarify biological mechanisms, identify more accurately patients that can benefit from the use of these drugs as well as to develop pharmacological analogues that could be tested in clinical trials.

The author declares no conflict of interest.

将情绪稳定剂的特异性从临床反应扩展到降低死亡率
情绪稳定剂是一类不同类型的药物,包括具有不同作用机制的药理学制剂(抗惊厥药,第二代抗精神病药和锂),但具有一个基本的临床特性:治疗和预防严重情感障碍患者发作复发的能力。一项建立一些基于证据的分类标准的尝试表明,理想的情绪稳定剂应该在以下方面有效:(a)治疗急性躁狂症状;(b)治疗急性抑郁症状;(c)预防躁狂症状;(d)预防抑郁症状锂可能是唯一满足所有这些标准的情绪稳定剂,尽管它在治疗双相抑郁症方面效果较差同样,抗惊厥药的临床表现似乎是特定的,取决于疾病阶段(急性和/或持续/维持)和情绪极性。的确,拉莫三嗪在预防抑郁症方面更有效,但在预防躁狂方面没有效果,可能在治疗急性双相抑郁症和快速循环方面更有效相反,卡马西平和丙戊酸在治疗急性躁狂症以及维持中是有效的。3,4与其他治疗方法相比,后者在混合躁狂或躁狂伴易怒的某些亚组患者中也显示出更大的疗效。最后,抗精神病药物在预防情绪复发方面也显示出有效性,在治疗双相情感障碍的急性混合发作方面可能有更高的疗效这些疗效/有效性模式似乎与不同的临床表现相关,也显示出一定程度的预测能力。这一点在锂治疗中确实得到了证明,其特定的临床特征,即发作性(躁狂-抑郁-间歇期)临床病程顺序、没有快速循环、没有精神病性症状、双相情感障碍家族史、锂治疗前疾病持续时间较短、发病年龄较晚8,预示着锂治疗的良好临床反应。有趣的是,最近的一项机器学习研究评估了在双相情感障碍患者的大型多中心样本中,使用临床标记物是否可以预测锂反应性作者表明,在混合样品中,锂响应性是可预测的,在接收器工作特性曲线下具有良好的准确度区域为0.80,假阳性率特别低(0.91)更重要的是,与临床病程和缺乏快速循环相关的特征在预测锂反应性方面表现出一致的信息虽然通过较不可靠的分析方法确定,但类似的临床特征模式与丙戊酸(混合型或躁狂症,起病年龄早,快速循环,同时滥用药物)10或拉莫三嗪(症状起病早,病程非发作性,快速循环,与恐慌或物质使用障碍共病,住院次数较少,先前药物试验较少,男性)反应性有关值得注意的是,这些临床(表型)反应模式似乎被特定的遗传结构所强调,例如锂12,以及最近的拉莫三嗪和丙戊酸13在这种情况下,我们有理由问,这些药物特异性的临床特性(可能由不同的神经生物学机制调节)是否超出了急性症状的解决和/或情绪复发的控制。在这一期的期刊中,Chen和合著者探讨了使用情绪稳定剂可以调节双相情感障碍患者的全因死亡率、自杀率和自然死亡率的假设为此,他们研究了25,787名双相情感障碍患者,这些患者的数据可在台湾国家健康保险研究数据库(NHIRD)中获得。其中,2001年2月1日至2016年12月31日指标入院后死亡4000例,其中自杀760例(19.0%),自然原因死亡2947例(73.7%)重要的是,作者表明,情绪稳定剂在最初的5年期间显著降低了全因死亡率、自杀和自然死亡率的风险。锂的这种保护作用特别高,丙戊酸的保护作用较小,而拉莫三嗪和卡马西平对死亡风险没有影响。此外,锂对降低死亡风险具有剂量依赖性,这在使用锂持续时间较长的患者和使用药物累积剂量较高的患者中都可以检测到。使用丙戊酸也可观察到这种剂量依赖性风险降低。重要的是,敏感性分析解释了不朽的时间偏差,这可能影响这类流行病学队列研究的结果。 这些发现非常及时,因为它们是在情绪稳定剂,尤其是锂在降低死亡率,尤其是自杀相关死亡率方面的有效性的持续争论中出现的。事实上,最近一项为期52周的双盲、安慰剂对照的随机对照试验(RCT)对患有双相情感障碍或重度抑郁症和严重合并症(物质使用障碍、创伤后应激障碍)的退伍军人进行了附加锂治疗,但由于无法在这一复杂的患者群体中发现明确的抗自杀效果,因此终止了试验。尽管受到重大限制的影响,特别是低水平的锂依从性,但仍有一个问题,即RCT是否可能是最合适的设计来检测其降低死亡率的效果,这可能需要长达2年的时间才能确定在这样的背景下,像Chen的工作这样进行良好和充分支持的流行病学研究,提供了一个足够的时间窗口来观察治疗对自杀结果的可能影响,以及总体上对降低死亡率的影响。值得注意的是,暴露于情绪稳定剂和死亡风险之间的剂量依赖性分析表明,使用锂的时间越长,全因死亡率(包括自杀)的风险越低。14另一个重要的一点是,在接受丙戊酸治疗的患者中也发现了全因自杀和自然死亡率的降低。这与其他队列研究和RCT18一致,表明丙戊酸可能有效降低自杀死亡率。然而,新颖的一点是,使用这种抗惊厥药与降低自然死亡风险的关联。这一发现,也在锂治疗的患者中观察到,表明锂和丙戊酸干扰的生物途径可能是这种临床效应的基础。事实上,如果像之前观察到的那样,锂和丙戊酸反应者具有非常不同的临床特征,那么从生物学上讲,这些药物具有一些共同的分子效应,例如抑制糖原合成酶激酶3β (GSK-3β) 19由于GSK-3β是神经元存活的关键调节因子,因此应该进一步探索这一途径的作用。此外,关于丙戊酸对端粒缩短的可能影响的数据也很缺乏,端粒缩短是生物衰老的标志,已被证明通过锂处理可以减少端粒缩短。20 .剂量依赖效应的观察(就暴露时间而言)具有重要意义,尽管由于缺乏血清水平的测量而受到限制。后一个方面当然是最重要的,以确保适当的治疗依从性,从而确定在观察期间药物暴露是否均匀。但血清水平的分析也可以检测特定临床效果的治疗窗口。例如,锂的神经保护作用可能在低剂量下发挥作用21,而其抗病毒特性在较高的血清水平下显示出更大的效力。22最后一个问题是,全因死亡率降低的效果是否与情绪稳定剂的临床效果有关。尽管有人认为锂的抗自杀作用可能在某种程度上独立于它稳定情绪的特性,23但尚不清楚这是否也适用于自然死亡。这是一个非常有趣的研究领域,需要在未来的研究中进一步发展。情绪稳定剂在临床医生的药理学装备中发挥着重要作用。它们的临床效果似乎超出了情绪障碍的范围,而且在儿科人群中也可以观察到如此丰富的效应谱的存在激励着进一步的临床和转化研究,以澄清生物学机制,更准确地识别可以从这些药物的使用中受益的患者,以及开发可以在临床试验中测试的药理学类似物。作者声明不存在利益冲突。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
11.20
自引率
3.00%
发文量
135
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica acts as an international forum for the dissemination of information advancing the science and practice of psychiatry. In particular we focus on communicating frontline research to clinical psychiatrists and psychiatric researchers. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica has traditionally been and remains a journal focusing predominantly on clinical psychiatry, but translational psychiatry is a topic of growing importance to our readers. Therefore, the journal welcomes submission of manuscripts based on both clinical- and more translational (e.g. preclinical and epidemiological) research. When preparing manuscripts based on translational studies for submission to Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, the authors should place emphasis on the clinical significance of the research question and the findings. Manuscripts based solely on preclinical research (e.g. animal models) are normally not considered for publication in the Journal.
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