Antidepressant Drugs
Antidepressant Drugs
Antidepressant Drugs
Samra Bashir
Learning Objectives
1. Classify the drugs used in the treatment of depression,
providing examples of each.
2. Describe the pharmacological actions, clinical efficacy and
side/ adverse effects of antidepressant drugs.
Depression
Definition:
Mood state, as indicated by feelings of sadness, despair, anxiety,
emptiness, discouragement, or hopelessness; having no feelings;
or appearing tearful.
Depression
Classification:
• Major depressive disorder (unipolar major depression)
• Persistent depressive disorder (dysthymia)
• Disruptive mood dysregulation disorder
• Premenstrual dysphoric disorder
• Substance/medication induced depressive disorder
• Depressive disorder due to another medical condition.
• Other specified depressive disorder (eg, minor depression)
• Unspecified depressive disorder
Major depressive disorder
(Unipolar major depression)
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is characterized by
• Depressed mood most of the time for at least 2 weeks and/or loss of interest or pleasure in most or all
activities
Accompanied by:
• experiencing fatigue
• having trouble sleeping — insomnia — or sleeping too much
• feeling worthless or guilty
• having difficulty concentrating and making decisions
• unintentionally losing or gaining a significant amount of weight
• experiencing a type of restlessness called psychomotor agitation or finding it difficult to think, speak, and
do other everyday things, called psychomotor impairment
• having frequent thoughts of death
• MDD is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality
American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5),
• 70% of patients have response to drugs. American Psychiatric Association, Arlington, VA 2013.
Pathophysiology of MDD
• Monoamine hypothesis of depression: depression is related to a
deficiency in the amount or function of cortical and
limbic serotonin (5-HT), Norepineprhine and dopamine
(monoamines)
• The level of a amine neurotransmitters can be influenced by
physical illness, genetics, substance abuse, diet, hormonal
changes, brain injury or social circumstances
Limitations to theory –
• despite antidepressant medications approximately 33% of patients
with MDD (major depressive disorder) remain refractory to first
line agents
• Many studies have not found an alteration in function or levels of
monoamines in depressed patients.
• In addition, some candidate antidepressant agents under study do
not act directly on the monoamine system.
Pathophysiology of MDD
Neurotropic hypothesis of depression
• A drop in the levels of nerve growth factors/neurotrophic factors especially
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor(BDNF) is responsible for the development
of depression.
• BDNF are critical in the regulation of neural plasticity, resilience, and
neurogenesis.
• Animal and human studies indicate that stress and pain are associated with a
drop in BDNF levels resulting in atrophic structural changes in the
hippocampus and perhaps other areas such as the medial frontal cortex and
anterior cingulate.
• Depression and chronic stress states have also been associated with a
substantial loss of volume in the anterior cingulate and medial orbital frontal
cortex which appears to increase as a function of the duration of illness and
the amount of time that the depression remains untreated.
• Administration of antidepressants increases BDNF levels in clinical trials and
may be associated with an increase in hippocampus volume in some
patients.
Why to treat depression?
• Prevalence of depression is quite high in both developing and developed
world (lifetime prevalence 15%).
• Depression is one of the most common cause of disability.
• Major depression (MDD) is associated with substantial morbidity and
mortality.
• Medical conditions—from chronic pain to coronary artery disease are
found as associated with MDD.
• When depression coexists with other medical conditions, the patient’s
disease burden increases, and the quality of life—and often the prognosis
for effective treatment—decreases significantly.
Therapeutic uses of antidepressants
• Antidepressants have received US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approvals for the
treatment of
• Major depressive disorder (primary indication)
• panic disorder,
• generalized anxiety disorder (GAD),
• post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and
• obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).
• In addition, antidepressants are commonly used to treat pain disorders such as neuropathic
pain and the pain associated with fibromyalgia.
• Some antidepressants are used for treating premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD),
mitigating the vasomotor symptoms of menopause, and treating stress urinary incontinence.
General mechanism of antidepressant drugs
Classification of antidepressant drugs
• Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs)
(Fluoxetine, sertraline, paroxetine, citalopram, escitalopram, fluvoxamine)
• Serotonin-Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitors
• Selective Serotonin-Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitors (SNRIs) – Venlafaxine,
desvenlafaxine, duloxetine, milnacipran and levomilnacipran
• Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) - Amitryptyline, imipramine, desipramine, doxepin
• 5-HT2 Antagonists – trazodone, nefazodone and vortioxetine
• Tetracyclic and unicyclic antidepressants
Maprotiline, bupropion, mirtazapine, amoxapine, vilazodone
• Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors phenelzine, tranylcypromine, selegiline
Mechanism
of action
Enhanced
MAOIs
monoamine
neurotransmission
SSRIs
SNRIs
TCAs (+
5 HT2 antihistamine,
α-adrenergic
antagonists blocking, and
anticholinergic)
SSRIs
(Fluoxetine (protoptype) , sertraline, citalopram, escitalopram, fluvoxamine, paroxetine,)
Mechanism Block the reuptake
of action of serotonin,
increasing its
concentration in
synaptic cleft and
its postsynaptic
neuronal activity
SSRIs
and milnacipran
NET > SERT
Secondry amine
( desipramine and TCAs were introduced as drug
therapy of depression since 1950s
nortriptyline)
NET > SERT
Pharmacokinetics
• The TCAs absorb well and have long half-lives.
• Most are dosed once daily at night (due to their sedating
effects).
• Extensively metabolism by CYP2D6. Only 5% dose is excreted
unchanged in the urine.
• Concurrent administration of drugs such as fluoxetine and
genetic polymorphism for CYP2D6 alter plasma levels of TCA.
TCAs
Adverse effects
• Anticholinergic side effects are the most common: dry mouth, constipation, urinary retention, blurred vision,
and confusion (30 amines > 20 amines)
• Orthostatic hypotension: potent α-blocking property (imipramine is most likely and nortriptyline is least likely to
cause this effect)
• Weight gain, sedation: H 1 antagonism
• Sexual dysfunctions: particularly with highly serotonergic TCAs such as clomipramine
• Diaphoresis
• Cardiotoxicity
• Decrease seizure threshold
• Tremor
• QT prolongation: in overdose
• The TCAs have a prominent discontinuation syndrome (cholinergic rebound)
• TCAs may exacerbate unstable angina, benign prostrate hyperplasia, epilepsy and preexisting arrhythmias.
Therapeutic uses
• Moderate to severe depression (as second or third line agents)
• Some patients with Phobic and panic anxiety disorders also
respond to TCAs
• Bed wetting in 6 year or older children (imipramine)
• Chronic pain syndrome (eg neuropathic pain)
• Migraine headache
• Insomnia (Doxepin)
Use in depression
• Clinicians often avoid using tricyclic antidepressants because of their adverse side
effects
• The choice of cyclic antidepressant is often based upon side-effect profiles
because these medications vary in their degree of side effects. Nortriptyline and
desipramine tend to be the best tolerated.
• Therapy should be started with a low dose in order to avoid side effects, which is
slowly increased.
• Response or remission may not occur until four or more weeks have passed after a
therapeutic dose has been achieved
• TCAs have narrow therapeutic index, thus suicidal patients should be given only
limited quantity of these drug with close monitoring.
Tetracyclc and unicyclic antidepressant
• A number of antidepressants do not fit
neatly into the other classes.
• Unicyclic: Bupropion
• Tetracyclic: mirtazapine, amoxapine,
vilazodone, and maprotiline
• Multicyclic: vilazodone
• Primary use of tetracyclic compound is
MDD.
Vilazodone
Pharmacokinetics
• Tetra and uni-cyclic compounds are well absorbed orally.
• All the agents undergo extensive first pass metabolism and
have high plasma protein binding
Tetracyclic and unicyclic antidepressant
Mechanism of Action
• Bupropion: It is norepinephrine-dopamine reuptake inhibitor (NDRI) increases NE and DA but has no effect on
serotonin transmission.
- increases pre-synaptic release of NE and DA
• Mirtazapine: increases release of NE (α2-adrenergic antagonist) and 5-HT, acts as 5HT 2A and 5HT3 blocker. It also
blocks H1 receptors
• Amoxapine and maprotiline: actions resemble those of TCAs such as desipramine.
- Both are potent NET inhibitors and less potent SERT inhibitors.
- In addition, both possess anticholinergic properties.
- Unlike the TCAs or other antidepressants, amoxapine is a moderate inhibitor of the postsynaptic D2
receptor, therefore, posses some antipsychotic properties.
• Vilazodone: A potent serotonin reuptake inhibitor and a partial agonist of the 5-HT1A receptor.