4.2 Article

Predicting Response to Psychopharmacological Treatment: Survey of Recent Results

Journal

PHARMACOPSYCHIATRY
Volume 44, Issue 6, Pages 263-272

Publisher

GEORG THIEME VERLAG KG
DOI: 10.1055/s-0031-1286290

Keywords

TDM; severity at baseline; early onset; side-effects; medical comorbidity; polypharmacy; inflammatory processes

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Introduction: Treatment with antidepressants and antipsychotics, though effective, is unspecific as agents that differ greatly in their biochemical and pharmacological actions have virtually the same efficacy. Half of the patients with initial improvement show incomplete response, while a large proportion of patients exhibit a refractory clinical picture which is resistant to all treatment modalities. Methods: Our analyses were based on a reference study of 2 848 depressive inpatients under monotherapeutic treatment with 7 different antidepressants or placebo, along with a naturalistic study of depressive and schizophrenic patients (296 inpatients, 363 outpatients) under today's standard polypharmaceutic treatment regimens. Results: The empirical data suggested the following predictors of response: (1) severity at baseline, (2) early onset of improvement, (3) unwanted side-effects, and (4) medical comorbidity. A combination of these predictors with Therapeutic Drug Monitoring (TDM) methods has direct clinical relevance. Discussion: Evidence-based approaches to personalized treatment help improving the unsatisfactory situation patients and clinicians are faced with, given today's incomplete treatments and the fact that the mechanisms by which antidepressants and antipsychotics ultimately exert their therapeutic effects are only marginally understood.

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