1. Concurrent anxiety in patients with major depression and cerebral serotonin 4 receptor binding. A NeuroPharm-1 study.
- Author
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Köhler-Forsberg K, Ozenne B, Larsen SV, Poulsen AS, Landman EB, Dam VH, Ip CT, Jørgensen A, Svarer C, Knudsen GM, Frokjaer VG, and Jørgensen MB
- Subjects
- Anxiety Disorders diagnosis, Anxiety Disorders metabolism, Cerebral Cortex metabolism, Depression diagnostic imaging, Depression metabolism, Humans, Serotonin metabolism, Syndrome, Anxiety diagnosis, Anxiety metabolism, Depressive Disorder, Major diagnosis, Depressive Disorder, Major metabolism, Receptors, Serotonin, 5-HT4 metabolism
- Abstract
Concurrent anxiety is frequent in major depressive disorder and a shared pathophysiological mechanism between anxiety and other depressive symptoms is plausible. The serotonin 4 receptor (5-HT
4 R) has been implicated in both depression and anxiety. This is the first study to investigate the association between the cerebral 5-HT4 R binding and anxiety in patients with depression before and after antidepressant treatment and the association to treatment response. Ninety-one drug-free patients with depression were positron emission tomography scanned with the 5-HT4 R ligand [11 C]-SB207145. Depression severity and concurrent anxiety was measured at baseline and throughout 8 weeks of antidepressant treatment. Anxiety measures included four domains: anxiety/somatization factor score; Generalized Anxiety Disorder 10-items (GAD-10) score; anxiety/somatization factor score ≥7 (anxious depression) and syndromal anxious depression. Forty patients were rescanned at week 8. At baseline, we found a negative association between global 5-HT4 R binding and both GAD-10 score (p < 0.01) and anxiety/somatization factor score (p = 0.06). Further, remitters had a higher baseline anxiety/somatization factor score compared with non-responders (p = 0.04). At rescan, patients with syndromal anxious depression had a greater change in binding relative to patients with non-syndromal depression (p = 0.04). Concurrent anxiety in patients with depression measured by GAD-10 score and anxiety/somatization factor score is negatively associated with cerebral 5-HT4 R binding. A lower binding may represent a subtype with reduced natural resilience against anxiety in a depressed state, and concurrent anxiety may influence the effect on the 5-HT4 R from serotonergic antidepressants. The 5-HT4 R is a promising neuroreceptor for further understanding the underpinnings of concurrent anxiety in patients with depression., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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