Back to Search Start Over

Systematic review and meta-analysis on the therapeutic reference range for escitalopram: Blood concentrations, clinical effects and serotonin transporter occupancy.

Authors :
Eichentopf, Luzie
Hiemke, Christoph
Conca, Andreas
Engelmann, Jan
Gerlach, Manfred
Havemann-Reinecke, Ursula
Hefner, Gudrun
Florio, Vincenzo
Kuzin, Maxim
Lieb, Klaus
Reis, Margareta
Riemer, Thomas G.
Serretti, Alessandro
Schoretsanitis, Georgios
Zernig, Gerald
GrĂ¼nder, Gerhard
Hart, Xenia M.
Source :
Frontiers in Psychiatry; 10/17/2022, Vol. 13, p1-11, 11p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Introduction: A titration within a certain therapeutic reference range presupposes a relationship between the blood concentration and the therapeutic effect of a drug. However, this has not been systematically investigated for escitalopram. Furthermore, the recommended reference range disagrees with mean steady state concentrations (11-21 ng/ml) that are expected under the approved dose range (10-20 mg/day). This work systematically investigated the relationships between escitalopram dose, blood levels, clinical effects, and serotonin transporter occupancy. Methods: Following our previously published methodology, relevant articles were systematically searched and reviewed for escitalopram. Results: Of 1,032 articles screened, a total of 30 studies met the eligibility criteria. The included studies investigated escitalopram blood levels in relationship to clinical effects (9 studies) or moderating factors on escitalopram metabolism (12 studies) or serotonin transporter occupancy (9 studies). Overall, the evidence for an escitalopram concentration/effect relationship is low (level C). Conclusion: Based on our findings, we propose a target range of 20-40 ng/ml for antidepressant efficacy of escitalopram. In maintenance treatment, therapeutic response is expected, when titrating patients above the lower limit. The lower concentration threshold is strongly supported by findings from neuroimaging studies. The upper limit for escitalopram's reference range rather reflects a therapeutic maximum than a tolerability threshold, since the incidence of side effects in general is low. Concentrations above 40 ng/ml should not necessarily result in dose reductions in case of good clinical efficacy and tolerability. Dose-related escitalopram concentrations in different trials were more than twice the expected concentrations from guideline reports. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16640640
Volume :
13
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Frontiers in Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159971243
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.972141