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N-acetylcysteine in a Double-Blind Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial: Toward Biomarker-Guided Treatment in Early Psychosis

Authors :
Conus, Philippe
Seidman, Larry J.
Fournier, Margot
Xin, Lijing
Cleusix, Martine
Baumann, Philipp S.
Ferrari, Carina
Cousins, Ann
Alameda, Luis
Gholam-Rezaee, Mehdi
Golay, Philippe
Jenni, Raoul
Woo, T -U Wilson
Keshavan, Matcheri S.
Eap, Chin B.
Wojcik, Joanne
Cuenod, Michel
Buclin, Thierry
Gruetter, Rolf
Do, Kim Q.
Conus, Philippe
Seidman, Larry J.
Fournier, Margot
Xin, Lijing
Cleusix, Martine
Baumann, Philipp S.
Ferrari, Carina
Cousins, Ann
Alameda, Luis
Gholam-Rezaee, Mehdi
Golay, Philippe
Jenni, Raoul
Woo, T -U Wilson
Keshavan, Matcheri S.
Eap, Chin B.
Wojcik, Joanne
Cuenod, Michel
Buclin, Thierry
Gruetter, Rolf
Do, Kim Q.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Biomarker-guided treatments are needed in psychiatry, and previous data suggest oxidative stress may be a target in schizophrenia. A previous add-on trial with the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine (NAC) led to negative symptom reductions in chronic patients. We aim to study NAC's impact on symptoms and neurocognition in early psychosis (EP) and to explore whether glutathione (GSH)/redox markers could represent valid biomarkers to guide treatment. In a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial in 63 EP patients, we assessed the effect of NAC supplementation (2700 mg/day, 6 months) on PANSS, neurocognition, and redox markers (brain GSH [GSHmPFC], blood cells GSH levels [GSHBC], GSH peroxidase activity [GPxBC]). No changes in negative or positive symptoms or functional outcome were observed with NAC, but significant improvements were found in favor of NAC on neurocognition (processing speed). NAC also led to increases of GSHmPFC by 23% (P = .005) and GSHBC by 19% (P = .05). In patients with high-baseline GPxBC compared to low-baseline GPxBC, subgroup explorations revealed a link between changes of positive symptoms and changes of redox status with NAC. In conclusion, NAC supplementation in a limited sample of EP patients did not improve negative symptoms, which were at modest baseline levels. However, NAC led to some neurocognitive improvements and an increase in brain GSH levels, indicating good target engagement. Blood GPx activity, a redox peripheral index associated with brain GSH levels, could help identify a subgroup of patients who improve their positive symptoms with NAC. Thus, future trials with antioxidants in EP should consider biomarker-guided treatment.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1287174059
Document Type :
Electronic Resource