Bonnet Udo
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Essen, Germany.
CNS Drug Rev. 2003 Spring;9(1):97-140. doi: 10.1111/j.1527-3458.2003.tb00245.x.
Moclobemide is a reversible inhibitor of monoamine-oxidase-A (RIMA) and has been extensively evaluated in the treatment of a wide spectrum of depressive disorders and less extensively studied in anxiety disorders. Nearly all meta-analyses and most comparative studies indicated that in the acute management of depression this drug is more efficacious than placebo and as efficacious as tricyclic (or some heterocyclic) antidepressants or selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). There is a growing evidence that moclobemide is not inferior to other antidepressants in the treatment of subtypes of depression, such as dysthymia, endogenous (unipolar and bipolar), reactive, atypical, agitated, and retarded depression as with other antidepressants limited evidence suggests that moclobemide has consistent long-term efficacy. However, more controlled studies addressing this issue are needed. For patients with bipolar depression the risk of developing mania seems to be not higher with moclobemide than with other antidepressants. The effective therapeutic dose range for moclobemide in most acute phase trials was 300 to 600 mg, divided in 2 to 3 doses. While one controlled trial and one long-term open-label study found moclobemide to be efficacious in social phobia, three controlled trials subsequently revealed either no effect or less robust effects with the tendency of higher doses (600 - 900 mg/d) to be more efficacious. Two comparative trials demonstrated moclobemide to be as efficacious as fluoxetine or clomipramine in patients suffering from panic disorder. Placebo-controlled trials in this indication are, however, still lacking. A relationship between the plasma concentration of moclobemide and its therapeutic efficacy is not apparent but a positive correlation with adverse events has been found. Dizziness, nausea and insomnia occurred more frequently on moclobemide than on placebo. Due to negligible anticholinergic and antihistaminic actions, moclobemide has been better tolerated than tri- or heterocyclic antidepressants. Gastrointestinal side effects and, especially, sexual dysfunction were much less frequent with moclobemide than with SSRIs. Unlike irreversible MAO-inhibitors, moclobemide has a negligible propensity to induce hypertensive crisis after ingestion of tyramine-rich food ("cheese-reaction"). Therefore, dietary restrictions are not as strict. However, with moclobemide doses above 900 mg/d the risk of interaction with ingested tyramine might become clinically relevant. After multiple dosing the oral bioavailability of moclobemide reaches almost 100%. At therapeutic doses, moclobemide lacks significant negative effects on psychomotor performance, cognitive function or cardiovascular system. Due to the relative freedom from these side effects, moclobemide is particularly attractive in the treatment of elderly patients. Moclobemide is a substrate of CYP2C19. Although it acts as an inhibitor of CYP1A2, CYP2C19, and CYP2D6, relatively few clinically important drug interactions involving moclobemide have been reported. It is relatively safe even in overdose. The drug has a short plasma elimination half-life that allows switching to an alternative agent within 24 h. Since it is well tolerated, therapeutic doses can often be reached rapidly upon onset of treatment. Steady-state plasma levels are reached approximately at one week following dose adjustment. Patients with renal dysfunction require no dose reduction in contrast to patients with severe hepatic impairment. Cases of refractory depression might improve with a combination of moclobemide with other antidepressants, such as clomipramine or a SSRI. Since this combination has rarely been associated with a potentially lethal serotonin syndrome, it requires lower entry doses, a slower dose titration and a more careful monitoring of patients. Combination therapy with moclobemide and other serotonergic agents, or opioids, should be undertaken with caution, although no serious adverse events have been published with therapeutic doses of moclobemide to date. On the basis of animal data the combined use of moclobemide with pethidine or dextropropoxyphene should be avoided. There is no evidence that moclobemide would increase body weight or produce seizures. Some preclinical data suggest that moclobemide may have anticonvulsant property.
吗氯贝胺是一种单胺氧化酶 -A可逆抑制剂(RIMA),已在广泛的抑郁症治疗中得到广泛评估,而在焦虑症治疗中的研究较少。几乎所有的荟萃分析和大多数比较研究表明,在抑郁症的急性治疗中,这种药物比安慰剂更有效,并且与三环(或某些杂环)抗抑郁药或选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂(SSRI)效果相当。越来越多的证据表明,吗氯贝胺在治疗抑郁症亚型(如心境恶劣、内源性(单相和双相)、反应性、非典型、激越性和迟滞性抑郁症)方面并不逊色于其他抗抑郁药,与其他抗抑郁药一样,有限的证据表明吗氯贝胺具有持续的长期疗效。然而,需要更多针对此问题的对照研究。对于双相抑郁症患者,吗氯贝胺引发躁狂的风险似乎并不高于其他抗抑郁药。在大多数急性期试验中,吗氯贝胺的有效治疗剂量范围为300至600毫克,分2至3次服用。虽然一项对照试验和一项长期开放标签研究发现吗氯贝胺对社交恐惧症有效,但随后的三项对照试验显示要么无效,要么效果不明显,且高剂量(600 - 900毫克/天)似乎更有效。两项比较试验表明,吗氯贝胺在惊恐障碍患者中与氟西汀或氯米帕明效果相当。然而,该适应症仍缺乏安慰剂对照试验。吗氯贝胺的血浆浓度与其治疗效果之间的关系并不明显,但已发现与不良事件呈正相关。与安慰剂相比,服用吗氯贝胺时头晕、恶心和失眠的发生率更高。由于抗胆碱能和抗组胺作用可忽略不计,吗氯贝胺的耐受性优于三环或杂环抗抑郁药。吗氯贝胺引起的胃肠道副作用,尤其是性功能障碍,比SSRI少得多。与不可逆的单胺氧化酶抑制剂不同,吗氯贝胺在摄入富含酪胺的食物后引发高血压危象的倾向可忽略不计(“奶酪反应”)。因此,饮食限制没有那么严格。然而,吗氯贝胺剂量超过900毫克/天时,与摄入酪胺相互作用的风险可能在临床上变得相关。多次给药后,吗氯贝胺的口服生物利用度几乎达到100%。在治疗剂量下,吗氯贝胺对精神运动性能、认知功能或心血管系统没有明显的负面影响。由于相对没有这些副作用,吗氯贝胺在老年患者的治疗中特别有吸引力。吗氯贝胺是CYP2C19的底物。虽然它可作为CYP1A2、CYP2C19和CYP2D6的抑制剂,但报道的涉及吗氯贝胺的临床重要药物相互作用相对较少。即使过量服用也相对安全。该药物的血浆消除半衰期较短,允许在24小时内换用其他药物。由于耐受性良好,治疗开始后通常可迅速达到治疗剂量。剂量调整后约一周达到稳态血浆水平。与严重肝功能损害的患者相比,肾功能不全的患者无需减少剂量。难治性抑郁症患者联合使用吗氯贝胺与其他抗抑郁药(如氯米帕明或SSRI)可能会改善病情。由于这种联合用药很少与潜在致命的5-羟色胺综合征相关,因此需要较低的起始剂量、更缓慢的剂量滴定以及对患者更仔细的监测。吗氯贝胺与其他5-羟色胺能药物或阿片类药物的联合治疗应谨慎进行,尽管迄今为止治疗剂量的吗氯贝胺尚未公布严重不良事件。根据动物数据,应避免吗氯贝胺与哌替啶或右丙氧芬联合使用。没有证据表明吗氯贝胺会增加体重或引发癫痫。一些临床前数据表明吗氯贝胺可能具有抗惊厥特性。