Ruetsch O, Viala A, Bardou H, Martin P, Vacheron M N
Centre Hospitalier Sainte-Anne, Secteur 13, 1, rue Cabanis, 75014 Paris.
Encephale. 2005 Jul-Aug;31(4 Pt 1):507-16. doi: 10.1016/s0013-7006(05)82412-1.
Weight gain is associated with the use of many psychotropic medications, including antidepressants, mood stabilizers, antipsychotic drugs, and may have serious long term consequences: it can increase health risks, specifically from overweight (BMI = 25-29.9 kg/m2) to obesity (BMI > or =30 kg/m2), according to Body Mass Index (BMI), and the morbidity associated therewith in a substantial part of patients (hypertension, coronary heart desease, ischemic stroke, impaired glucose tolerance, diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia, respiratory problems, osteoarthritis, cancer); according to patients, psychosocial consequences such as a sense of demoralization, physical discomfort and being the target of substantial social stigma are so intolerable that they may discontinue the treatment even if it is effective. The paper reviews actual epidemiological data concerning drug induced weight gain and associated health problems in psychiatric patients : there is a high risk of overweight, obesity, impaired glucose tolerance, diabetes mellitus, premature death, in patients with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder; and the effects of specific drugs on body weight: Tricyclic Antidepressants (TCA) induced weight gain correlated positively with dosage and duration of treatment, more pronounced with amitriptyline ; Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRI) decrease transiently bodyweight during the first few weeks of treatment and may then increase bodyweight; weight gain appears to be most prominent with some mood stabilizers (lithium, valproate); atypical antipsychotics tend to cause more weight gain than conventional ones and weight gain, diabetes, dyslipidemia, seem to be most severe with clozapine and olanzapine. Conceming the underlying mechanisms of drug induced weight gain, medications might interfere with central nervous functions regulating energy balance; patients report about: increase of appetite for sweet and fatty foods or "food craving" (antidepressants, mood stabilizers, antipsychotic drugs) and weight gain despite reduced appetite which can be explained by an altered resting metabolic rate (TCA, SSRI, Monoaminoxidase Inhibitors MAO I). According to current concepts, appetite and feeding are regulated by a complex of neurotransmitters, neuromodulators, cytokines and hormones interacting with the hypothalamus, including the leptin and the tumor necrosis factor system. The pharmacologic mechanisms underlying weight gain are presently poorly understood: maybe the different activities at some receptor systems may induce it, but also genetic predisposition. Understanding of the metabolic consequences of psychotropic drugs (weight gain, diabetes, dyslipidemia) is essential: the insulin-like effect of lithium is known; treatment with antipsychotic medications increases the risk of impaired glucose tolerance and diabetes mellitus. Several management options of weight gain are available from choosing or switching to another drug, dietary advices, increasing physical activities, behavioural treatment, but the best approach seems to attempt to prevent the weight gain : patients beginning maintenance therapy should be informed of that risk, and nutritional assessment and counselling should be a routine part of treatment management, associated with monitoring of weight, BMI, blood pressure, biological parameters (baseline and three months monitoring of fasting glucose level, fasting cholesterol and triglyceride levels, glycosylated haemoglobin). Psychiatrics must pay attention to concomitant medications and individual factors underlying overweight and obesity. Weight gain has been described since the discovery and the use of the firstpsychotropic drugs, but seems to intensify with especially some of the second generation antipsychotic medications ; understanding of the side effects of psychotropic drugs, including their metabolic consequences (weight gain, diabetes, dyslipidemia) is essential for the psychiatrics to avoid on the one hand a risk of lack of compliance, a discontinuation of the pharmacological medication and also a risk of relapse and rehospitalization, and on the other hand to avoid acute life threatening events (diabetic ketoacidocetosis and non ketotic hyperosmolar coma, long term risk complications of diabetes and overweight).
体重增加与多种精神药物的使用有关,包括抗抑郁药、心境稳定剂、抗精神病药物,且可能产生严重的长期后果:根据体重指数(BMI),它会增加健康风险,尤其是从超重(BMI = 25 - 29.9 kg/m²)发展到肥胖(BMI≥30 kg/m²),以及由此引发的相当一部分患者的发病情况(高血压、冠心病、缺血性中风、糖耐量受损、糖尿病、血脂异常、呼吸问题、骨关节炎、癌症);在患者看来,诸如士气低落感、身体不适以及成为严重社会耻辱的对象等心理社会后果令人难以忍受,以至于即便治疗有效,他们也可能停药。本文综述了有关精神病患者药物性体重增加及相关健康问题的实际流行病学数据:精神分裂症或双相情感障碍患者存在超重、肥胖、糖耐量受损、糖尿病、过早死亡的高风险;以及特定药物对体重的影响:三环类抗抑郁药(TCA)导致的体重增加与治疗剂量和疗程呈正相关,阿米替林的这种作用更为明显;选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂(SSRI)在治疗的最初几周会使体重短暂下降,之后可能导致体重增加;某些心境稳定剂(锂盐、丙戊酸盐)似乎最易导致体重增加;非典型抗精神病药物往往比传统药物更容易引起体重增加,而氯氮平和奥氮平导致的体重增加、糖尿病、血脂异常似乎最为严重。关于药物性体重增加的潜在机制,药物可能会干扰调节能量平衡的中枢神经功能;患者报告称:对甜食和高脂肪食物的食欲增加或“食物渴望”(抗抑郁药、心境稳定剂、抗精神病药物),以及尽管食欲下降但体重仍增加,这可以用静息代谢率改变来解释(TCA、SSRI、单胺氧化酶抑制剂MAO I)。根据当前的概念,食欲和进食受与下丘脑相互作用的多种神经递质、神经调质、细胞因子和激素的调节,包括瘦素和肿瘤坏死因子系统。目前对体重增加的药理机制了解甚少:也许在某些受体系统的不同活性可能会引发体重增加,但遗传易感性也可能起作用。了解精神药物的代谢后果(体重增加、糖尿病、血脂异常)至关重要:锂盐的胰岛素样作用是已知的;使用抗精神病药物治疗会增加糖耐量受损和糖尿病的风险。有多种应对体重增加的管理选择,从选择或换用另一种药物、饮食建议、增加体育活动、行为治疗,但最佳方法似乎是试图预防体重增加:开始维持治疗的患者应被告知这种风险,营养评估和咨询应成为治疗管理的常规部分,并与体重、BMI、血压、生物学参数(空腹血糖水平、空腹胆固醇和甘油三酯水平、糖化血红蛋白的基线及三个月监测)的监测相结合。精神科医生必须关注合并用药以及超重和肥胖背后的个体因素。自发现和使用首批精神药物以来就有体重增加的描述,但似乎在使用某些第二代抗精神病药物时会加剧;了解精神药物的副作用,包括其代谢后果(体重增加、糖尿病、血脂异常)对于精神科医生至关重要,一方面可避免依从性差、停药以及复发和再次住院的风险,另一方面可避免急性危及生命的事件(糖尿病酮症酸中毒和非酮症高渗性昏迷、糖尿病和超重的长期风险并发症)。