Milak Matthew S, Parsey Ramin V, Lee Leilani, Oquendo Maria A, Olvet Doreen M, Eipper Francoise, Malone Kevin, Mann J John
Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University, New York, NY, United States.
Psychiatry Res. 2009 Jul 15;173(1):63-70. doi: 10.1016/j.pscychresns.2008.09.004. Epub 2009 May 14.
In order to test the hypotheses that pretreatment metabolic activity in the midbrain and the rostral anterior cingulate may predict remission in response to medications enhancing monoaminergic transmission, we compared relative regional cerebral metabolic rate of glucose (rCMRglu) using positron emission tomography (PET) in medication-free patients with major depression who remitted after 3 months of monoaminergic medication, with non-remitters on the same treatment. [(18)F]-FDG PET was conducted in a group of 33 drug-free DSM-IV major depression subjects prior to antidepressant treatment. Patients were prescribed paroxetine initially (61%) unless they had failed paroxetine previously. Treatment was then managed by the subjects' own physician with 91% receiving a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor and 78% another non-selective monoamine reuptake inhibitor during the 3 months of treatment. Voxel-based parametric brain maps of remitters were compared with maps of non-remitters using SPM2. Remission was defined as a >50% decrease in and a final score of <or=10 on the 24-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale. We found that treatment remitters have lower activity in a single contiguous brain region (with global maxima in the midbrain, cluster level P=0.013, corrected for multiple comparison (CMC)), prior to treatment, compared with non-remitters to 3 months of community-based monoaminergic antidepressant treatment. Degree of improvement correlated with pretreatment midbrain activity. Pretreatment clinical picture and intensity of treatment did not distinguish remitters. No other area of the brain showed a significant difference between remitters and non-remitters even with CMC completely disabled. Lower relative regional brain activity in the region of monoaminergic nuclei prior to treatment predicts remission in response to 3 months of antidepressant treatment, despite no clinical differences at baseline and no difference in treatment intensity. Brain imaging is a potential objective laboratory technique that may guide treatment selection where clinical methods have not shown promise. Prospective studies are needed to replicate these findings and determine whether outcome prediction is limited to a specific class of antidepressants.
为了检验中脑和喙部前扣带回的预处理代谢活性可能预测对增强单胺能传递的药物治疗缓解情况的假设,我们使用正电子发射断层扫描(PET)比较了无药物治疗的重度抑郁症患者在接受3个月单胺能药物治疗后缓解者与未缓解者的相对局部脑葡萄糖代谢率(rCMRglu)。对一组33名符合《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)标准的无药物治疗的重度抑郁症患者在抗抑郁治疗前进行了[(18)F]-氟代脱氧葡萄糖(FDG)PET检查。患者最初被处方帕罗西汀(61%),除非他们之前使用帕罗西汀治疗失败。然后由患者自己的医生进行治疗管理,在3个月的治疗期间,91%的患者接受选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂治疗,78%的患者接受另一种非选择性单胺再摄取抑制剂治疗。使用统计参数映射软件2(SPM2)将缓解者基于体素的参数化脑图谱与未缓解者的图谱进行比较。缓解被定义为24项汉密尔顿抑郁量表评分下降>50%且最终得分≤10分。我们发现,与接受3个月社区单胺能抗抑郁治疗未缓解者相比,治疗缓解者在治疗前单个连续脑区的活性较低(中脑出现全局最大值,聚类水平P=0.013,经多重比较校正(CMC))。改善程度与治疗前中脑活性相关。治疗前的临床表现和治疗强度无法区分缓解者。即使完全不进行CMC,缓解者和未缓解者在大脑的其他区域也未显示出显著差异。尽管基线时无临床差异且治疗强度无差异,但治疗前单胺能核区域相对较低的局部脑活性可预测对抗抑郁治疗3个月的缓解情况。脑成像可能是一种潜在的客观实验室技术,在临床方法未显示出效果时可指导治疗选择。需要进行前瞻性研究来重复这些发现,并确定结果预测是否仅限于特定类别的抗抑郁药。