Shively Carol A, Register Thomas C, Appt Susan E, Clarkson Thomas B
From the Department of Pathology/Comparative Medicine, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Psychosom Med. 2015 Apr;77(3):267-78. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000000163.
Major depressive disorder and coronary heart disease often co-occur in the same individuals. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are widely prescribed for depression and other disorders, but their effects on coronary heart disease risk remain unclear. We determined the effects of an SSRI on coronary artery atherosclerosis (CAA) in an established nonhuman primate model used to clarify the association between depression and CAA.
Forty-two adult female cynomolgus macaques consuming a Western diet were characterized during an 18-month pretreatment phase and assigned to SSRI (sertraline hydrochloride 20 mg/kg, per os, once a day) or placebo balanced on pretreatment depression, body weight (BW), and iliac artery atherosclerosis extent measured via biopsy. After 18 months, CAA extent was measured using histomorphometry.
Before and during treatment, depressed monkeys had lower BW, body mass index, and plasma high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and higher heart rates during the pretreatment (p < .01) but not the treatment phase (p = .17). There were no pretreatment differences between the sertraline and placebo groups. Sertraline reduced anxious behavior but had no effect on BW, body mass index, heart rate, plasma lipids, or depression. CAA, analyzed by a 2 (depressed, nondepressed) × 2 (placebo, sertraline) × 3 (coronary arteries) analysis of covariance adjusted for pretreatment iliac atherosclerosis, was greater in depressed than in nondepressed monkeys (p < .036), and in sertraline than in placebo-treated monkeys (p = .040). The observed CAA extent in depressed monkeys treated with sertraline was 4.9 times higher than that in untreated depressed monkeys, and 6.5 times higher than that in nondepressed monkeys, on average.
Depressed animals developed more CAA, and long-term treatment with sertraline resulted in more extensive CAA.
重度抑郁症和冠心病常发生于同一患者。选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂(SSRI)被广泛用于治疗抑郁症及其他疾病,但其对冠心病风险的影响尚不清楚。我们在一个已建立的非人灵长类动物模型中,确定了SSRI对冠状动脉粥样硬化(CAA)的影响,该模型用于阐明抑郁症与CAA之间的关联。
42只食用西方饮食的成年雌性食蟹猴在18个月的预处理阶段进行特征描述,并根据预处理时的抑郁程度、体重(BW)和通过活检测量的髂动脉粥样硬化程度,分为SSRI组(盐酸舍曲林20mg/kg,口服,每日一次)或安慰剂组。18个月后,使用组织形态计量学测量CAA程度。
在治疗前和治疗期间,抑郁的猴子体重、体重指数和血浆高密度脂蛋白胆固醇较低,且在预处理阶段心率较高(p < 0.01),但在治疗阶段无差异(p = 0.17)。舍曲林组和安慰剂组在预处理时无差异。舍曲林减少了焦虑行为,但对体重、体重指数、心率、血脂或抑郁无影响。通过对预处理髂动脉粥样硬化进行协方差调整的2(抑郁、非抑郁)×2(安慰剂、舍曲林)×3(冠状动脉)分析,发现抑郁猴子的CAA比非抑郁猴子更严重(p < 0.036),且舍曲林组比安慰剂组更严重(p = 0.040)。平均而言,接受舍曲林治疗的抑郁猴子的CAA程度比未治疗的抑郁猴子高4.9倍,比非抑郁猴子高6.5倍。
抑郁动物发生了更严重的CAA,长期使用舍曲林治疗导致CAA更广泛。