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[红细胞酮还原酶活性、血浆总氟哌啶醇与急性精神病]

[Erythrocyte ketone reductase activity, total plasma haloperidol and acute psychoses].

作者信息

Dutoit D, Thomas P, Leroux J M, Vaiga G, Pommery J, Cottencin O, Erb F, Goudemand M

机构信息

Service de Psychiatrie Générale, Université de Lille II et CHRU, Lille.

出版信息

Encephale. 1995 Nov-Dec;21(6):417-24.

PMID:8674466
Abstract

Haloperidol (HAL) is a widely used and clinically effective neuroleptic. Its metabolism differs in various animal species. In humans, reduced haloperidol (RHAL), a hydroxy metabolite of HAL, is produced by a cytosolic ketone reductase. Interconversion is known to occur whereby HAL is found in the plasma after administration of RHAL in vivo. Interconversion of HAL and RHAL has been observed in man. However, the capacity for reductive HAL is greater than its oxidation back from RHAL. RHAL, the resulting metabolite of HAL, is reported to be about 10-25% as active as HAL in an animal model. Large intersubject variation has been observed in the pharmacokinetics of HAL and RHAL. A wide variation in reductive drug-metabolizing has been observed in schizophrenic patients treated with HAL. Both high and low RHAL/HAL ratios or RHAL levels were reported to be linked to poor response in HAL-treated patients and might be correlated with the therapeutic window effect of HAL treatment. It is conceivable, therefore, that subjects with high reductive capacity relative to oxidative capacity may have less therapeutic response from the same dose of HAL than those with a low reductive capacity relative to oxidative capacity. This aim of this study was to investigate the HAL reduction among a sample of HAL-treated schizophrenic patients. Because ketone reductases are generally not tissue specific, we investigate the reductase activity in Red blood cells (as described by Inaba), before and during the treatment. Steady-state plasma drug levels during 2 weeks of treatment were quantified. We examined the relationships between fixed doses of HAL treatment, Red blood cells ketone reductase activity, plasma HAL and RHAL levels and the percentage of change of the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale for Schizophrenia. The participants in this study were 15 inpatients consecutively being treated in the adult psychiatric wards of the University of Lille. All subjects met DSM III-R criteria for schizophrenia (paranoid form). Upon induction subjects were evaluated clinically by trained raters using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale for Schizophrenia (PANSS). Subjects were required to score 40 or higher on the general psychopathology subscale of the PANSS to continue participation. All subjects were drug free. Haloperidol was administered orally at three times daily dose. Patients were randomized to treatment at three orally fixed doses: 6 mg per day, 10 mg per day and 15 mg per day. Patients were treated for 2 periods of one week. At the end of each period, dosages could be modified according to the clinic evolution of the patient. PANSS was repeated by the same raters blinded to the haloperidol dosage, plasma concentration and Rbc haloperidol ketone reductase activity, at the beginning and at the end of each period. Blood samples were collected on the same day that clinical assessment were made. Multiple regression analysis (forward stepwise) revealed that Red blood cells reductase activity at D0 is an important variable predicting haloperidol plasma levels at week 2. Similarly Red blood cells reductase activity at D0 and D7 predicted Reduced haloperidol plasma concentrations at week 2. In this sample, no parameter was found to be consistency predicted the percentage change in the PANSS positive subscale from baseline, at week 2. Nevertheless, Red blood cells reductase activity at D0, Reduced haloperidol/haloperidol ratio at week 2, haloperidol plasma levels at week 2 and the dose of haloperidol at week 1 were important variables predicting the percentage change in the PANSS general subscale from baseline at week 2. These results suggest that the knowledge of reductase activity could predict the treatment response in acute schizophrenic patients.

摘要

氟哌啶醇(HAL)是一种广泛使用且临床有效的抗精神病药物。其代谢在不同动物物种中存在差异。在人类中,还原型氟哌啶醇(RHAL)是HAL的一种羟基代谢产物,由胞质酮还原酶产生。已知会发生相互转化,即在体内给予RHAL后,血浆中会发现HAL。在人体中已观察到HAL和RHAL的相互转化。然而,HAL的还原能力大于其从RHAL逆向氧化的能力。据报道,HAL的代谢产物RHAL在动物模型中的活性约为HAL的10% - 25%。在HAL和RHAL的药代动力学方面已观察到较大的个体间差异。在用HAL治疗的精神分裂症患者中,已观察到还原型药物代谢存在广泛差异。据报道,高或低的RHAL/HAL比值或RHAL水平与HAL治疗患者的不良反应相关,并且可能与HAL治疗的治疗窗效应相关。因此,可以想象,相对于氧化能力而言还原能力高的受试者与相同剂量HAL下还原能力低的受试者相比,可能对HAL的治疗反应较小。本研究的目的是调查一组接受HAL治疗的精神分裂症患者中的HAL还原情况。由于酮还原酶通常不是组织特异性的,我们在治疗前和治疗期间研究了红细胞中的还原酶活性(如稻叶所述)。对治疗2周期间的稳态血浆药物水平进行了定量。我们检查了固定剂量的HAL治疗、红细胞酮还原酶活性、血浆HAL和RHAL水平与精神分裂症阳性和阴性症状量表变化百分比之间的关系。本研究的参与者是在里尔大学成人精神科病房连续接受治疗的15名住院患者。所有受试者均符合精神分裂症(偏执型)的DSM III - R标准。在诱导期,由训练有素的评估者使用精神分裂症阳性和阴性症状量表(PANSS)对受试者进行临床评估。受试者在PANSS的一般精神病理学分量表上的得分需达到40分或更高才能继续参与。所有受试者均未服用药物。氟哌啶醇每日口服三次给药。患者被随机分配接受三种口服固定剂量的治疗:每天6毫克、每天10毫克和每天15毫克。患者接受两个为期一周的治疗期。在每个治疗期结束时,可根据患者的临床进展调整剂量。在每个治疗期开始和结束时,由对氟哌啶醇剂量、血浆浓度和红细胞氟哌啶醇酮还原酶活性不知情的相同评估者重复进行PANSS评估。在进行临床评估的同一天采集血样。多元回归分析(逐步向前法)显示,D0时的红细胞还原酶活性是预测第2周氟哌啶醇血浆水平的一个重要变量。同样,D0和D7时的红细胞还原酶活性预测了第2周还原型氟哌啶醇的血浆浓度。在该样本中,未发现有参数能一致地预测第2周时PANSS阳性分量表相对于基线的变化百分比。然而,D0时的红细胞还原酶活性、第2周时还原型氟哌啶醇/氟哌啶醇比值、第2周时氟哌啶醇血浆水平以及第1周时氟哌啶醇剂量是预测第2周时PANSS一般分量表相对于基线变化百分比的重要变量。这些结果表明,了解还原酶活性可以预测急性精神分裂症患者的治疗反应。

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