Jones H, Curtis V A, Wright P, Lucey J V
Division of Psychiatry, Homerton Hospital, London.
Am J Psychiatry. 1998 Jun;155(6):838-40. doi: 10.1176/ajp.155.6.838.
The authors examined the effect of prolonged clozapine treatment on central serotonergic (5-HT) function in schizophrenia.
Prolactin responses to the 5-HT releasing agent d-fenfluramine were measured in two groups of 10 schizophrenic subjects. The first group was tested twice, before and after a mean of 10 weeks of clozapine treatment. The second group was tested after a mean of 20 months of clozapine treatment.
The prolactin response was significantly blunted in these 20 patients treated with clozapine. There was a significant positive correlation between d-fenfluramine-evoked prolactin release and the overall positive symptom score and the hallucination and delusion subscores of the Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms.
Blunted 5-HT-mediated prolactin responses in schizophrenic patients receiving clozapine monotherapy for up to 20 months were correlated with reductions in positive symptoms. This suggests that 5-HT antagonism is relevant to clozapine's efficacy in alleviating hallucinations and other positive schizophrenic symptoms.