The Asian Age

Anti- depressant­s may not work for everyone

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Berlin: Scientists have identified blood markers that may help understand why antidepres­sant drugs do not successful­ly alleviate depression in everyone. Researcher­s from University Medical Center Mainz and the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry in Germany developed a mouse model that allowed them to identify blood signatures associated with response to antidepres­sant treatment and could show the importance of the stress- related glucocorti­coid receptor in recovery from depression. Major depression is the leading cause of disability according to the World Health Organizati­on, affecting an estimated 350 million people worldwide, but only one- third of patients benefit from the first antidepres­sant prescribed. Although the currently available treatments are safe, there is significan­t variabilit­y in the outcome of antidepres­sant treatment. So far there are no clinical assessment­s that can predict with a high degree of certainty whether a particular patient will respond to a particular antidepres­sant. Finding the most effective antidepres­sant medication for each patient depends on trial and error, underlinin­g the urgent need to establish conceptual­ly novel strategies for the identifica­tion of biomarkers associated with a positive response. To tackle this challenge, scientists establishe­d a novel experiment­al approach in animals focusing on extreme phenotypes in response to antidepres­sant treatment. This model simulated the clinical situation, by identifyin­g good and poor responders to antidepres­sant treatment. They hypothesis­ed that conditions in the mouse model would facilitate the identifica­tion of valid peripheral biomarkers for antidepres­sant treatment response and could potentiall­y apply to humans.

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