Daily Mail

Have millions been taking drugs with harmful side-effects for decades — when there’s no scientific evidence they do what they claim?

Some medical profession­als have suspected it for years. Now doctors and patients have been left reeling by a groundbrea­king study

- By Jonathan Gornall THE ANTIDEPRES­SANTS BOMBSHELL

L‘They’ve been the makers’ most profitable drugs’

ike millions of patients who seek help from their GPs for depression, emma Ward was repeatedly told she was suffering from ‘an imbalance of chemicals in the brain’. if emma wanted to get better, her doctors said the 26-year-old should keep taking the antidepres­sants she had been prescribed since she was 15 — even though the drugs did not seem to improve her mood, and left her feeling perpetuall­y numb emotionall­y.

Now, shocking new research published yesterday shows that the theory justifying the millions of prescripti­ons for antidepres­sants handed out every month to patients such as emma, is simply not true.

The research confirms what some medical profession­als have increasing­ly come to suspect. That the ‘chemical imbalance’ theory — that depression is due to a lack of the brain chemical serotonin — is nothing more than a myth.

This myth was created more than 35 years ago by pharmaceut­ical companies to justify their products, and has been perpetuate­d ever since by the training and practice of doctors around the world. in the most comprehens­ive review of the research on links between depression and serotonin ever carried out, researcher­s from the Uk, italy and Switzerlan­d looked at 17 major internatio­nal reviews that had documented the findings from more than 260 studies, involving 300,000 patients.

Their findings, published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry, undermine the basis for decades of prescribin­g of the most commonly used antidepres­sants, Selective Serotonin Reuptake inhibitors, or SSRis.

‘For years, people have been led to believe that depression is caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain, due to a deficiency of the chemical serotonin,’ the lead researcher, Professor Joanna Moncrieff, a professor of psychiatry at University College London and a consultant psychiatri­st at North east London NHS Foundation Trust, told the Mail.

‘We can safely say that after a vast amount of research conducted over several decades, there is no convincing evidence that depression is caused by serotonin abnormalit­ies.’

Serotonin is a neurotrans­mitter, a chemical that transmits messages between nerve cells. The NHS website says that while ‘it would be too simplistic to say depression and related mental health conditions are caused by low serotonin levels ... it is thought SSRis work by increasing serotonin levels in the brain’.

The findings are a major upset, since SSRis account for the majority of antidepres­sants prescribed in the Uk, and millions of Britons rely on them.

Their use is rising inexorably — of the record 7.4 million antidepres­sant prescripti­ons issued in england in March alone, almost four million were SSRis. The majority of patients prescribed antidepres­sants are women.

There are currently eight different SSRis prescribed in the Uk, among them fluoxetine, the mother of all SSRis — better known as Prozac.

Fluoxetine was developed by U.S. pharmaceut­ical giant eli Lilly in the early 1970s, based on ‘the hypothesis’ that boosting serotonin would help treat depression, and it soon became apparent that the company had struck gold.

According to a 2005 paper, by two of Fluoxetine’s inventors, ‘revenue from antidepres­sant sales was valued at less than $200 million in the first eight months of 1975’.

Prozac was approved for the treatment of depression in the

U.S. in 1987, and by 2002 it had been prescribed to more than 40 million patients worldwide, with total sales of $22 billion.

‘Part of the reason why the story of chemical imbalances in depression has become so prevalent is because it was propagated by drug companies when they were marketing new antidepres­sants,’ says Dr Mark Horowitz, a coauthor of the new study.

‘Antidepres­sants have been blockbuste­r drugs for the pharmaceut­ical industry, frequently ranking among their most profitable.’

Yet in recent years, the ‘chemical imbalance’ theory has been increasing­ly questioned. in a position statement on antidepres­sants in 2019 the Royal College of Psychiatri­sts said ‘the original idea that antidepres­sants “correct a chemical imbalance in the brain” is an oversimpli­fication’.

But the theory is still taught at medical schools and in psychiatri­c textbooks. in its guidance on treating depression in adults, NiCe says SSRis ‘modify neuronal transmissi­on in the brain’ — in other words, they work on serotonin levels.

Just a few weeks ago, during an interview on BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour, Dr Nighat Arif, resident GP on both iTV’s This Morning programme and BBC Breakfast, was asked why she thought more women than men were being put on antidepres­sants.

Women, she said, were not only more likely to ask for help, but also ‘understand that there is a chemical imbalance and antidepres­sants given at the right time will help with that imbalance’.

And yet ‘it has been suspected for some years that the evidence for this “brain imbalance” doesn’t stack up,’ says Professor Moncrieff. ‘But no one has got the evidence together and really looked at it properly.

‘However, now we have and it confirms that there is no convincing evidence that serotonin is linked with depression, and

certainly not that low serotonin is a cause of depression.

‘We suggest it is time to acknowledg­e that the serotonin theory is not empiricall­y substantia­ted.’

If the drugs don’t work by tackling a mythical ‘imbalance’, this

could explain previous research which has found that SSRIs and other antidepres­sants are no

better than a placebo for mild to moderate depression.

Certainly, according to the new review, antidepres­sants ‘work’ mainly because people believe they do. The researcher­s write: ‘It is often assumed that the effects of antidepres­sants demonstrat­e that depression must be at least

partially caused by a brain-based chemical abnormalit­y, and that the apparent efficacy of SSRIs shows serotonin is implicated.

‘ Other explanatio­ns for the effects of antidepres­sants have been put forward, including the

idea they work via an amplified placebo effect.’

Even if antidepres­sants do have a placebo effect, they are active drugs that can have unpleasant side- effects, including loss of libido and emotional numbness. Some people can also struggle to

come off them because of severe withdrawal symptoms.

Take Emma Ward — she’s an NHS psychologi­st, which makes the way she was treated all the more incredible. We’ve changed her name to protect her identity at her request.

Several times over the years, Emma had tried to wean herself off the various antidepres­sants she was put on as a teenager, but

she was always defeated by the side-effects of withdrawal: ‘it felt like my brain was submerged in water in a really choppy sea’.

Then, two months ago, desperate for help to come off the antidepres­sant fluoxetine, she spoke to her Community Mental Health Team, only to be told ‘bizarrely, and infuriatin­gly, I was just being “resistant to getting better” ’.

By this stage, she’d done her own research and questioned the chemical imbalance theory — ‘but I was told not believing in it was an indication of paranoid thoughts, because the theory was “scientific­ally proven”. On that basis, they recommende­d I should start taking anti-psychotics’.

Stevie Lewis, 66, a former business consultant was prescribed antidepres­sants after being told she had developed a chemical imbalance.

Now a campaigner against the overuse of antidepres­sants and a board member of the Internatio­nal Institute for Psychiatri­c Drug Withdrawal, Stevie was on an SSRI for 17 years, most of which she spent ‘trying and failing to stop’ because the withdrawal effects were so severe.

‘I am outraged that I and so many other people have been persuaded to take a drug based on unproven science,’ says Stevie, from Catbrook, Monmouthsh­ire.

Women are more likely to be paying the price for the medical profession’s adherence to the myth of chemical imbalance, for the simple reason that more women than men are prescribed antidepres­sants.

A survey by the Women’s Nutritiona­l Advisory Service in 2019 found that 40 per cent of women experienci­ng perimenopa­use were prescribed antidepres­sants to help manage their (hormonal) symptoms. A study this year found women were more than

twice as likely to be diagnosed with anxiety and prescribed antidepres­sants. Professor Martin Marshall, chair of the Royal College of GPs (RCGP), said this was

because women are ‘more comfortabl­e seeking help for mental health conditions’ than men.

Stevie Lewis was first prescribed antidepres­sants in 1996, when she

was 41, and began suffering intermitte­nt insomnia and unexplaine­d anxiety once a month.

‘I now know I was going through the classic perimenopa­use, but it wasn’t discussed in those days. Instead, I was told I was on the edge of a nervous breakdown, that I had a chemical imbalance in my brain and that these tablets would correct it.

‘What astonishes me is that doctors, who are supposed to be scientists, have perpetuate­d this story for the best part of 30 years. It is shameful.’

Shown the new research by Good Health, Dr Arif said that like legions of doctors before her,

she’d been taught ‘that depression is caused by low serotonin’.

She added: ‘If newer research is correcting this long-held belief,

then I welcome the discussion and will look again at how I communicat­e how antidepres­sants work with my patients.’

Lead researcher behind the new review, Dr Horowitz, a training

psychiatri­st and clinical research fellow in psychiatry at University College London, said that during his training he, too, was taught

depression was caused by low serotonin — ‘I even taught this to students in my own lectures’.

Now, he says, ‘it feels like everything I thought I knew has been flipped upside down’.

Professor Moncrieff says: ‘We do not understand what antidepres­sants are doing to the brain, and giving people misinforma­tion prevents them from making an informed decision about whether to take them or not.’

What emerged from the new research was ‘ how strong an effect adverse life events played in depression, suggesting low mood is a response to people’s lives and cannot be boiled down to a simple chemical equation’, the researcher­s noted.

Yet surveys have shown the vast majority of patients believe their

depression is caused by low serotonin or a chemical imbalance.

‘This belief,’ say the authors, ‘has been shown to lead to a pessimisti­c outlook on the likelihood of recovery.’

In June 2022, NICE issued its first new guidance in 12 years on treating depression, indicating that SSRIs should be considered as the first-choice antidepres­sant for more severe patients.

It says its recommenda­tions were ‘ arrived at after careful considerat­ion of the evidence available’, and a spokespers­on told the Mail that ‘ our recommenda­tions were based on the evidence of effectiven­ess’.

The Royal College of Psychiatri­sts said: ‘ Antidepres­sants are an effective, NICE-recommende­d treatment for depression. We would not recommend for anyone to stop taking their antidepres­sants based on this review.’

Professor Marshall of the RCGP said: ‘ This research is challengin­g, and it’s important it is taken into account as clinical guidelines are developed and updated.

‘Patients should not be concerned about taking antidepres­sants as a result, but if they are, they should continue to take them as prescribed and discuss

this with their doctor at their next appointmen­t.’

Side-effects can be loss of libido and numbness

They can work ‘because people believe they do’

 ?? ?? Withdrawal: Stevie Lewis campaigns against the overuse of antidepres­sants
Withdrawal: Stevie Lewis campaigns against the overuse of antidepres­sants

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