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Presynaptic Dopamine Capacity in Patients with Treatment-Resistant Schizophrenia Taking Clozapine: An [F-18]DOPA PET Study

Cited 77 time in Web of Science Cited 85 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Eui Tae; Howes, Oliver D.; Veronese, Mattia; Beck, Katherine; Seo, Seongho; Park, Jin Woo; Lee, Jae Sung; Lee, Yun-Sang; Kwon, Jun Soo

Issue Date
2017-03
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Neuropsychopharmacology, Vol.42 No.4, pp.941-950
Abstract
Some patients with schizophrenia show poor response to first-line antipsychotic treatments and this is termed treatment-resistant schizophrenia The differential response to first-line antipsychotic drugs may reflect a different underlying neurobiology. Indeed, a previous study found dopamine synthesis capacity was significantly lower in patients with treatment-resistant schizophrenia However, in this study, the treatment-resistant patients were highly symptomatic, whereas the responsive patients showed no or minimal symptoms. The study could not distinguish whether this was a trait effect or reflected the difference in symptom levels. Thus, we aimed to test whether dopaminergic function is altered in patients with a history of treatment resistance to first-line drugs relative to treatment responders when both groups are matched for symptom severity levels by recruiting treatment-resistant patients currently showed low symptom severity with the clozapine treatment. Healthy controls (n = 12), patients treated with clozapine (n = 12) who had not responded to first-line antipsychotics, and patients who had responded to first-line antipsychotics (n = 12) were recruited. Participants were matched for age and sex and symptomatic severity level in patient groups. Participants' dopamine synthesis capacity was measured by using [F-18]DOPA PET. We found that patients treated with clozapine show lower dopamine synthesis capacity than patients who have responded to first-line treatment (Cohen's d=0.9191 (whole striatum), 0.7781 (associative striatum), 1.0344 (limbic striatum), and 1.0189 (sensorimotor striatum) in line with the hypothesis that the dopaminergic function is linked to treatment response. This suggests that a different neurobiology may underlie treatment-resistant schizophrenia and that dopamine synthesis capacity may be a useful biomarker to predict treatment responsiveness.
ISSN
0893-133X
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/192658
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/npp.2016.258
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