Ghrelin Serum Concentrations Are Associated with Treatment Response During Lithium Augmentation of Antidepressants
Date Issued
2017-01-01
Author(s)
Ricken, Roland
Bopp, Sandra
Schlattmann, Peter
Himmerich, Hubertus
Bschor, Tom
Richter, Christoph
Elstner, Samuel
Stamm, Thomas J.
Schulz-Ratei, Brigitte
Lingesleben, Alexandra
Reischies, Friedel M.
Bauer, Michael
Heinz, Andreas
Hellweg, Rainer
Adli, Mazda
DOI
10.1093/ijnp/pyw082
Abstract
Lithium augmentation of antidepressants is an effective strategy in treatment-resistant depression. The proteohormone ghrelin is thought to be involved in the pathophysiology of depression. The purpose of this study was to investigate the association of treatment response with the course of ghrelin levels during lithium augmentation.; Ghrelin serum concentrations and severity of depression were measured in 85 acute depressive patients before and after 4 weeks of lithium augmentation.; In a linear mixed model analysis, we found a significant effect of response*time interaction (F1.81=9.48; P=.0028): under treatment, ghrelin levels increased in nonresponders and slightly decreased in responders to lithium augmentation. The covariate female gender had a significant positive effect (F1.83=4.69; P=.033), whereas time, response, appetite, and body mass index (kg/m2) did not show any significant effect on ghrelin levels (P>.05).; This is the first study showing that the course of ghrelin levels separates responders and nonresponders to lithium augmentation. Present results support the hypothesis that ghrelin serum concentrations might be involved in response to pharmacological treatment of depression.
File(s)![Thumbnail Image]()
Loading...
Name
pyw082.pdf
Size
193.59 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum
(MD5):d45afe1a5f08d349f870c6af344b152f