Lithium and valproate combination: Therapeutic strategies in a sample of patients with bipolar disorder

2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (S2) ◽  
pp. 236-236
Author(s):  
M. Muti ◽  
I. Pergentini ◽  
M. Corsi ◽  
C. Viaggi ◽  
A. Caramelli ◽  
...  

IntroductionLithium is the agent that has shown more efficacy for the treatment of Bipolar Disorder (BD), anyway a single agent isn’t effective to control all aspects of the syndrome.The mood-stabilizer frequently used, in combination with Lithium, is Valproate which presents different methabolism and side effects. Further both molecules are glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3b) inhibitors and have synergistic neuroprotective action.ObjectivesWe underline the need to better investigate Lithium and Valproate combination therapy in BD.AimsObservation of Lithium and Valproate combination therapy in a sample of patients with BD, considering doses and serum levels.Methods56 patients with BD (mean age 38 ± 0,02), followed at the day hospital of the Psychiatric Clinic, University of Pisa, were studied. Serum levels evaluated at the Section of Pharmacology, Department of Neuroscience, University of Pisa.ResultsWe identified 5 comparison groups depending on the dose intake of Lithium (11 subjects: 300 mg /die, 9: 450 mg/die, 19: 600 mg/die, 7: 750 mg/die, 10: 900 mg/die) with increased serum levels of the medication (0.27 mEq/l, 0.37 mEq/l, 0.50 mEq/l, 0.52 mEq/l, 0,70 mEq/l). There are not significant differences between groups related to both, the mean dose intake of Valproate (772 mg/die, 744.4 mg/die, 867.5 mg/die, 821.4 mg/die, 845 mg/die) and its serum levels (45.2 mg/L, 46.6 mg/L, 53.2 mg/L, 47.4 mg/L, 48.4 mg/L).ConclusionsThis study aims to identify the effective dose of Lithium in combination with Valproate able to determine the prevention of relapse in BD patients. The use of the lower dose of Lithium maintaining therapeutic effectivness, means reducing side effects, toxicity and the need for constant monitoring.

Author(s):  
Robert M. Post

Lithium is the paradigmatic mood stabilizer. It is effective in the acute and prophylactic treatment of both mania and, to a lesser magnitude, depression. These characteristics are generally paralleled by the widely accepted anticonvulsant mood stabilizers valproate, carbamazepine (Table 6.2.4.1), and potentially by the less well studied putative mood stabilizers oxcarbazepine, zonisamide, and the dihydropyridine L-type calcium channel blocker nimodipine. In contrast, lamotrigine has a profile of better antidepressant effects acutely and prophylactically than antimanic effects. Having grouped lithium, valproate, and carbamazepine together, it is important to note they have subtle differences in their therapeutic profiles and differential clinical predictors of response (Table 6.2.4.1). Response to one of these agents is not predictive of either a positive or negative response to the others. Thus, clinicians are left with only rough estimates and guesses about which drug may be preferentially effective in which patients. Only sequential clinical trials of agents either alone or in combination can verify responsivity in an individual patient. Individual response trumps FDA-approval. Given this clinical conundrum, it is advisable that patients, family members, clinicians, or others carefully rate patients on a longitudinal scale in order to most carefully assess responses and side effects. These are available from the Depression Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA), the STEP-BD NIMH Network, or www.bipolarnetworknews.org and are highly recommended. The importance of careful longitudinal documentation of symptoms and side effects is highlighted by the increasing use of multiple drugs in combination. This is often required because patients may delay treatment-seeking until after many episodes, and very different patterns and frequencies of depressions, manias, mixed states, as well as multiple comorbidities may be present. Treating patients to the new accepted goal of remission of their mood and other anxillary symptoms usually requires use of several medications. If each component of the regimen is kept below an individual's side-effects threshold, judicious use of multiple agents can reduce rather than increase the overall side-effect burden. There is increasing evidence of reliable abnormalities of biochemistry, function, and anatomy in the brains of patients with bipolar disorder, and some of these are directly related to either duration of illness or number of episodes. Therefore, as treatment resistance to most therapeutic agents is related to number of prior episodes, and brain abnormalities may also increase as well, it behooves the patient to begin and sustain acute and long-term treatment as early as possible. Despite the above academic, personal, and public health recommendations, bipolar disorder often takes ten years or more to diagnose and, hence, treat properly. In fact, a younger age of onset is highly related to presence of a longer delay from illness onset to first treatment, and as well, to a poorer outcome assessed both retrospectively and prospectively. New data indicate that the brain growth factor BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor) which is initially important to synaptogenesis and neural development, and later neuroplasticity and long-term memory in the adult is involved in all phases of bipolar disorder and its treatment. It appears to be: 1) both a genetic (the val-66-val allele of BDNF) and environmental (low BDNF from childhood adversity) risk factor; 2) episode-related (serum BDNF decreasing with each episode of depression or mania in proportion to symptom severity; 3) related to some substance abuse comorbidity (BDNF increases in the VTA with defeat stress and cocaine self-administration); and 4) related to treatment. Lithium, valproate, and carbamazepine increase BDNF and quetiapine and ziprasidone block the decreases in hippocampal BDNF that occur with stress (as do antidepressants). A greater number of prior episodes is related to increased likelihood of: 1) a rapid cycling course; 2) more severe depressive symptoms; 3) more disability; 4) more cognitive dysfunction; and 5) even the incidence of late life dementia. Taken together, the new data suggest a new view not only of bipolar disorder, but its treatment. Adequate effective treatment may not only (a) prevent affective episodes (with their accompanying risk of morbidity, dysfunction, and even death by suicide or the increased medical mortality associated with depression), but may also (b) reverse or prevent some of the biological abnormalities associated with the illness from progressing. Thus, patients should be given timely information pertinent to their stage of illness and recovery that emphasizes not only the risk of treatments, but also their potential, figuratively and literally, life-saving benefits. Long-term treatment and education and targeted psychotherapies are critical to a good outcome. We next highlight several attributes of each mood stabilizer, but recognize that the choice of each agent itself is based on inadequate information from the literature, and sequencing of treatments and their combinations is currently more an art than an evidence-based science. We look forward to these informational and clinical trial deficits being reduced in the near future and the development of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and other neurobiological predictors of individual clinical response to individual drugs. In the meantime, patients and clinicians must struggle with treatment choice based on: 1) the most appropriate targetting of the predominant symptom picture with the most likely effective agent (Table 6.2.4.1 and 6.2.4.2) the best side-effects profile for that patient (Table 6.2.4.2 and 6.2.4.3) using combinations of drugs with different therapeutic targets and mechanisms of action (Table 6.2.4.3 and 6.2.4.4) careful consideration of potential advantageous pharmacodynamic interactions and disadvantageous pharmacokinetic drug-drug interactions that need to be avoided or anticipated.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 108-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ramy M. Hanna ◽  
Huma Hasnain ◽  
Michelle D. Sangalang ◽  
Jennifer Han ◽  
Aarthi Arasu ◽  
...  

Lithium (Li) carbonate has been established as a mood stabilizer and an efficacious treatment for bipolar disorder since its discovery by Dr. John Cade in 1948. Li interacts significantly with organ systems and endocrine pathways. One of the most challenging side effects of Li to manage is its effect on the parathyroid glands. Dysregulation of parathyroid signaling due to Li results in hypercalcemia due to increased vitamin D3 generation, increased calcium absorption from the gut, and bone resorption, occasionally resulting in concomitant hypercalciuria. However, hypercalciuria is not a definitive feature for hyperparathyroidism, and normal calcium excretion might be seen in these patients. Hypercalcemia may also result from volume contraction and decreased renal clearance, which are commonly seen in these patients. Anatomically the parathyroid abnormalities can present as single or multiglandular disease. We report 3 cases where the patients developed multiple side effects of Li therapy as well as hypercalcemia due to hyperparathyroidism. The literature is reviewed with regard to medical and surgical management of Li-associated hyperparathyroidism in the context of these 3 presented cases.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shahin Alizadeh-Fanalou ◽  
Mohammad Babaei ◽  
Elham Bahreini

Abstract Background: Many diabetic patients use herbal medicines in addition to their mainstream treatments. Plants contain a well-known and unknown set of compounds that may exacerbate or improve diabetes complications. Thus, the side effects of these herbs should be known before prescribing. The aim of the study is to investigate the effects of hydroalcoholic extract of Securigera securidaca (L.) Degen & Dorfl (S. securidaca) seed (HESS) on angiogenesis/anti-angiogenesis balance in Streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats, alone and in combination with glibenclamide. Methods: The groups involved in this animal study included diabetic and healthy control groups, groups treated with three doses of HESS, group treated with glibenclamide, and groups received combination therapy. Serum samples were taken and analyzed for the levels of angiogenic/ anti-angiogenic biomarkers.Results: Induction of diabetes increased serum levels of angiogenic agents and decreased circulating anti-angiogenic factors. The herbal extract, even with the highest dose, had little effects on the blood levels of the tested biomarkers except with TGF-β. Glibenclamide was more effective than the highest dose of HESS in preventing the increase in serum levels of angiogenic factors and in inhibiting the decrease in anti-angiogenic agents in diabetic rats. Combination therapy with the highest dose of HESS partly enhanced the glibenclamide effects.Conclusions: Although glibenclamide was more effective than the highest dose of HESS used in this study in preventing changes in serum concentrations of angiogenic/ anti-angiogenic biomarkers in the diabetic animals, this study show that S. securidaca has no side effects on diabetes complications caused by vascular disorders and neovascularization, and still it can be used as a herbal supplement with the standard drug.


Author(s):  
Nidhi Chauhan ◽  
Subho Chakrabarti ◽  
Sandeep Grover

Abstract Objective Unlike schizophrenia, comparisons of different methods of estimating inadequate adherence in bipolar disorder (BD) are scarce. This study compared four methods of identifying inadequate adherence among outpatients with BD. Materials and Methods Two self-reports, the Morisky Medication Adherence Questionnaire (MAQ) and the Drug Attitude Inventory (DAI-10), clinician ratings employing the Compliance Rating Scale (CRS), mood-stabilizer levels, and clinic-based pill counts were compared at intake in 106 outpatients with BD and after 6 months of follow-up (n = 75). Statistical Analysis Rates of nonadherence were determined for each method. The ability to detect inadequate adherence was based on sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV), and positive and negative likelihood ratios (LR positive and LR negative). Correlation coefficients and Cohen's kappa values were used to determine the agreement between measures. Correlation coefficients were also used to evaluate the determinants of inadequate adherence Results The MAQ and the DAI-10 (cut-off score of two) yielded higher rates of nonadherence (35–47%) than the other methods. They were better at detecting adherence (specificity, 34–42%; PPV, 40–44%; and LR negative, 0.70–0.96) than other measures and had moderate ability to identify nonadherence compared with them (sensitivity, 63–73%; NPV, 54–70%; and LR positive, 1.02–1.16). They were associated with several established predictors of nonadherence. The MAQ and DAI-10 scores and the MAQ and CRS scores were modestly correlated. Multivariate analysis showed that 20% of the variance in the DAI-10 scores was explained by the MAQ scores. Despite their low yield, serum levels had a high sensitivity (88%) and higher accuracy (55%) in identifying inadequate adherence. CRS ratings and pill counts had high sensitivity but low specificity to detect inadequate adherence. Conclusion Self-reports appeared to be the most efficient method of ascertaining inadequate adherence among outpatients with BD. However, since none of the measures were adequate by themselves, a combination of different measures is more likely to maximize the chances of identifying inadequate adherence among these patients.


2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (S2) ◽  
pp. 2026-2026
Author(s):  
K. Fountoulakis

The treatment of bipolar disorder is complex and the overall results of monotherapy are not satisfactory. Combination and add-on studies suggest that in acutely manic patients who are partial responders to lithium, valproate or carbamazepine, a good strategy would be to add haloperidol, risperidone, olanzapine, quetiapine or aripiprazole. Adding oxcarbazepine to lithium is also a choice. For patients with refractory bipolar depression the only positive data concern adding lamotrigine to lithium. During the maintenance phase the combination of quetiapine plus mood stabilizer is superior to monotherapy in the prevention of manic and depressive recurrences in either manic, depressive, or mixed index episode over a period of 2-years. These combination studies appear to be the first to report prevention on both depression and mania regardless of the type of index episode.Discontinuation studies suggest that patients stabilized on combination therapy (olanzapine plus lithium/valproate or mood stabilizer plus ziprasidone) do worse when the antipsychotic is discontinued. The recently published BALANCE could neither reliably confirm nor refute a benefit of combination therapy compared with lithium monotherapy. Add on studies suggest that at least some strategies could be useful in patients with inadequate response to monotherapy. Overall, although there is no compelling data that combination treatment does better than monotherapy, the data suggest that those patients stabilized on combination treatment might do worse if shifted from combination, and patients refractory to monotherapy could benefit with add on treatment with olanzapine, valproate, an antidepressant or lamotrigine, depending on the index acute phase.


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 827-827
Author(s):  
Howard Safran ◽  
Mallika Sachdev Dhawan ◽  
Ludimila Cavalcante ◽  
Andre Luiz De Souza ◽  
Steven Francis Powell ◽  
...  

827 Background: 9-ING-41 is a selective GSK-3β inhibitor with significant pre-clinical antitumor activity in a broad spectrum of malignancies as a single agent and in combination with cytotoxic agents. GSK-3β is a serine/threonine kinase whose overexpression is associated with advanced stage, aggressive tumor growth, and chemotherapy resistance. We report the preliminary results of patients (pts) with gastrointestinal (GI) malignancies. Methods: Phase 1b/2 study evaluating safety and efficacy of 9-ING-41 as monotherapy and combination therapy in pts with refractory cancers. 9-ING-41 is administered intravenously twice-weekly as a single agent (21-day-cycle) or combined with chemotherapy agents, including gemcitabine (GEM), nab-paclitaxel + GEM, carboplatin, or paclitaxel. Study parts 1 and 2 evaluate the safety, describe dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs), determine the maximum tolerated dose and the recommended phase 2 study dose (RP2D) for 9-ING-41 as monotherapy (Part 1) and as combination therapy (Part 2). Part 3 (Simon 2-Stage Phase 2) assess clinical benefit in pts treated with 9-ING-41-based combinations at the RP2D established in Part 2. Response is assessed by RECIST 1.1 criteria in the evaluable lesions. Results: To date, the study accrued 63 pts. Five dose levels (1, 2, 3.3, 5 and 7 mg/kg) have been completed without DLTs. Part 2 of the study evaluating 9-ING-41-based chemotherapy combinations is ongoing. Five out of nine pts with pancreas cancer (PCa) enrolled had stable disease (SD) as the best response; 2 out of 9 pts had a 40-45% decline of CA 19-9. One pt completed 6 cycles with 9-ING-41, two pts completed 4 cycles with 9-ING-41/GEM. Two active pts are receiving 9-ING-41/GEM with SD after 3 and 4 cycles. Three out of four pts with adenocarcinoma of the appendix enrolled had SD as the best response; two pts in active treatment are receiving cycles 5 and 6. One out of 13 pts with colorectal cancer had SD. 9-ING-41-attributable AE to date are reversible grade 1 transient visual changes (color perception). Conclusions: 9-ING-41 is well-tolerated with encouraging SD among heavily pretreated pts with carcinoma of the pancreas and appendix. Clinical trial information: NCT03678883.


2018 ◽  
pp. 158-165
Author(s):  
S. Nassir Ghaemi

A “mood stabilizer” is a drug that prevents mania and depressive episodes in bipolar disorder. The four drugs that have reasonable evidence that they can do this are lithium, Depakote, carbamazepine, and Lamictal. Second generation antipsychotics are not mood stabilizers, despite the FDA maintenance indications that many have received, because of the invalidity of the enriched, randomized, discontinuation maintenance design. Thus, all patients with bipolar illness should receive one of those four mood stabilizers, and dopamine blockers should be used as adjuncts, but not by themselves. In this chapter, a summary is given of the major drug classes, and the agents within those classes. Specific dosing guidelines are provided for most agents. Main clinical side effects and drug interactions are reviewed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 93 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anita A. Mehta ◽  
Ashok D. Agrawal ◽  
Vasu Appanna ◽  
Kiranj K. Chaudagar

The subacute use of corticosteroids has side-effects such as glucose intolerance, dyslipidemia, anxiety, and depression, which could be halted with vitamin D, which is an immunomodulatory vitamin. Thus, we aimed to study the anti-asthmatic efficacy and side-effects profile of vitamin D, the corticosteroid dexamethasone, and their combination on ovalbumin-induced airway inflammation in rats. For this, 2 different doses of vitamin D (50 IU/kg, daily for 2 weeks, or and 60000 IU/kg, bolus dose, by intraperitoneal injection (i.p.)) were administered in combination with dexamethasone (2.5 mg/kg, i.p., for 2 weeks) prior to challenge with ovalbumin. At the end of the therapy, the asthmatic parameters such as differential white blood cell counts, serum levels of immunoglobulin E, bronchoalveolar lavaged fluid, and interleukin-5, as well as serum levels of nitric oxide were significantly increased after allergen challenges in asthmatic rats as compared with the controls. Such increases were significantly attenuated by monotherapy with vitamin D and with combination therapy of vitamin D and dexamethasone, where the combination therapy was superior to the monotherapy. Dexamethasone-induced hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia, and behavioral abnormalities in the allergic rats were attenuated with vitamin D. The daily dose was better for controlling serum levels of immunoglobulin E than the bolus dose, whereas the bolus was superior for reducing dexamethasone-induced psychotropic abnormalities. There were no significant changes in other parameters between the daily and the bolus dose. In conclusion, a daily dose of vitamin D in combination with dexamethasone is more efficacious for treating asthma in allergic rats than monotherapy.


2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (S2) ◽  
pp. 2181-2181
Author(s):  
S. Kasper ◽  
E. Vieta ◽  
F. Bellivier ◽  
M. Frye

The extensive research into the treatment of bipolar disorder over the last 20 years means that we, as clinicians, have never been in a better position to treat patients with bipolar disorder. Yet despite the availability of modern, evidence-based treatment guidelines, bipolar disorder remains an everyday treatment challenge. Newly diagnosed patients requiring treatment for the first time are not always adequately controlled with single-agent therapy and, similarly, combination therapy is also frequently necessary as maintenance treatment. But with this recognition comes the new challenge of identifying when monotherapy is not enough, which agents to combine, when and for how long? How do we know?Joined by an internationally respected faculty, Professor Siegfried Kasper chairs a discussion to help answer some of the key questions facing clinicians today:What response can be anticipated from recommended first-line monotherapies for acute mania?How do we know whether the response we observe when we prescribe a first-line treatment in a manic patient is adequate?To what extent can a partial non-response to monotherapy be improved by the addition of a second agent?What's the benefit of maintaining combination treatment once patients are stable and how long should I continue?Does adding an antipsychotic to a mood stabiliser increase the risk of adverse events, in the short term or in the long term?Drawing on latest guideline recommendations, recent clinical research, case studies and their extensive clinical experience, the panel will debate these interesting questions and shed light on how we can optimize both acute and maintenance treatment in this patient group.Although the design of maintenance studies in bipolar disorder has significantly evolved in recent years, individual study designs continue to differ in important ways, with important implications. What may appear to be small differences between study designs, such as the type of most recent episode experienced by the patients or the stabilisation criteria used in the trial, can have big implications for study outcome. It is thus becoming increasingly important to be able to evaluate the results of trials within the context of the design and determine what they mean for treatment practice. Our panel will therefore also discuss the extent to which the design of bipolar maintenance studies can influence the results achieved and share their views on what this means for treatment now, and in the future.Are we, and more importantly our patients, getting the most out of combination therapy for bipolar mania? Come and debate the issues with the panel, share your views and see what can be achieved.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document