Genetic predictors of response to serotonergic and noradrenergic antidepressants in major depressive disorder: a genome-wide analysis of individual-level data and a meta-analysis

It has been suggested that outcomes of antidepressant treatment for major depressive disorder could be significantly improved if treatment choice is informed by genetic data. This study aims to test the hypothesis that common genetic variants can predict response to antidepressants in a clinically m...

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Veröffentlicht in:PLoS medicine 2012-10, Vol.9 (10), p.e1001326-e1001326
Hauptverfasser: Tansey, Katherine E, Guipponi, Michel, Perroud, Nader, Bondolfi, Guido, Domenici, Enrico, Evans, David, Hall, Stephanie K, Hauser, Joanna, Henigsberg, Neven, Hu, Xiaolan, Jerman, Borut, Maier, Wolfgang, Mors, Ole, O'Donovan, Michael, Peters, Tim J, Placentino, Anna, Rietschel, Marcella, Souery, Daniel, Aitchison, Katherine J, Craig, Ian, Farmer, Anne, Wendland, Jens R, Malafosse, Alain, Holmans, Peter, Lewis, Glyn, Lewis, Cathryn M, Stensbøl, Tine Bryan, Kapur, Shitij, McGuffin, Peter, Uher, Rudolf
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:It has been suggested that outcomes of antidepressant treatment for major depressive disorder could be significantly improved if treatment choice is informed by genetic data. This study aims to test the hypothesis that common genetic variants can predict response to antidepressants in a clinically meaningful way. The NEWMEDS consortium, an academia-industry partnership, assembled a database of over 2,000 European-ancestry individuals with major depressive disorder, prospectively measured treatment outcomes with serotonin reuptake inhibiting or noradrenaline reuptake inhibiting antidepressants and available genetic samples from five studies (three randomized controlled trials, one part-randomized controlled trial, and one treatment cohort study). After quality control, a dataset of 1,790 individuals with high-quality genome-wide genotyping provided adequate power to test the hypotheses that antidepressant response or a clinically significant differential response to the two classes of antidepressants could be predicted from a single common genetic polymorphism. None of the more than half million genetic markers significantly predicted response to antidepressants overall, serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or noradrenaline reuptake inhibitors, or differential response to the two types of antidepressants (genome-wide significance p
ISSN:1549-1676
1549-1277
1549-1676
DOI:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001326