AI Article Synopsis

  • Antipsychotic medications can have different effects and side effects in individuals with mental illnesses, prompting research to find specific biomarkers linked to these effects.
  • Researchers conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis using studies with healthy volunteers to evaluate hormonal, inflammatory, and metabolic biomarkers associated with antipsychotic treatment, identifying 28 studies with 28 biomarkers.
  • The analysis found significant effects on six biomarkers, particularly related to the commonly used antipsychotic olanzapine, highlighting the need for further research and replication of these findings to better understand the impact of antipsychotics on biomarkers.

Article Abstract

Antipsychotic medications demonstrate a variable range of efficacy and side effects in patients with mental illness. Research has attempted to identify biomarkers associated with antipsychotic effects in various populations. Research designs utilizing healthy volunteers may have the added benefit of measuring the effect of antipsychotics on a given biomarker (s) independent of the varied environmental and clinical factors that often accompany patient populations. The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to synthesize the current evidence of hormonal, inflammatory, and metabolic biomarker studies of antipsychotic treatment in study designs using healthy volunteers. The systematic review was performed according to established guidelines and a random effects meta-analysis of biomarkers appearing in at least three studies was performed while biomarkers in two or less studies were qualitatively summarized. A total of 28 studies including 28 biomarkers were identified. Meta-analyses were carried out for 14 biomarkers, showing significant effects within six biomarkers (cortisol, C-peptide, free fatty acids, leptin, thyroid-stimulating hormone, and prolactin). Many of these effects were associated with olanzapine, the most used antipsychotic amongst the trials, observed on sub-analyses. When combining biomarkers into categories, some additional effects were observed, for example, when grouping inflammatory biomarkers. These findings suggest that antipsychotics exert potentially strong effects on several biomarkers of interest independent of psychiatric disease which could be used to spur future investigations, however, replication work is needed for many biomarkers included in this review.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9187614PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/phar.2689DOI Listing

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