AI Article Synopsis

  • Neurosteroids, particularly etifoxine, are being researched for treating affective disorders and are thought to stimulate the production of neurosteroids in the body.
  • A crossover study involving 36 healthy male volunteers compared the effects of etifoxine, alprazolam, and a placebo using stool sample analysis to assess gut microbiome changes.
  • Results showed that while etifoxine treatment led to a reduction in certain beneficial bacterial species, changes in microbiome diversity were more likely influenced by individual differences rather than the treatments themselves.

Article Abstract

Background: Neurosteroids have recently gained in interest as a treatment strategy for affective disorders. Etifoxine is known for its dual mode of action, one of which is to stimulate endogenous neurosteroid synthesis. The gut microbiome has been studied in affective disorders, but it has not been investigated in the context of human etifoxine or neurosteroid interventions.

Methods: We performed a crossover study with 36 healthy male volunteers who received etifoxine versus alprazolam and placebo in a balanced Williams design. Participants were randomized into six sequences and went through three 5-day treatments followed by wash-out phases of 9 days. Bacterial compositions in stool samples were determined by high-throughput 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing.

Results: Gut microbiome analyses revealed no relevant effects between treatments with respect to alpha and beta diversity. Differential abundance analyses yielded etifoxine treatment as the only effect related to changes in microbial features with reductions of , and (i.e., ).

Conclusion: Here we report on the first human investigation of the gut microbiome with short-term etifoxine intervention. Differences in diversity and compositional structure of the microbiome were more likely due to between- subject effects rather than medication. However, five-day treatment with etifoxine reduced the abundance of a few bacterial species. These species are currently seen as beneficial components of a healthy intestinal microbiome. This reduction in abundances may be related to elevated endogenous neurosteroids.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10704910PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2023.1188847DOI Listing

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