Despite these strengths, the results reported by Uher and colleagues are modest. None of the candidate genes assessed provided evidence for association with response to either of the antidepressants studied or with response to a combined phenotype assessing generalized antidepressant response. In light of substantial prior literature implicating candidates in the serotoninergic system, including the serotonin transporter polymorphism for which there is meta-analytic support (
+5), the lack of significant association to escitalopram response at any of these loci is disappointing. GWAS results were only slightly more encouraging, as no SNP achieved genome-wide significance in the study group as a whole, although a SNP in the uronyl 2-sulphotransferase (
UST) gene was significantly (p=3.6×10
—8) associated with response to nortriptyline. The lack of convincing genome-wide results is consistent with the limited number of other GWAS studies of antidepressant drug response. Ising and colleagues (
+6) reported on a GWAS involving two German samples, with replication genotyping conducted in a subset of the Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) trial, while Garriock and colleagues (
+7) conducted a GWAS on level 1 of the STAR*D sample, which included more than 1,400 subjects treated with citalopram, and each of these studies did not detect genome-wide significant results. The traditional mantra of complex geneticists faced with nonsignificant results is "more subjects needed"; however, STAR*D included 1,400 subjects treated with the same agent in a relatively controlled clinical trial, and it is daunting to consider much larger single-drug treatment trials in at least the near term.