
Am J Psychiatry 155:838-840, June 1998
© 1998 American Psychiatric Association
Neuroendocrine Evidence That Clozapine's Serotonergic Antagonism Is Relevant to Its Efficacy in Treating Hallucinations and Other Positive Schizophrenic Symptoms
Hugh Jones, M.B., B.S.,
Vivienne A. Curtis, M.R.C.Psych.,
Padraig Wright, M.D., M.R.C.Psych., and
James V. Lucey, M.D., M.R.C.P.I., M.R.C.Psych.
OBJECTIVE: The authors examined the effect of prolonged clozapine treatment on central serotonergic (5-HT) function in schizophrenia. METHOD: Prolactin responses to the 5-HT releasing agent d-fenfluramine were measured in two groups of 10 schizophrenic subjects. The first group was tested twice, before and after a mean of 10 weeks of clozapine treatment. The second group was tested after a mean of 20 months of clozapine treatment. RESULTS: The prolactin response was significantly blunted in these 20 patients treated with clozapine. There was a significant positive correlation between d-fenfluramine-evoked prolactin release and the overall positive symptom score and the hallucination and delusion subscores of the Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Blunted 5-HT-mediated prolactin responses in schizophrenic patients receiving clozapine monotherapy for up to 20 months were correlated with reductions in positive symptoms. This suggests that 5-HT antagonism is relevant to clozapine's efficacy in alleviating hallucinations and other positive schizophrenic symptoms.
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