Pharmacogenomic Overlap Between Antidepressant Treatment Response in Major Depression & Antidepressant Associated Treatment Emergent Mania in Bipolar Disorder

Author:

Nunez Nicolas1,Coombes Brandon1ORCID,Beaupre Lindsay Melhuish,Ozerdem Aysegul,Resendez Manuel Gardea,Romo-Nava Francisco,Bond David2,Veldic Marin1ORCID,Singh Balwinder,Moore Katherine,Betcher Hannah,Kung Simon,Prieto Miguel,Fuentes Manuel,Ercis MeteORCID,Miola Alessandro,Ruiz Jorge Sanchez1ORCID,Jenkins GregoryORCID,Batzler Anthony,Leung JonathanORCID,Cuellar-Barboza AlfredoORCID,Tye Susannah3ORCID,McElroy Susan L.4,Biernacka Joanna1ORCID,Frye Mark1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mayo Clinic

2. University of Minnesota

3. The Universty of Queensland

4. Lindner Center of Hope / University of Cincinnati

Abstract

Abstract There is increasing interest in individualizing treatment selection for more than 25 regulatory approved treatments for major depressive disorder (MDD). Despite an inconclusive efficacy evidence base, antidepressants (ADs) are prescribed for the depressive phase of bipolar disorder with oftentimes an inadequate treatment response and or clinical concern for mood destabilization. This study explored the relationship between antidepressant response in MDD and antidepressant-associated treatment emergent mania (TEM) in bipolar disorder (BD). We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) and polygenic score analysis of TEM and tested its association with a subset of BD-I patients treated with SSRIs or SNRIs. Our results did not identify any genome-wide significant variants although, we found that a higher polygenic score (PGS) for antidepressant response in MDD was associated with higher odds of TEM in BD. Future studies with larger transdiagnostic cohorts treated with antidepressants are encouraged to identify a neurobiological mechanism associated with a spectrum of depression improvement (response- emergent mania).

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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