Switching to Vortioxetine in Patients with Poorly Tolerated Antidepressant-Related Sexual Dysfunction in Clinical Practice: A 3-Month Prospective Real-Life Study

Author:

Montejo Angel L.123ORCID,Sánchez-Sánchez Froilán4,De Alarcón Rubén2,Matías Juan2,Cortés Benjamin2,Matos Claudia2,Martín-Pinto Tomás2,Ríos Peñitas5,González-García Nerea6ORCID,Acosta José María3

Affiliation:

1. Nursing School, University of Salamanca, Av. Donantes de Sangre SN, 37004 Salamanca, Spain

2. Servicio de Psiquiatría, Hospital Universitario de Salamanca, 37007 Salamanca, Spain

3. Instituto de Investigación Biomédica de Salamanca (IBSAL), Paseo de San Vicente SN, 37007 Salamanca, Spain

4. Centro de Salud Xàtiva, Xàtiva, 46800 Valencia, Spain

5. Hospital Universitario Cáceres, 10004 Cáceres, Spain

6. Statistical Department, University of Salamanca, 37004 Salamanca, Spain

Abstract

Treatment-emergent sexual dysfunction (TESD) is one of the most frequent and persistent adverse effects of antidepressant medication. Sexual dysfunction (SD) secondary to SSRIs occurs in >60% of sexually active patients and >80% of healthy volunteers, with this causing treatment discontinuation in >35% of patients. However, this factor is rarely addressed in routine examinations, and only 15–30% of these events are spontaneously reported. A strategy of switching to a different non-serotonergic antidepressant could involve a risk of relapse or clinical worsening due to a lack of serotonergic activity. Vortioxetine appears to have less impact on sexual function due to its multimodal mechanism of action. No studies have been published on the effectiveness of switching to vortioxetine in patients with poorly tolerated long-term antidepressant-related SD in naturalistic settings. Study objectives: To determine the effectiveness of switching to vortioxetine due to SD in a routine clinical practice setting. Methodology: observational pragmatic and naturalistic study to determine the effectiveness of the switch to vortioxetine (mean dosage 13.11 ± 4.03) in 74 patients aged 43.1 ± 12.65 (54% males) at risk of discontinuing treatment due to sexual dysfunction. The PRSexDQ*- SALSEX scale (* Psychotropic-Related Sexual Dysfunction Questionnaire) was applied at two moments: baseline visit and after 3 months of follow-up. Results: global Sexual Dysfunction (SD) measured with the SALSEX scale decreased significantly between the baseline visit (10.32; SD 2.73) and the follow-up visit (3.78; SD 3.68), p < 0.001. There was a significant improvement (p < 0.001) at the endpoint including decreased libido, delay of orgasm, anorgasmia and arousal difficulties in both sexes. After switching to vortioxetine, 83.81% of patients experienced an improvement in sexual function (43.2% felt greatly improved). Most patients (83.3%) who switched to vortioxetine continued treatment after the follow-up visit. A total of 58.1% of patients showed an improvement in depressive symptoms from the baseline visit. Conclusion: switching to vortioxetine is an effective and reliable strategy to treat patients with poorly tolerated previous antidepressant-related sexual dysfunction in real-life clinical settings.

Funder

Lundbeck

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference43 articles.

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2. Treatment-Emergent Sexual Dysfunction Related to Antidepressants: A Meta-Analysis;Serretti;J. Clin. Psychopharmacol.,2009

3. Incidence of sexual dysfunction associated with antidepressant agents: A prospective multicenter study of 1022 outpatients. Spanish Working Group for the Study of Psychotropic-Related Sexual Dysfunction;Montejo;J. Clin. Psychiatry,2001

4. The Impact of Severe Mental Disorders and Psychotropic Medications on Sexual Health and Its Implications for Clinical Management;Montejo;World Psychiatry,2018

5. Pharmacology and Clinical Potential of Vortioxetine in the Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder;Alvarez;Neuropsychiatr. Dis. Treat.,2014

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