Dose-dependent effects of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor citalopram: A combined SPECT and phMRI study

Author:

Schrantee Anouk12ORCID,Solleveld Michelle M12,Schwantje Hilde1,Bruin Willem B3,Mutsaerts Henk-Jan MM1ORCID,Adriaanse Sofie M1,Lucassen Paul2,Booij Jan1,Reneman Liesbeth1

Affiliation:

1. Amsterdam University Medical Centers, Academic Medical Center, Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

3. Amsterdam University Medical Centers, Academic Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

Background: Serotonin transporter blockers, like citalopram, dose-dependently bind to the serotonin transporter. Pharmacological magnetic resonance imaging (phMRI) can be used to non-invasively monitor effects of serotonergic medication. Although previous studies showed that phMRI can measure the effect of a single dose of serotoninergic medication, it is currently unclear whether it can also detect dose-dependent effects. Aims: To investigate the dose-dependent phMRI response to citalopram and compared this with serotonin transporter occupancy, measured with single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). Methods: Forty-five healthy females were randomized to pre-treatment with placebo, a low (4 mg) or clinically standard (16 mg) oral citalopram dose. Prior to citalopram, and 3 h after, subjects underwent SPECT scanning. Subsequently, a phMRI scan with a citalopram challenge (7.5 mg intravenously) was conducted. Change in cerebral blood flow in response to the citalopram challenge was assessed in the thalamus and occipital cortex (control region). Results: Citalopram dose-dependently affected serotonin transporter occupancy, as measured with SPECT. In addition, citalopram dose-dependently affected the phMRI response to intravenous citalopram in the thalamus (but not occipital cortex), but phMRI was less sensitive in distinguishing between groups than SPECT. Serotonin transporter occupancy showed a trend-significant correlation to thalamic cerebral blood flow change. Conclusion: These results suggest that phMRI likely suffers from higher variation than SPECT, but that these techniques probably also assess different functional aspects of the serotonergic synapse; therefore phMRI could complement positron emission tomography/SPECT for measuring effects of serotonergic medication.

Funder

ERA-NET-PrioMedChild

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Psychiatry and Mental health,Pharmacology

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