Pharmacogenetic evaluation to assess breakthrough psychosis with aripiprazole long-acting injection: a case report

Abstract Background Given the complex nature of symptom presentation and medication regimens, psychiatric clinics may benefit from additional tools to personalize treatments. Utilizing pharmacogenetic information may be helpful in assessing unique responses to therapy. We report herein a case of wea...

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Main Authors: Seenae Eum, Mark E. Schneiderhan, Jacob T. Brown, Adam M. Lee, Jeffrey R. Bishop
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-07-01
Series:BMC Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-017-1396-x
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spelling doaj-b6622791b1034bcbbfe10a56553b22d22020-11-25T01:54:32ZengBMCBMC Psychiatry1471-244X2017-07-011711710.1186/s12888-017-1396-xPharmacogenetic evaluation to assess breakthrough psychosis with aripiprazole long-acting injection: a case reportSeenae Eum0Mark E. Schneiderhan1Jacob T. Brown2Adam M. Lee3Jeffrey R. Bishop4College of Pharmacy, Department of Experimental and Clinical Pharmacology, University of MinnesotaCollege of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmacy Practice and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of MinnesotaCollege of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmacy Practice and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of MinnesotaCollege of Pharmacy, Department of Experimental and Clinical Pharmacology, University of MinnesotaCollege of Pharmacy, Department of Experimental and Clinical Pharmacology and College of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, University of MinnesotaAbstract Background Given the complex nature of symptom presentation and medication regimens, psychiatric clinics may benefit from additional tools to personalize treatments. Utilizing pharmacogenetic information may be helpful in assessing unique responses to therapy. We report herein a case of wearing-off phenomena during treatment with aripiprazole long-acting injectable (LAI) and a proof of concept strategy of how pharmacogenetic information may be used to assess possible genetic factors and also hypothesize potential mechanisms for further study. Case presentation A 51-year-old African American male with schizoaffective disorder was referred to a psychiatric clinic for medication management. After unsuccessful trials of multiple antipsychotics, oral aripiprazole was initiated (up to 30 mg/day) and transitioned to aripiprazole LAI with symptom improvement. At a high dose of aripiprazole LAI (400 mg Q3wks), the patient experienced breakthrough symptoms approximately 3 days prior to his next injection. Various considerations were examined to explain his atypical dose requirements, including but not limited to pharmacogenetic influences. Pharmacogenetic testing ruled out genetic influences on drug metabolism but noted a -141C Del variant in the dopamine-D2 receptor (DRD2) gene associated in prior studies of poor-response to antipsychotics. At this time, a new formulation, aripiprazole lauroxil, was explored due to its availability in higher dose options. Transition to the new formulation (882 mg Q4wks) greatly improved and stabilized the patient’s symptoms with no breakthrough psychosis. Comparable daily dose equivalents were achieved with two different formulations due to the Q3wks vs Q4wks dosing strategies, although the two agents have some differences in pharmacokinetic profiles. Conclusions We report a case of a patient experiencing wearing-off symptoms with aripiprazole LAI who benefited from switching to aripiprazole lauroxil. Pharmacogenetic testing revealed normal activity for relevant metabolism pathways but a DRD2 -141C variant that may influence brain D2 expression and antipsychotic responsiveness. The clinical utility of DRD2 information and what to do with genotyping results has not been previously addressed, despite availability on clinical test panels. Our case report suggests further investigations of altered dosing strategies and receptor genotype sensitivities to pharmacokinetic factors may be helpful in understanding symptom re-emergence observed in some patients taking LAI antipsychotics.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-017-1396-xAripiprazole long-acting injectableWearing-off symptomsDRD2Clinical pharmacogenetic testing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seenae Eum
Mark E. Schneiderhan
Jacob T. Brown
Adam M. Lee
Jeffrey R. Bishop
spellingShingle Seenae Eum
Mark E. Schneiderhan
Jacob T. Brown
Adam M. Lee
Jeffrey R. Bishop
Pharmacogenetic evaluation to assess breakthrough psychosis with aripiprazole long-acting injection: a case report
BMC Psychiatry
Aripiprazole long-acting injectable
Wearing-off symptoms
DRD2
Clinical pharmacogenetic testing
author_facet Seenae Eum
Mark E. Schneiderhan
Jacob T. Brown
Adam M. Lee
Jeffrey R. Bishop
author_sort Seenae Eum
title Pharmacogenetic evaluation to assess breakthrough psychosis with aripiprazole long-acting injection: a case report
title_short Pharmacogenetic evaluation to assess breakthrough psychosis with aripiprazole long-acting injection: a case report
title_full Pharmacogenetic evaluation to assess breakthrough psychosis with aripiprazole long-acting injection: a case report
title_fullStr Pharmacogenetic evaluation to assess breakthrough psychosis with aripiprazole long-acting injection: a case report
title_full_unstemmed Pharmacogenetic evaluation to assess breakthrough psychosis with aripiprazole long-acting injection: a case report
title_sort pharmacogenetic evaluation to assess breakthrough psychosis with aripiprazole long-acting injection: a case report
publisher BMC
series BMC Psychiatry
issn 1471-244X
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Abstract Background Given the complex nature of symptom presentation and medication regimens, psychiatric clinics may benefit from additional tools to personalize treatments. Utilizing pharmacogenetic information may be helpful in assessing unique responses to therapy. We report herein a case of wearing-off phenomena during treatment with aripiprazole long-acting injectable (LAI) and a proof of concept strategy of how pharmacogenetic information may be used to assess possible genetic factors and also hypothesize potential mechanisms for further study. Case presentation A 51-year-old African American male with schizoaffective disorder was referred to a psychiatric clinic for medication management. After unsuccessful trials of multiple antipsychotics, oral aripiprazole was initiated (up to 30 mg/day) and transitioned to aripiprazole LAI with symptom improvement. At a high dose of aripiprazole LAI (400 mg Q3wks), the patient experienced breakthrough symptoms approximately 3 days prior to his next injection. Various considerations were examined to explain his atypical dose requirements, including but not limited to pharmacogenetic influences. Pharmacogenetic testing ruled out genetic influences on drug metabolism but noted a -141C Del variant in the dopamine-D2 receptor (DRD2) gene associated in prior studies of poor-response to antipsychotics. At this time, a new formulation, aripiprazole lauroxil, was explored due to its availability in higher dose options. Transition to the new formulation (882 mg Q4wks) greatly improved and stabilized the patient’s symptoms with no breakthrough psychosis. Comparable daily dose equivalents were achieved with two different formulations due to the Q3wks vs Q4wks dosing strategies, although the two agents have some differences in pharmacokinetic profiles. Conclusions We report a case of a patient experiencing wearing-off symptoms with aripiprazole LAI who benefited from switching to aripiprazole lauroxil. Pharmacogenetic testing revealed normal activity for relevant metabolism pathways but a DRD2 -141C variant that may influence brain D2 expression and antipsychotic responsiveness. The clinical utility of DRD2 information and what to do with genotyping results has not been previously addressed, despite availability on clinical test panels. Our case report suggests further investigations of altered dosing strategies and receptor genotype sensitivities to pharmacokinetic factors may be helpful in understanding symptom re-emergence observed in some patients taking LAI antipsychotics.
topic Aripiprazole long-acting injectable
Wearing-off symptoms
DRD2
Clinical pharmacogenetic testing
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-017-1396-x
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