Dissociable temporal effects of bupropion on behavioural measures of emotional and reward processing in depression

被引:23
作者
Walsh, Annabel E. L. [1 ,3 ]
Browning, Michael [2 ,3 ]
Drevets, Wayne C. [4 ]
Furey, Maura [4 ]
Harmer, Catherine J. [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Warneford Hosp, NIHR Oxford Hlth Biomed Res Ctr, Oxford OX3 7JX, England
[2] Warneford Hosp, Oxford Hlth NHS Fdn Trust, Oxford OX3 7JX, England
[3] Univ Oxford, Dept Psychiat, Psychopharmacol & Emot Res Lab, Oxford OX3 7JX, England
[4] Janssen Res & Dev LLC, Titusville, NJ 08560 USA
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
depression; emotional processing; reward; dopamine; bupropion; ANTIDEPRESSANT DRUG-ACTION; COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL MODEL; AMISULPRIDE; 50; MG; MAJOR DEPRESSION; SELECTIVE SEROTONIN; HEALTHY-VOLUNTEERS; NEURAL RESPONSE; MOOD DISORDERS; PARALLEL-GROUP; DOUBLE-BLIND;
D O I
10.1098/rstb.2017.0030
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Antidepressants remediate negative biases in emotional processing early in treatment, prior to mood improvement. However, the effects on reward processing potentially relevant to the treatment of anhedonia are less clear. Here we investigate the early and sustained effects of the dopamine and noradrenaline reuptake inhibitor bupropion on behavioural measures of emotional and reward processing in currently depressed individuals. Forty-six currently depressed patients and 42 healthy controls participated in a repeated measures study, during which open-label bupropion was administered to only the patient group over a six week period without a placebo group. All participants completed the Emotional Test Battery and a probabilistic instrumental learning task at week 0, week 2 and week 6. Currently depressed patients displayed negative biases in emotional processing and blunted response bias for high-probability wins compared to the healthy controls at baseline. Bupropion was found to reduce the negative biases in emotional processing early in treatment, including a significant decrease in the percentage misclassification of other face emotions as sad and the number of negative self-referent words falsely recalled between baseline and week 2. Conversely, bupropion was found to initially further reduce the response bias for high-probability wins between baseline and week 2. This effect reversed with six weeks' bupropion treatment and reward processing was normalized compared to the healthy controls. Early in treatment, bupropion acts to reduce negative biases in emotional processing but exacerbates impaired reward processing. The beneficial actions of bupropion on reward processing then occur later in treatment. Such dissociation in the temporal effects of bupropion on emotional and reward processing has implications for the treatment of the different symptom domains of negative affect and anhedonia in depression. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue 'Of mice and mental health: facilitating dialogue between basic and clinical neuroscientists'.
引用
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页数:10
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