Genotype-Guided Antidepressant Prescribing for Patients With Depression: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
Researchers
Kathryn V Blake, Lindsay J Hines, Michelle Liu, Rachel A Myers, Jordan F Baye, Kerri L Cavanaugh, Benjamin Q Duong, Leslie A Hulvershorn, Carol A Mathews, James W Murrough, Lori A Orlando, Natasha J Petry, Emma M Tillman, Azita Sadeghpour, Deepak Voora, Sara L Block, Emily J Cicali, Sabrina Clermont, Erica N Elwood, Elizabeth C Harris, Khoa A Nguyen, Michelle A Ramos, Marc B Rosenman, Nandini Shroff, Saskia Shuman, Christina Wyatt, Carol R Horowitz, Simona Volpi, Rajbir Singh, Renee A Rider, Hrishikesh Chakraborty, Paul R Dexter, Julie A Johnson, Todd C Skaar, Larisa H Cavallari, Josh F Peterson
Abstract
The effectiveness of pharmacogenetics to guide prescribing of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) for depression remains unclear, despite the well-established association between SSRI pharmacokinetics and genetic variation. To determine whether pharmacogenetic-guided prescribing of SSRIs improves treatment response in patients with depression. The ADOPT PGx (A Depression and Opioid Pragmatic Trial in Pharmacogenetics) Depression pragmatic randomized clinical trial was conducted from August 10, 2021, through April 27, 2024, at primary care, psychiatry, or family medicine clinics at enrolling sites throughout the US. Patients were aged 8 years or older and had experienced depression for 3 months or longer. Patients were randomized to genotype-guided SSRI prescribing (intervention group) or usual care (control group). Actionable drug metabolism phenotypes were defined as those for which pharmacogenetic clinical guidelines recommend alternative medication selection or dose adjustment. The primary outcome was change in Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) depression T scores at 3 months among patients with the actionable phenotype. Secondary end points included adverse effect severity of SSRIs at 3 months and depression remission (measured with PROMIS depression scores and Patient Health Questionnaire-8 [PHQ-8] scores) at 6 months. This study of 1460 patients included 1239 adults (84.9%) (mean [SD] age, 40.6 [16.7] years) and 221 children (15.1%) (mean [SD] age, 14.6 [1.8] years). Most patients were female (1096 [75.1%]). A total of 692 patients (47.4%) had an actionable phenotype; 351 (50.7%) were assigned to the intervention, and 341 (49.3%) were assigned to usual care. At baseline, 463 of the 692 patients (66.9%) reported having depressive symptoms for more than 2 years, 603 (87.1%) were receiving pharmacologic treatment, and 354 (51.2%) were receiving nonpharmacologic treatment. At 3 months, no significant differences were observed between the intervention and usual care groups in change in PROMIS depression T scores (mean [SD] change, -4.3 [8.4] vs -4.0 [8.1]; P = .68), medication adverse effect burden (mean [SD] change, 8.2 [4.3] vs 7.8 [4.5]; P = .37), or Patient Health Questionnaire-8 score change (mean [SD] change, -3.3 [5.2] vs -2.7 [4.8]; P  = .13). However, at 6 months, the PROMIS depression T-score remission rate (score ≤16) was higher in the intervention group compared with the usual care group (153 of 317 patients [48.3%] vs 122 of 310 patients [39.4%]; P = .02). In this randomized clinical trial, genotype-guided prescribing of SSRIs did not improve control of depression symptoms at 3 months compared with usual care but was associated with higher depression remission rates at 6 months. These findings suggest a possible longer-term clinical benefit and indicate that future studies should focus on the durability and long-term impact of genotype-guided prescribing in the management of depressive symptoms. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifiers: NCT04445792 (Master Protocol Research Program platform trial) and NCT05966155 (ADOPT PGx Depression trial).Source: PubMed (PMID: 42090156)View Original on PubMed