The antidepressant and biochemical effects of femoxetine, a selective serotonin uptake inhibitor, and desipramine, a selective nor-adrenaline uptake inhibitor, have been compared in a double-blind study in 42 outpatients with depressive illness. The patients were allocated at random to treatment with either 600 mg femoxetine or 150 mg desipramine daily for 6 weeks. The total depression score showed a significant decrease in both groups, indicating an overall improvement in depressive symptoms. The patients treated with femoxetine reported significantly less severe anticholinergic effects during the whole treatment period than the desipramine patients. Both drugs, decreased the level of 5-HIAA in CSF, whereas no consistent changes were found in the MHPG and HVA levels. The pretreatment level of the metabolites had no predictive value for the outcome of the treatment with either drug. No significant correlation was found between therapeutic effect and the plasma concentration of the active compounds.
Switching from a virologically successful first-line boosted PI-containing cART regimen to a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor-containing cART regimen containing either efavirenz or nevirapine is virologically safe, while switching to abacavir-containing cART should be avoided.
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