Altered peripheral carbonyl stress markers, high levels of serum pentosidine, which accumulates following carbonyl stress, and low levels of pyridoxal (vitamin B6), which detoxifies reactive carbonyl compounds, have been reported in a cross-sectional study of chronic schizophrenia. However, changes in the levels of these compounds in patients with schizophrenia have not been investigated in a longitudinal study. To clarify whether these markers may be biological markers that reflect the clinical course of the disease, the serum levels of these compounds were investigated in a cross-sectional and a longitudinal study. One hundred and thirty-seven acute-stage Japanese patients were enrolled. Among these, 53 patients were followed from the acute stage to remission. A portion of patients in the acute stage (14 cases, 10.2%) showed extremely high pentosidine levels. These levels were not associated with the severity of symptoms but were associated with antipsychotic dose amounts. Pyridoxal levels were lower in schizophrenia and increased according to the clinical course of the illness. Furthermore, 18 patients with decreased pyridoxal levels according to the clinical course showed that the greater the decrease in pyridoxal levels, the lesser the improvement in symptoms. Thus, extremely high pentosidine levels in a portion of patients may be caused by higher daily antipsychotic doses, whereas pyridoxal levels were lower in schizophrenia and increased according to the clinical course. Patients with decreasing pyridoxal levels during the clinical course showed less improvement in symptoms. Carbonyl stress markers may also be therapeutic biological markers in some patients with schizophrenia.
The monitoring of plasma olanzapine concentrations has been found to be an important and useful tool for optimizing psychiatric treatment. The present study investigated the effect that clinical factors, such as smoking and age, and functional polymorphisms of UGT1A4, CYP1A2, and CYP2D6 genes have on plasma olanzapine concentration, as well as the effects of plasma olanzapine concentrations on Japanese schizophrenic patients' clinical symptoms. The subjects included 51 chronic schizophrenic patients whose symptoms were not controlled with chronic conventional antipsychotics and therefore were switched to olanzapine. Male smokers had a significantly lower olanzapine concentration-dose ratio and olanzapine/4'-N-desmethyl olanzapine ratio (which reflects CYP1A2 activity) than male nonsmokers and female nonsmokers. The results of a 2-way analysis of covariance showed that smoking had the main effect, rather than gender or age. The functional gene polymorphisms that were studied had no effect on the plasma olanzapine and metabolite concentrations. An improved total Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) score was not correlated with the plasma olanzapine concentration, but individual BPRS scores related to improvement of suspiciousness, hallucinations, and blunted affect were significantly correlated with plasma olanzapine concentration. Clinical factors, especially smoking, were more important modulators of olanzapine metabolism than the functional genotypes. Long-term olanzapine treatment with adequate plasma olanzapine concentrations could be more effective in improving some symptoms than treatment with conventional antipsychotics.
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