An Experimental Medicine Investigation of the Effects of Subacute Pramipexole Treatment on Emotional Information Processing in Healthy Volunteers
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Date
2021-08Author
Cowen, Philip J
Harmer, Catherine J
Browning, Michael
Halahakoon, Don Chamith
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Marieke Annie Gerdine Martens, Alexander Kaltenboeck ,Don Chamith Halahakoon , Michael Browning, Philip J. Cowen and Catherine J. Harmer.An Experimental Medicine Investigation of the Effects of Subacute Pramipexole Treatment on Emotional Information Processing in Healthy Volunteers. Pharmaceuticals 2021, 14, 800
Abstract
Treatment with the dopamine D2/D3 receptor agonist pramipexole has demonstrated
promising clinical effects in patients with depression. However, the mechanisms through which
pramipexole might alleviate depressive symptoms are currently not well understood. Conventional
antidepressant drugs are thought to work by biasing the processing of emotional information in
favour of positive relative to negative appraisal. In this study, we used an established experimental
medicine assay to explore whether pramipexole treatment might have a similar effect. Employing a
double-blind, parallel-group design, 40 healthy volunteers (aged 18 to 43 years, 50% female) were
randomly allocated to 12 to 15 days of treatment with either pramipexole (at a peak daily dose
of 1.0 mg pramipexole salt) or placebo. After treatment was established, emotional information
processing was assessed on the neural level by measuring amygdala activity in response to positive
and negative facial emotional expressions, using functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In
addition, behavioural measures of emotional information processing were collected at baseline and
on drug, using an established computerized task battery, tapping into different cognitive domains.
As predicted, pramipexole-treated participants, compared to those receiving placebo, showed decreased neural activity in response to negative (fearful) vs. positive (happy) facial expressions in
bilateral amygdala. Contrary to our predictions, however, pramipexole treatment had no significant
antidepressant-like effect on behavioural measures of emotional processing. This study provides
the first experimental evidence that subacute pramipexole treatment in healthy volunteers modifies
neural responses to emotional information in a manner that resembles the effects of conventional
antidepressant drugs.
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