With different antidepressants comes vastly different impacts on the body

Publicly released:
International
Photo by Christina Victoria Craft on Unsplash
Photo by Christina Victoria Craft on Unsplash

Different antidepressants have widely different potential impacts on the body, according to international researchers who say this information needs to be considered when choosing which medication is likely to be appropriate for an individual patient. Researchers combined results from 168 US studies and reports on antidepressant side-effects involving over 58,000 people to look at the impact of 30 different medications over about two months of usage. They say some antidepressants had different impacts on heart rate and blood pressure, while others impacted body weight. Some antidepressants were linked to weight gain in almost half the people who used them while others were linked to weight loss in over half those who used them. They say unknowns remain around the more long-term impact on the body for these antidepressants.

Media release

From: The Lancet

Antidepressants vary widely in their physical side effects, highlighting the need for personalised prescribing, says major meta-analysis

Antidepressants can differ widely in how they physically affect the body, including around a 4 kg difference in weight change between certain drugs (approximately 2.5 kg weight loss from agomelatine and 2kg weight gain from maprotiline), confirms a systematic review and meta-analysis published in The Lancet. The authors emphasise that these findings should not deter people from taking antidepressants, which remain vital and effective treatments for mental health conditions. Instead, they say the results highlight the importance of tailoring the treatment to each individual, taking into account their personal health and preferences.

This large-scale systematic review and network meta-analysis combined results from 151 clinical trials and 17 US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) reports involving over 58,000 participants to assess the effect of 30 different antidepressants on the body over an average of eight weeks course of treatment. The study found that antidepressants also differ in their effects on heart rate, with a difference of more than a 20 beats-per-minute difference in heart rate (approximately eight BPM decrease for fluvoxamine and a 14 BPM increase for nortriptyline); and blood pressure, with a difference of over 10 mmHg variation in blood pressure (approximately seven mmHg decrease for nortriptyline and a five mmHg increase for doxepin).

The study estimates that some antidepressants (e.g., maprotiline and amitriptyline) were associated with weight gain in almost half of individuals prescribed them, while other antidepressants (agomelatine) were associated with weight loss in 55% of patients. Most antidepressants did not show major effects on kidney or liver function, electrolyte levels, or heart rhythm. The authors also note that it is not known if antidepressant-induced physical effects persist or change over time, and more research is needed to understand how antidepressants affect the body over longer time periods.

The authors say their results suggest that treatment guidelines should be updated to reflect the differing physical side effects of antidepressants, and decisions about which drug to use should always be made by the doctor and patient on an individual basis. They also note that other effects of antidepressants were not covered in their study, such as sexual or emotional changes and differences in drug effectiveness, and these should also be considered alongside these results.

Attachments

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public. Research URLs will go live after the embargo ends.

Research The Lancet, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends
Journal/
conference:
The Lancet
Organisation/s: King's College London, UK
Funder: National Institute for Health Research, Maudsley Charity, Wellcome Trust, Medical Research Council.
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.