A gene variant that reduces the plasticity of the nervous system also modulates responses to treatments for mood and anxiety disorders, according to growing evidence.

"Findings are accumulating to suggest that BDNF is an important modifier of the responses to a number of clinical interventions, presumably because BDNF is such an important regulator of neuroplasticity, i.e., the ability of the brain to adapt," said Dr. John Krystal, Editor of Biological Psychiatry.
In this study, researchers from Australia and Puerto Rico teamed up to investigate the influence of the BDNF Val66Met genotype on response to exposure therapy in patients with PTSD. They recruited 55 patients, all of whom participated in an 8-week exposure-based cognitive behavior therapy program.
Exposure therapy is currently the most effective treatment for PTSD, although it does not work for everyone. This type of therapy is delivered over multiple one-on-one sessions with a trained therapist, with a goal of reducing patients' fear and anxiety.
They found that patients with the Met-66 allele of BDNF, compared with patients with the Val/Val allele, showed poorer response to exposure therapy.
"This paper reflects an important and significant advance, in translating recent ground-breaking findings in animal and human neuroscience into clinically anxious populations," said first author Dr. Kim Felmingham.
This finding supports prior evidence and highlights the importance of considering genotypes as potential predictor variables in clinical trials of exposure therapy.
MEDINDIA




Email





