The antidepressant drug currently identified as NSI-189 improved both depressive and cognitive symptoms and its effects appeared to persist even after discontinuation.

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The antidepressant drug promotes the production of new brain cells, which is an alternative strategy for treating depression.
The study authors note that only one third of patients with major depressive disorder can be adequately treated with today's antidepressant drugs. For some, the drugs do not provide sufficient symptom relief; for others, unpleasant side effects - including gastrointestinal symptoms, weight increase, sleep disorders and sexual dysfunction - can lead them to discontinue treatment. While the primary mechanism of current antidepressants is alteration of neurotransmitters like serotonin, these drugs also induce neurogenesis in the brain structure called the hippocampus, suggesting that increasing neurogenesis could be an alternate strategy for treating depression.
Animal studies of NSI-189 conducted by Neuralstem, which is developing the drug for clinical use, showed that it stimulated hippocampal neurogenesis and improved behavioral symptoms in a mouse model of depression. A phase 1a trial in healthy volunteers was conducted in 2011, and the current phase 1b trial - designed primarily to address safety and identify the maximum safe dose - was designed and guided by investigators from the MGH CTNI.
The trial enrolled 24 adult patients diagnosed with major depressive disorder, who were randomized into three treatment groups. In each group of 8 participants, 6 received the active drug and 2 received a placebo; those assigned to the active drug in the double-blinded study received 40 mg doses either once, twice or three times daily. After 28 days of treatment, which was conducted in an inpatient clinical trials unit, patients were followed for another 56 days.
Reports of adverse effects - none of them serious - were similar in both the control group and in participants receiving the active drug, even those who took the maximum daily dose.
Symptom improvement was maintained throughout the follow-up period, which the authors indicate is particularly notable since the effects of current antidepressants typically only last as long as they are taken. The MGH team has also helped to design and is involved in implementing the larger phase 2 trial of NSI-189 that has recently been initiated.
Source-Eurekalert
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