The Effect of Menopause on Antipsychotic Response

  • Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Salud Mental ROR
  • Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona ROR
  • University of Toronto ROR

Brain Sciences, 12(10), 1342

DOI 10.3390/brainsci12101342 PMID 36291276

Abstract

Background

It has been hypothesized that, whenever estrogen levels decline, psychosis symptoms in women increase. At menopause, this can happen in two main ways: (a) the loss of estrogen (mainly estradiol) can directly affect central neurotransmission, leading to increase in schizophrenia-related symptoms, and (b) the loss of estrogen can decrease the synthesis of enzymes that metabolize antipsychotic drugs, thus weakening their efficacy. Aims and

Methods

The aim of this narrative review was to investigate the second possibility by searching PubMed and ClinicalTrials.gov for studies over the last two decades that investigated the metabolism of antipsychotics and their efficacy before and after menopause in women or that studied systemic and local estrogen level effects on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of individual antipsychotic drugs.

Results

The evidence suggests that symptom level in women with schizophrenia rises after menopause for many reasons beyond hormones but, importantly, there is an estrogen-dependent loss of efficacy related to antipsychotic treatment.

Conclusion

Effective clinical intervention is challenging; nevertheless, several promising routes forward are suggested.

Topics

menopause antipsychotic response, estrogen psychosis symptoms, perimenopausal psychosis, estrogen decline schizophrenia, antipsychotic dose menopause, hormonal influence psychosis, estrogen neuroprotective effects, menopause psychiatric medication, late-onset psychosis estrogen, reproductive hormone psychiatric outcomes
PMID 36291276 36291276 DOI 10.3390/brainsci12101342 10.3390/brainsci12101342

Cite this article

González-Rodríguez, A., Monreal, J. A., & Seeman, M. V. (2022). The Effect of Menopause on Antipsychotic Response. *Brain sciences*, *12*(10), 1342. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12101342

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