Clinical Neuroscience

Receptor occupancy and drug response: Understanding the relationship

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Clinical implications

The implications for clinicians are relatively clear. Knowing the minimal effective doses for depression, psychosis, or mania informs the target dose. If improvement is seen at lower doses, the clinician needs to assess the profile of symptoms that improved, potential drug–drug interactions, or potential irregularities in the patient’s metabolic pathways. Clinicians need to increase doses above the minimally effective dose carefully, and expend additional effort in analyzing changes in their patient’s symptoms and adverse effects; this analysis should be performed with skepticism and willingness to reduce a dosage if no additional benefit is seen. Attention to these receptor-symptom interactions will improve response and reduce adverse consequences in the majority of patients.

Related Resource

  • Lako IM, van den Heuvel ER, Knegtering H, et al. Estimating dopamine D2 receptor occupancy for doses of 8 antipsychotics: a meta-analysis. J Clin Psychopharmacol. 2013;33(5):675-681.

Drug Brand Names

Aripiprazole • Abilify
Asenapine • Saphris
Citalopram • Celexa
Clozapine • Clozaril
Fluoxetine • Prozac
Haloperidol • Haldol
Iloperidone • Fanapt
Lurasidone • Latuda
Nortriptyline • Pamelor
Olanzapine • Zyprexa
Paroxetine • Paxil
Quetiapine • Seroquel
Risperidone • Risperdal
Sertraline • Zoloft
Venlafaxine • Effexor
Ziprasidone • Geodon

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