Division of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Queen's University Belfast
Department of Psychiatry, Causeway Hospital, Coleraine
Division of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Queen's University, Belfast
Nutrition and Metabolism Research Group, Queen's University Belfast
Division of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Queen's University Belfast, UK
Correspondence: Professor Gavin P. Reynolds, Division of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Queen's University Belfast, Whitla Medical Building, 97 Lisburn Road, Belfast BT9 7BL, UK. Email: g.reynolds{at}qub.ac.uk
This study was supported in part by Janssen-Cilag Pharmaceuticals. S.C. has received honoraria as a speaker or advisor panel member for Astellas, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Lilly, Organon and Servier. R.O'N. has received honoraria from AstraZeneca. G.R. has received honoraria as a speaker or advisor panel member for Lilly, AstraZeneca, Organon and Janssen.
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Obesity and metabolic syndrome are significant problems for patients taking antipsychotic drugs. Evidence is emerging of genetic risk factors.
Aims
To investigate the influence of two candidate genes, smoking and drug treatment on obesity and metabolic syndrome in patients with schizophrenia.
Method
Patients (n=134) were assessed for measures of obesity, other factors contributing to metabolic syndrome, and two genetic polymorphisms (5-HT2C receptor –759C/T and leptin –2548A/G).
Results
Neither genotype nor smoking was significantly associated with measures of obesity. However, both leptin genotype and smoking were significantly associated with metabolic syndrome. Significant interaction occurred between the genetic polymorphisms for effects on obesity, whereby a genotype combination increased risk. Drug treatment showed significant effects on measures of obesity and triglyceride concentrations; risperidone was associated with lower values than olanzapine or clozapine.
Conclusions
The findings suggest interacting genetic risk factors and smoking influence development of metabolic syndrome in patients on antipsychotic drugs.
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The mechanisms underlying antipsychotic drug-induced metabolic disturbances remain unclear, although genetic predisposition is likely to play an important part in the substantial differences between individuals in the susceptibility to these side-effects. Of the genetic risk factors for antipsychotic-induced metabolic dysregulation, only those associated with weight gain have been investigated to any extent. The strongest evidence lies with the –759C/T polymorphism of the serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine) 5-HT2C receptor gene for which an association with antipsychotic-induced weight gain has been identified.1–4 This has some a priori validity since antagonism at the 5-HT2C receptor is likely to be a mechanism contributing to this side-effect of antipsychotic drug treatment.5
A further gene showing an association with drug-induced weight gain is that for leptin; the functional promoter polymorphism –2548A/G is also associated with long-term development of antipsychotic drug-induced weight gain.2 Leptin is an important hormone regulating adipose tissue mass and body weight; it inhibits food intake and stimulates energy expenditure. Thus, although there is no report of a direct genetic association with development of metabolic syndrome in patients treated for schizophrenia, 5-HT2C receptor and leptin gene polymorphisms provide strong candidates.
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The metabolic syndrome was defined using the International Diabetes Federation criteria (www.metabolic-syndrome-institute.org/news/2006/2006-05-03.2.php) by the presence of abdominal obesity, i.e. waist circumference 94 cm or more in men and 80 cm or more in women, and at least two further risk factors from the following:
1.7 mmol/l) or specific treatment for this lipid
abnormality;
130 mmHg or diastolic
85 mmHg) or
treatment of previously diagnosed hypertension;
5.6 mmol/l) or previously diagnosed type
2 diabetes.
Genetic analysis
Genomic DNA was prepared from peripheral blood using standard techniques.
All genotyping was carried out strictly blind to the clinical status of the
patients. The 5-HT2C receptor polymorphism (–759C/T) and
leptin polymorphism (–2548A/G) were determined using a polymerase chain
reaction based on the protocol described by Templeman et
al.2
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS version 11.0 for Windows.
Univariate analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to determine any association
between genotype and weight, waist circumference, BMI, blood glucose,
triglycerides and cholesterol measures. Chi-squared analysis or, with small
numbers where appropriate, Fisher's exact test was used to determine the
association between categorical measures including genotype, presence/absence
of metabolic syndrome, obesity and smoking.
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Metabolic findings
Central obesity was present in 99 of 133 participants (74.4%), defined by
increased waist circumference. Stricter criteria (BMI >30 m/kg2)
defined 55 of 133 (41%) participants with obesity. Central obesity was
significantly more frequent in women (40/47 v. 59/86 in men,
P<0.05). Diabetes was present in 6 participants; 2 further
individuals had impaired glucose tolerance (6%). These patients were receiving
olanzapine (n=3), zotepine (n=2), clozapine (n=1),
amisulpride (n=1) or flupenthixol (n=1). Forty-six of 120
patients (38%) had metabolic syndrome.
Gender was significantly related to BMI (P=0.005) and the categorical measures of central obesity (P=0.037) and obesity defined by the BMI >30 kg/m2 criterion (P=0.012), with a greater incidence of obese women, but was not significantly related to metabolic syndrome. Age had no significant effect on measures of obesity but was significantly and positively related to metabolic syndrome (P=0.003). However, the mean age of patients receiving olanzapine (37.6 years) and clozapine (36.2 years) was significantly lower than that of the remaining patients (P<0.001) and the risperidone group (44.2 years; P=0.013); thus age was included as a covariate in further analysis of drug effects.
Tobacco smoking was not significantly related to central obesity or other individual metabolic measures. However, it was significantly related to metabolic syndrome (P=0.047), where smoking was associated with an increased frequency of metabolic syndrome (36/81 v. 10/39 non-smokers).
Comparing patients grouped according to the three major drugs prescribed, a significant treatment effect was observed for measures of obesity and for blood triglyceride levels, but not for HDL concentration (Table 1). These reflected generally higher values for olanzapine and clozapine in comparison with risperidone. The effect held true when comparing the risperidone group with participants prescribed either of the other two drugs with regard to waist circumference (101.0 cm v. 93.4 cm; P=0.014), BMI (29.3 kg/m2 v. 27.5 kg/m2; P=0.039) and blood triglycerides (2.24 mmol/l v. 1.52 mmol/l; P=0.022). Again, there was no significant difference in prevalence of metabolic syndrome between the olanzapine/clozapine group and the risperidone group (17/46 v. 4/15).
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Table 1 Association of the three major atypical antipsychotic drugs with
measures of obesity and metabolic syndrome
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Genetic findings
5-HT2C receptor gene polymorphism
As the 5-HT2C receptor gene is linked to the X chromosome, male
participants were genotyped hemizygotes C or T with 15 of 84 (18%) having the
T allele. Among female participants, 15 of 45 (33%) were heterozygotic; none
were homozygous for the T allele.
There was no significant association of BMI or waist circumference in the patients with the –759C/T genotype; in addition, gender as a cofactor had no effect on the analysis. Similarly, the presence of obesity and metabolic syndrome showed no significant association (Table 2).
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Table 2 Effect of –759C/T 5-HT2C receptor and –2548A/G
leptin gene promoter polymorphisms on the measurements of obesity and presence
of metabolic syndrome
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Leptin gene polymorphism
The distribution of leptin gene polymorphism was AA (29/130) 22%, AG
(55/130) 42%, GG (46/130) 35%; these results did not deviate significantly
from Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium. There was no significant association
between the leptin genotype and BMI, waist circumference or presence of
obesity (Table 2). The effect
of leptin genotype on presence of metabolic syndrome was not significant (AA
6/28, AG 23/49, GG 17/42; P=0.083); however, when participants were
grouped on the basis of presence or absence of the G allele, there was a
significant association with metabolic syndrome
(Table 2). There was no
significant association of this division of genotype, or division into
heterozygotes and homozygotes, with any of the obesity measures tested
above.
Combined 5-HT2C receptor and leptin polymorphism analysis
Combined genotype analysis (5-HT2C receptor CT/T v. CC
and leptin AA v. AG/GG) showed a strong overall effect
(P=0.007) on BMI in which the leptin genotype had no significant main
effect, whereas the effect of 5-HT2C polymorphism reached
significance (P=0.048), with a strong gene interaction effect
(P=0.001). The same strong interaction was observed in the effect of
the polymorphisms on waist circumference (P=0.0003), whereas separate
gene effects did not show significance. Correction for age or inclusion of
gender had no influence on this result. These effects remained true in the
subgroup of patients receiving one of the three main oral drugs, with
generally higher levels of significance; inclusion of drug subgroup
(clozapine/olanzapine v. risperidone) showed this factor to have a
significant effect without adversely influencing the association of BMI with
the 5-HT2C polymorphism or the gene interaction effect.
In further investigation of this genetic interaction we observed an effect of leptin polymorphism on the main measures of obesity within the more common –759C/CC 5-HT2C subgroup. Carriers of the G allele exhibited significantly higher BMI and waist circumference than their AA counterparts (Table 3). Gender as a cofactor did not substantially influence these associations. Again, these effects remained true in the subgroup of patients receiving the three main oral drugs, inclusion of drug subgroup (clozapine/olanzapine v. risperidone) generally increasing the significance of genetic associations (data not shown). Association of metabolic syndrome with the leptin polymorphism was also significant within the 5-HT2C C/CC genotype (Table 3), where the leptin AA genotype demonstrated a protective effect (2 of 20 participants having metabolic syndrome).
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Table 3 The effect of leptin AG/GG v. AA genotype on the measurements
of obesity and presence of metabolic syndrome in the –759CC
5-HT2C patient group
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These results demonstrate that measures of obesity and other metabolic changes contributing to the metabolic syndrome in a cohort of patients with schizophrenia are influenced by several interacting factors. These include modifiable factors such as antipsychotic drug type and smoking, and genetic factors including the promoter polymorphisms of the 5-HT2C receptor and leptin genes. The absence of a measure of fasting plasma glucose concentration is a limitation of the study, and although a rigorous investigation of participants with elevated random glucose measurements was undertaken to identify impaired glucose tolerance, it is possible that there was some underestimation of the number of people with this disorder. Nevertheless, it proved possible to obtain unequivocal assessment of the frequency of metabolic syndrome from the other metabolic and blood pressure criteria in a large proportion of the sample. Thus a high prevalence of metabolic syndrome was found in our sample. This finding was similar to the recent observation from a study of a large cohort of patients with schizophrenia in Belgium,8 identifying a prevalence of 36% using the International Diabetes Federation criteria and indicating that it is at least twice that expected in the general population. The proportion of patients with diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance was greater than that in the local population (reported as 3.06% on the diabetes register), but the study was not powered to identify significant increases or drug-related differences in this factor; the absence of a control group also limits the conclusions we can come to in this respect.
Investigation of the effect of individual drugs on the metabolic measures undertaken here is limited by the fact that this was a naturalistic and cross-sectional, rather than a longitudinal, study. Full information relating to prior drug treatment, including length of time on current medication and past exposure to other antipsychotics, was not collected for all participants. The effect of such variability in drug exposure would inevitably be to increase the variance in any measures that were sensitive to individual drug type, resulting in a possible underestimate of drug-related differences. Nevertheless, in the three largest groups of patients receiving oral medication, we found a significant increase in measures of obesity and an increase in plasma triglyceride concentrations in patients receiving olanzapine or clozapine compared with those receiving risperidone. This is certainly consistent with the well-established observation of greater weight gain in patients receiving olanzapine or clozapine in comparison with those taking risperidone,9 and with the specific effects on triglycerides found in a randomised controlled trial in which, after 8 weeks, significant elevations were found following treatment with olanzapine or clozapine, but not following risperidone or sulpiride.10 The values in Table 1 may underestimate the relative differences in drug effects, since measures of body fat and triglycerides increase with age in this group, and the patients receiving risperidone tended to be older than those receiving olanzapine or clozapine. These apparent drug-related differences did not, however, translate into a significant difference between drug treatments in the frequency of metabolic syndrome.
There is a high prevalence of cigarette smoking among patients with schizophrenia. It is well-established that smoking is associated with increased cardiovascular disease and lung cancer, and it is likely that this contributes to increases in coronary heart disease, stroke and respiratory tumours in severe mental illness.11 Smoking can also have an anorexic effect, and it may be that this effect serves to ameliorate drug-induced weight gain. However, we found no evidence for this; there was no apparent effect of smoking on measures of obesity, whereas conversely smoking was a significant risk factor for the occurrence of metabolic syndrome. This is consistent with the observation that smoking increases risk of the development of type 2 diabetes.12
Several genetic studies associate functional –759C/T 5-HT2C receptor gene polymorphism with antipsychotic-induced weight gain. Yuan et al first showed that polymorphisms, including –759C/T, in the upstream regulatory region of the 5-HT2C receptor gene were associated with increases in prevalence of obesity and type 2 diabetes in the general population.13 Study of the –759C/T 5-HT2C receptor polymorphism in drug-naïve Chinese patients with schizophrenia showed that those with a T allele exhibited significantly less weight gain after 10 weeks of treatment.1 The finding was replicated in a European first-episode psychosis series following longer-term (up to 9 months) treatment with antipsychotics.2 This protective effect of the T allele on antipsychotic-induced weight gain has also been shown in some studies of people with chronic illness receiving antipsychotic drug treatment.3,4 However, in our study there was no significant association of this polymorphism with measures of obesity or metabolic syndrome. Taken with previous findings, this suggests that the gene may have strong effects on initial weight gain, but a lesser influence on the long-term consequences of that weight gain. In contrast, the leptin gene polymorphism studied here may have greater effects on body mass in the longer term. Templeman et al found an association of this –2548A/G polymorphism with weight gain after 9 months of antipsychotic treatment, in which patients who carried the A allele exhibited lower weight gain, although this was not a significant effect at 3 months.2 This promoter region polymorphism has been shown to influence leptin secretion and obesity;14,15 presence of the –2548G/G genotype has been found to be associated with extreme obesity in a Taiwanese aboriginal population.16
We have found a significant association between the –2548A/G leptin gene promoter polymorphism and the occurrence of metabolic syndrome in schizophrenia. Although there was no significant effect of the 5-HT2C receptor gene polymorphism alone on metabolic measures, including the presence of metabolic syndrome, the leptin and 5-HT2C receptor promoter polymorphisms together show a highly significant association, and strong gene–gene interaction term, with both metabolic syndrome and measures of obesity in patients receiving antipsychotic treatment for schizophrenia.
In our study, patients with the AA leptin genotype exhibited a significantly lower frequency of metabolic syndrome in comparison with the AG/GG genotypes. Thus, these data provide further genetic support for the potential importance of leptin in the development of the metabolic syndrome,17 which indicates an underlying mechanism relating genotype to phenotype. Combined genotype analysis showed that interaction between the leptin and 5-HT2C receptor polymorphisms was highly significant in their influence on the main measures of obesity. This is consistent with reports demonstrating interactions between the effects of leptin and 5-HT neuronal function.18,19 In the mediation of central leptin-induced anorexia, 5-HT2C receptors have been implicated, since the 5-HT2C receptor antagonist SB 242084 significantly attenuated the reduction in food intake caused by leptin administration.20
Templeman et al presented evidence that both the 5-HT2C receptor –759C/T and leptin –2548A/G polymorphisms influence antipsychotic-induced weight gain.2 They showed that 5-HT2C and leptin promoter polymorphisms, together with age and BMI, account for 26% of the variance in weight gain at 3 months of antipsychotic treatment. In our study, participants carrying the leptin –2548G allele within the `high risk' 5-HT2C receptor gene –759C/CC group showed significantly higher risk of obesity than those with the AA genotype. Similarly, the presence of metabolic syndrome was highly associated with the presence of the G allele in this group. This reflects the combined effect of two risk factors, the 5-HT2C C/CC genotype and the leptin G allele, in the development of metabolic side-effects. Both of these genetic factors are associated with lower concentrations of circulating leptin independent of the effects of drugs,2 and we speculate that the genotype-dependent increased risk of metabolic side-effects may relate to a differential sensitivity to leptin signalling and its disruption by antipsychotic drug treatment. Whatever the underlying mechanisms, our findings highlight the importance of interacting genetic factors in determining both obesity and metabolic syndrome in patients with schizophrenia and thus indicate the possible mechanisms underlying antipsychotic-induced metabolic disturbances and the potential for genetic identification of `high risk' individuals. Genotyping for such risk factors may assist both patient and prescriber in their choice of drug treatment, although diet and exercise, in addition to smoking as highlighted here, remain important modifiable factors influencing the metabolic health of those receiving antipsychotic drug treatment.
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