COX-2 inhibition as a treatment approach in schizophrenia: Immunological considerations and clinical effects of celecoxib add-on therapy
Tóm tắt
Recent advances in immunological research regarding the
differentiation between the type-1 and type-2 immune response
are discussed. Increased levels of Interleukin-6 (IL-6) and the
activation of the IL-6 system in schizophrenia might be the
result of the activation of type-2 monocytes/macrophages, too.
On the contrary, several parameters of the specific cellular
immune system are blunted, e. g. the decreased type-1 related
immune parameters in schizophrenic patients. This study was
performed as a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized
evaluation of risperidone and celecoxib versus risperidone and
placebo. Fifty schizophrenic patients were included in the
study: 25 patients received risperidone and placebo, and 25
patients received risperidone and celecoxib for 5 weeks after
the wash-out period. The treatment effect was calculated by
ANCOVA. In parallel, serum levels of sTNF-R1 and sIL- 2R, and
the percentages of CD3+-,
CD4+-, and
CD19+ lymphocytes were estimated. As
expected, both groups of schizophrenic patients showed
significant improvement. However, the celecoxib add-on therapy
group showed a significant group effect in the PANSS total
score. The cytokines and lymphocytes reflected the type-1/type-2
balancing effects of COX-2 inhibitors. Additional treatment with
celecoxib has significant positive effects on the therapeutic
action of risperidone with regard to the total schizophrenia
psychopathology. Moreover, the fact that treatment with an
immunomodulatory drug shows beneficial effects on the
symptomatology of schizophrenia indicates that immune
dysfunction in schizophrenia is not just an epiphenomenon, but
related to the pathomechanism of the disorder.