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Duloxetine: a review.

journal contribution
posted on 2003-07-01, 00:00 authored by Michael BerkMichael Berk
A developing concept is that antidepressant strategies which combine multiple mechanisms of action may have advantages over agents with single mechanisms. Duloxetine is a novel potent dual reuptake inhibitor of noradrenaline and serotonin. The antidepressant efficacy of duloxetine is reviewed in three trials. Results that emerge confirm the acute efficacy of the agent in major depressive disorder. In particular, remission rates in the comparative trials are higher with duloxetine than with either paroxetine or fluoxetine. Duloxetine appears to have specific efficacy in patients with somatic symptoms and there is some clinical evidence of analgesic properties. Modest weight loss was consistently described in the three acute trials and modest weight gain was seen in an open label follow-up study. Duloxetine was well-tolerated in all three trials with similar patterns of adverse events. No significant safety issues emerged from these trials.

History

Journal

Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics

Volume

3

Pagination

447-451

Location

England

ISSN

1744-8360

eISSN

1744-8360

Language

eng

Publication classification

D1.1 Major review

Copyright notice

2003, Informa Healthcare

Issue

4

Publisher

Informa Healthcare

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