Drug Makers' Goal: Benefits Of Prozac -- Without the Lag April 27, 1998
By THOMAS M. BURTON Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
The drug industry is in a high-stakes race to produce a faster-acting remedy for depression.
Few products in recent medical history have had as big an impact as the leading antidepressant, Prozac, and its top competitors, Zoloft and Paxil. Together the three drugs account for sales of more than $5.5 billion a year and are improving the lives of millions of patients.
But there's a big catch: The medications typically take two to six weeks -- or even longer -- to really work. That can be a lifetime for someone with severe depression, particularly now that insurance restrictions make it more difficult than ever to hospitalize long-term mental-illness patients.
As a result, finding a quicker cure "has been one of the Holy Grails of psychiatry," says Andrew A. Nierenberg, associate director of the depression program at Massachusetts General Hospital.
Leading the quest are Prozac's maker, Eli Lilly & Co.; Pfizer Inc., which makes Zoloft, and SmithKline Beecham PLC, Paxil's supplier. Other major players include Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., which makes another competing drug, Serzone; Glaxo-Wellcome PLC, makers of the antidepressant Wellbutrin; Johnson & Johnson and Boehringer Ingelheim AG.
The most intensive research focuses on one curious aspect of the human brain's physiology: Its tendency to resist the biochemical effects of most of the current top-selling drugs for the first few weeks.
Prozac, Zoloft and Paxil all act by increasing the amount of the chemical serotonin in the brain. Serotonin is a neurotransmitter, a chemical messenger that helps brain cells, called neurons, send information to each other. Higher levels of serotonin are crucial to better moods.
Tiny points called receptors on each brain cell are the brain-cell components that "talk" to each other through the serotonin. But certain receptors, called the 1A and 1D receptors, become desensitized to serotonin immediately after there is a sharp increase in the brain's serotonin level.
This inhibits the antidepressants' mood -- improving activity from getting started for several weeks. "It's as if there's a foot on the accelerator and another one on the brake, so the net effect is the car isn't moving too fast," says Lilly's Steven M. Paul, vice president of discovery research.
Finding a drug to take the foot off the brake "is where the big action is now," says Perry Molinoff, vice president of neuroscience drug discovery at Bristol-Myers. All the major research players are focusing on this approach, among others.
Intense and animated, the 47-year-old Dr. Paul worked under Nobel laureate Julius Axelrod at the National Institute of Mental Health. Scientists working under him have identified at least three compounds that, in laboratory rats, quickly produce the higher serotonin levels or other biochemical effects believed to relieve depression, though the company declines to specify how they work. Dr. Paul says he expects human clinical studies on various companies' drugs to be nearly complete within two to four years.
Bristol-Myers has also isolated chemicals that seem to be faster-acting and more effective. Improving the efficacy is also important, because about 25% of depressed patients don't seem to respond to any drug, and many others respond only partially.
Heading the Bristol-Myers effort is Arlene Eison, 44, the company's principal scientist in neuroscience drug discovery. She originally became interested in mental-health drugs when she was a high school student working with autistic children at Camarillo State Hospital in California. At Bristol-Myers, her work on two serotonin-based drugs -- the antidepressant Serzone and the anxiety drug Buspar -- led to the current research.
One approach at Bristol-Myers is to find which one or more of the 15 known serotonin receptors on each brain cell play the biggest roles in depression. "Nobody knows which of the serotonin receptors is being activated," says Dr. Molinoff. "If we home in on the specific receptor, we'll automatically have a faster acting and more efficacious compound."
Pfizer, too, has found some apparently quicker-acting compounds. Later this year, at least one will likely be in human clinical testing, says James Heym, Pfizer's group director of neuroscience and general pharmacology. The 47-year-old Dr. Heim was a serotonin researcher at Princeton University before joining Pfizer at its Groton, Conn., labs 15 years ago. At the company, he was an early project manager on Zeldox, a schizophrenia drug Pfizer hopes to market soon.
Pfizer is also exploring the possible involvement in depression of entirely different brain chemicals, called neuropeptides. These are chains of amino acids that can also serve as chemical messengers between cells.
One such chemical, called CRH, or corticotrophin-releasing-hormone, is found at relatively higher levels among depression patients and suicide victims. Pfizer, among other companies, is searching for a drug that would limit the effects of CRH on brain-cell receptors -- and maybe quickly uplift patients' moods because there might not be any built-in braking response.
SmithKline is moving into late-stage human clinical studies of a drug combination made up of its Paxil and a generic cardiac drug called pindolol. In Spain and Canada, scientists have used pindolol in combination with Prozac and Paxil to turbocharge the antidepressants. Research on the combination elsewhere has produced mixed results, but both SmithKline and Lilly are moving forward with the combined-drug approach.
Pindolol, aside from being a long established cardiac drug, also happens to be a drug that is an "antagonist" of the 1A receptor that acts as a brake on the effects of serotonin. In effect, it's a brake on the brake. But because it's a cardiac drug, pindolol also lowers blood pressure and the heart rate and may be far from an ideal solution.
Along with the drug companies, various psychiatrists are experimenting on their own. Some get quicker results for certain patients by combining the new drugs with older antidepressants called tricyclics simultaneously. American Home Products Co.'s new antidepressant, Effexor, may relieve depression in the first week in certain patients if they can tolerate very high doses of the drug, company scientists report.
For many other patients, electro-shock treatment is the only fast-acting option. And oddly, depriving a patient of approximately one night's sleep sometimes has amazingly quick effects in countering a severe depressive episode. "Nobody knows why it works," says Lilly's Dr. Paul. "But it does suggest to us that a quick response is possible."
Some technical obstacles make companies' new-drug research particularly difficult. One is the fact that scientists haven't yet been able to design a depressed lab rat genetically. Thus, while researchers can measure serotonin levels in rats' brains, they can't truly measure a drug's behavioral effects on the rats. "We wouldn't recognize a depressed rat if we saw one," says Lilly's Chris Fibiger, vice president of neuroscience research and discovery.
Some researchers also hope to be able to use high-tech "imaging" of depressed human patients' brains to actually see if new compounds are changing brain chemistry. Right now, this technology isn't advanced enough. But Harvard Medical School researcher Darin Dougherty says he expects that imaging will soon play a significant role in exploring faster antidepressants. |