Glycine treatment of the risk syndrome for psychosis: report of two pilot studies

Scott W Woods, Barbara C Walsh, Keith A Hawkins, Tandy J Miller, John R Saksa, Deepak C D'Souza, Godfrey D Pearlson, Daniel C Javitt, Thomas H McGlashan, John H Krystal, Scott W Woods, Barbara C Walsh, Keith A Hawkins, Tandy J Miller, John R Saksa, Deepak C D'Souza, Godfrey D Pearlson, Daniel C Javitt, Thomas H McGlashan, John H Krystal

Abstract

Patients meeting criteria for the risk syndrome for psychosis have treatment needs including positive and negative symptoms and cognitive impairment. These features could potentially respond to NMDA glycine-site agonists. The present objective was to determine which symptoms or domains of cognition promise to show the greatest response to glycine in risk syndrome patients. We conducted two short-term pilot studies of glycine used without adjunctive antipsychotic medication. In the first trial, 10 risk syndrome subjects received open-label glycine at doses titrated to 0.8 g/kg/d for 8 weeks, followed by discontinuation and 16 weeks of evaluation for durability of effects. In the second, 8 subjects were randomized to double-blind glycine vs. placebo for 12 weeks, followed by open-label glycine for another 12 weeks. Patients were evaluated every 1-2 weeks with the Scale Of Psychosis-risk Symptoms (SOPS) and before and after treatment with a neurocognitive battery. Within-group and between-group effect sizes were calculated. Effect sizes were large for positive (open-label within-group -1.10, double-blind between-group -1.11) and total (-1.39 and -1.15) symptoms and medium-to-large (-0.74 and -0.79) for negative symptoms. Medium or large effect sizes were also observed for several neurocognitive measures in the open-label study, although data were sparse. No safety concerns were identified. We conclude that glycine was associated with reduced symptoms with promising effect sizes in two pilot studies and a possibility of improvement in cognitive function. Further studies of agents that facilitate NMDA receptor function in risk syndrome patients are supported by these preliminary findings.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00268749 NCT00291226.

Keywords: Glycine; NMDA receptor; Prodrome; Psychosis; Risk syndrome; Schizophrenia.

Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. and ECNP. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Open-label glycine: SOPS total scores over time. Subject numbers indicate consecutive patients evaluated for risk syndrome research diagnoses who met criteria, consented, and began treatment with open-label glycine for 8 weeks. SOPS—Scale Of Psychosis-risk Symptoms.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Double-blind glycine vs. placebo: SOPS total scores over time. Filled circles: glycine; open circles: placebo. Subject numbers indicate consecutive patients evaluated for risk syndrome research diagnoses who met criteria, consented, and began treatment with double-blind glycine vs. placebo for 12 weeks. The first 8 weeks of treatment are shown. SOPS—Scale Of Psychosis-risk Symptoms.

Source: PubMed

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