Abstract

In a recent placebo-controlled multicenter study, 38 patients, ranging in age between 62 and 88 years (median, 71) were treated with nortriptyline (NT) for up to 7 weeks. NT was administered in a divided dose of 75 mg daily and serum NT (se NT), and its 10-hydroxy-metabolites (se OH-NT) were determined at various intervals. Several clinical measures of efficacy, including the 17-item Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, were evaluated weekly as well as side effects (anticholinergic) and electrocardiogram (ECG) changes. Eighty-one percent of patients had NT levels in the previously defined therapeutic range of 50 to 170 ng/ml, with steady state reached between 1 and 3 weeks. There was little individual variation in drug kinetics and metabolism over the study period. In general se OH-NT levels were not greater than those of se NT. Pharmacodynamic analyses showed that patients with moderate to severe anticholinergic side effects [CSE(+)] had significantly higher NT levels than those with mild or no symptoms [CSE(-)]. Furthermore, repeated-measures ANOVA modeled over time showed a highly significant decrease in clinical measures in both CSE groups of patients and also a highly significant group-time interaction. Higher se OH-NT levels were associated with less anticholinergic side effects. No ECG changes were observed.

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