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Blackwell Publishing IncMalden, USAPMEPain Medicine1526-2375American Academy of Pain Medicine20068S2S63S74 Original ArticleDuloxetine and Antidepressants in Fibromyalgia TreatmentArnold PA I N M E D I C I N E Volume 8 • Number S2 • 2007 Duloxetine and Other Antidepressants in the Treatment of Patients with Fibromyalgia Lesley M. Arnold, MD Women’s Health Research Program, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA ABSTRACT ABSTRACT Objective. To review the use of duloxetine, a new selective serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (SNRI), and other antidepressants in the treatment of patients with fibromyalgia. Results. Duloxetine has been shown to be an effective and safe treatment for many of the symptoms associated with fibromyalgia, particularly for women. Other selective SNRIs also show promise in the treatment of fibromyalgia. Until recently, tricyclic agents that have serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitory activity had been the most commonly studied group of antidepressants, and they are effective in treating pain and other symptoms associated with fibromyalgia, although their use may be limited by safety and tolerability concerns. There are few randomized, controlled studies of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors in fibromyalgia, and the results have been mixed. Conclusions. Antidepressants play an important role in the treatment of patients with fibromyalgia. Agents with dual effects on serotonin and norepinephrine appear to have more consistent benefits than selective serotonin antidepressants for the treatment of persistent pain associated with fibromyalgia. Key Words. Fibromyalgia; Antidepressant; Duloxetine; Serotonin; Norepinephrine Introduction F ibromyalgia is a disorder of unknown etiology characterized by chronic, widespread pain and a decreased pain threshold to pressure and other stimuli. Although the 1990 American College of Rheumatology (ACR) criteria for fibromyalgia include only widespread pain of at least 3 months’ duration and pain on digital palpation at 11 or more of 18 specific tender point sites of the body [1], most patients with fibromyalgia also experience other symptoms, including fatigue, sleep disturbance (nonrestorative sleep or insomnia), stiffness, anxiety, depression, cognitive disturReprint requests to: Lesley M. Arnold, MD, 222 Piedmont Avenue, Suite 8200, Cincinnati, OH 45219, USA. Tel: 513-475-8110; Fax: 513-475-8116; E-mail: lesley.arnold@ uc.edu. bances, irritable bowel or bladder syndromes, headache, paresthesias, or other conditions [1]. There is substantial lifetime psychiatric comorbidity in patients with fibromyalgia, most commonly mood and anxiety disorders [2]. Fibromyalgia aggregates in families and coaggregates with major mood disorder in families, suggesting that genetic factors are involved in the etiology of fibromyalgia and that mood disorders may share some of these inherited factors [3]. Fibromyalgia affects approximately 2% of the general population in the United States and is more common in women than in men, affecting 3.4% of women compared with 0.5% of men [4]. Fibromyalgia is associated with functional impairment and work disability [5] and, compared with other musculoskeletal diseases, is the only disorder that is associated with lower scores than the gen- © American Academy of Pain Medicine 1526-2375/07/$15.00/S63 S63–S74 doi:10.1111/j.1526-4637.2006.00178.x Downloaded from http://painmedicine.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on November 18, 2016 Design. Two randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, parallel-group, 12-week trials of duloxetine in the treatment of fibromyalgia were reviewed. Other published, randomized, placebocontrolled, double-blind trials, and meta-analyses of antidepressant treatment of fibromyalgia were identified by a PubMed search that was augmented by reference cross-check. S64 peripheral neuropathic pain in nondepressed patients [16,17], and is indicated by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of major depressive disorder in adults, generalized anxiety disorder in adults, and neuropathic pain associated with diabetic peripheral neuropathy in adults [18]. Methods The two randomized, double-blind, placebocontrolled trials of duloxetine in the treatment of fibromyalgia were reviewed. Other published, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled antidepressant trials in fibromyalgia and metaanalyses of antidepressant trials were identified by a PubMed search that was augmented by reference cross-check. Results Duloxetine The first study of duloxetine in fibromyalgia included 207 patients with fibromyalgia with or without current major depressive disorder in a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, parallel-group, multisite, 12-week study to assess the safety and efficacy of duloxetine, titrated to 60 mg twice a day (BID) [19]. Co-primary outcome measures were the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) total score and pain score [20]. The FIQ is a 20-item self-report instrument that asks patients to rate their overall symptoms and function over the previous week. The first 11 items make up a physical functioning scale, and each item is rated on a 4-point Likert-type scale. Items 12 and 13 ask patients to mark the number of days they felt well and number of days they missed work (including housework) because of fibromyalgia symptoms. Items 14 through 20 are measured on a 0–10 scale and rate difficulty doing work, pain, tiredness, morning tiredness, stiffness, anxiety, and depression. The total score of fibromyalgia impact ranges from 0 to 80, with 0 indicating no impact and 80 indicating maximum impact. Duloxetine-treated patients compared with placebo-treated patients improved significantly more on the FIQ total score, but not significantly more on the FIQ pain score. Compared with placebo-treated patients, duloxetine-treated patients also had significantly greater improvement in several secondary measures that included the Brief Pain Inventory (short form) [21] average pain severity score that measured pain over the past 24 hours from 0 (no pain) to 10 (pain as bad Downloaded from http://painmedicine.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on November 18, 2016 eral population in all of the health-related quality of life dimensions involving mental health problems [6]. Antidepressants are widely used to treat symptoms associated with fibromyalgia, and the rationale for their use is supported by several lines of evidence. First, antidepressants are effective treatments for mood and anxiety disorders that are common in patients with fibromyalgia and negatively impact function and quality of life. Second, evidence of coaggregation of major mood disorder and fibromyalgia in families suggests that fibromyalgia and mood disorders share common physiologic abnormalities that might respond to similar treatments [3]. For example, dysfunction of central monoaminergic neurotransmission might be one of the shared etiologic factors involved in mood disorders and fibromyalgia [3]. Serotonin and norepinephrine are thought to mediate endogenous analgesic mechanisms through the descending pain inhibitory pathways in the brain and spinal cord [7]. Antidepressant medications that enhance serotonin and norepinephrine neurotransmission may therefore reduce pain in patients with fibromyalgia. Third, there is substantial evidence that antidepressants that increase serotonin and norepinephrine neurotransmission are effective in the treatment of other chronic pain conditions [8]. Fourth, some antidepressants have other properties, including N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonism and ion-channel blocking activity that may also mediate antinociceptive effects [9,10]. Finally, there is growing evidence in large, well-designed clinical trials that some antidepressants are effective in the treatment of fibromyalgia. The purpose of this review is to highlight the recent clinical trials of one such antidepressant, duloxetine, and to put this new evidence in the context of other clinical trials of antidepressant treatment of fibromyalgia. Duloxetine is a new, potent selective serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (SNRI) that has virtually no affinity for cholinergic, histaminergic, and adrenergic receptors [11]. The dual reuptake inhibition of serotonin and norepinephrine is active over duloxetine’s entire clinically relevant dose range [11]. Duloxetine has been shown to be a safe, tolerable, and effective antidepressant [12–14], and duloxetine also significantly reduces painful physical symptoms, such as headache, back pain, stomach aches, and poorly localized musculoskeletal pain, associated with major depressive disorder [15]. Duloxetine is effective in reducing diabetic Arnold Duloxetine and Antidepressants in Fibromyalgia Treatment as you can imagine) (Figure 1) and the average pain interference score that assessed interference, from 0 (does not interfere) to 10 (completely interferes), with general activity, mood, walking ability, normal work, relations with other people, sleep, and enjoyment of life. Duloxetine-treated patients compared with those on placebo also experienced significant improvement in tender point number and mean tender point pain threshold. For the tender point assessment, a Fisher dolorimeter with a rubber disk of 1 cm2 [22] was applied to the 18 tender point sites defined by the ACR criteria [1], and the pressure was increased at a rate of 1 kg/s until the patients verbally indicated that they first felt discomfort or pain. The pressure was then stopped, and the threshold measurement was recorded in kg/cm2. The mean tender point threshold was calculated from 18 points, and the tender point count was determined by the number of tender points that had a threshold of ≤4 kg/cm2. Other secondary measures that significantly improved in the duloxetine-treated group compared with the placebo group included the FIQ stiffness score, Clinical Global Impression of Severity scale that ranged from 1 (normal, not at all ill) to 7 (among the most extremely ill patients) [23], and the Patient Global Assessment of Improvement scale that ranged from 1 (very much better) to 7 (very much worse). Quality of life measures that significantly improved in the duloxetine group compared with the placebo group included the Quality of Life in Depression Scale total score, the Sheehan Disability Scale total score, and the Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 36 (SF-36) physical subscore and scores for bodily pain, general health perception, mental health, physical functioning, and vitality [24–26]. In this first trial, duloxetine-treated female patients demonstrated significantly greater improvement on most efficacy measures compared with placebo-treated female patients, while the duloxetine-treated male patients failed to significantly improve on any efficacy measure. The interaction of treatment with sex approached the significance level of 0.1 for the FIQ total score (P = 0.101) and the FIQ pain score (P = 0.121) (Figure 2). Significantly more duloxetine-treated female patients (30.3%) had a clinically meaningful (≥50%) decrease in the FIQ pain score compared with placebo-treated female patients (16.5%). Furthermore, the Brief Pain Inventory average pain severity score decreased by ≥50% in significantly more duloxetine-treated women (30%) than women on placebo (16%). The reasons for the gender differences in response are unclear, but may be related to the small male subgroup (23 [11%] of 207 patients), or to possible sex differences in fibromyalgia than affect treatment response [19]. The duloxetine trial was the first fibromyalgia clinical trial to assess baseline psychiatric comorbidity using a structured clinical interview and to include patients with and without current major depressive disorder in order to evaluate the impact of major depressive disorder on the response to treatment with duloxetine. Notably, duloxetine treatment improved pain severity regardless of baseline major depressive disorder status. In addition, the treatment effect of duloxetine on significant pain reduction in female patients was Figure 2 Least-squares (LS) mean change from baseline in the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) total score and FIQ pain score by sex. FIQ total score: duloxetine (female N = 89, male N = 12), placebo (female N = 91, male N = 11); FIQ pain score: duloxetine (female N = 89, male N = 12), placebo (female N = 92, male N = 11). Downloaded from http://painmedicine.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on November 18, 2016 Figure 1 Least-squares (LS) mean change from baseline in the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) average pain severity score for all randomized patients. Duloxetine 60 mg BID = duloxetine 60 mg twice a day. S65 S66 Figure 3 Least-squares (LS) mean change from baseline in the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) average pain severity score for all randomized patients. Duloxetine 60 mg BID = duloxetine 60 mg twice a day; duloxetine 60 mg QD = duloxetine 60 mg once a day. 60 mg BID (41%) compared with placebo (23%) had a ≥50% reduction in the Brief Pain Inventory average pain severity score. Compared with placebo, duloxetine 60 mg QD or duloxetine 60 mg BID resulted in significantly greater improvement in the remaining Brief Pain Inventory pain severity and interference scores, and other secondary outcomes including the FIQ [20] Clinical Global Impression of Severity [23], and the Patient Global Impression of Improvement. Consistent with the first duloxetine study, several quality of life measures significantly improved in both duloxetine groups compared with the placebo group including the Quality of Life in Depression Scale total score, the Sheehan Disability Scale total score, and the SF-36 mental subscore, bodily pain, mental health, role limit emotional, role limit physical, and vitality [24–26]. There were no significant differences between duloxetine 60 mg QD and duloxetine 60 mg BID treatment groups in efficacy outcomes. However, only the duloxetine 60 mg BID dose, compared with placebo, significantly improved the tender point assessments. This suggests that the higher dose may be necessary to improve pressure pain thresholds, which have been found to be less responsive to treatment in previous fibromyalgia trials using tricyclics [28,29]. As in the first study of duloxetine, the treatment effect of duloxetine on pain reduction was independent of the effect on mood and the presence of major depressive disorder. The most frequent side effect in patients in the duloxetine 60 mg QD and 60 mg BID groups was nausea, and side effects were generally mild to moderate in severity for most patients. Significantly more patients in the duloxetine 60 mg BID group than the placebo group discontinued treatment due to adverse events. This finding differs from the previous duloxetine trial of 60 mg BID in which there were no differences between treatment groups in discontinuation due to treatmentemergent adverse events. The difference between the studies might be explained by the slower titration of duloxetine in the first study, in which duloxetine was titrated from a starting dose of 20 mg QD to 60 mg BID over 2 weeks. In the second study, patients were started on 60 mg QD and titrated to 60 mg BID over just 3 days. This suggests that some patients would benefit from a lower duloxetine starting dose and slower titration. The results of both duloxetine studies in fibromyalgia provide evidence that duloxetine 60 mg QD and 60 mg BID for up to 12 weeks are safe Downloaded from http://painmedicine.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on November 18, 2016 independent of the effect on mood or anxiety. Therefore, the effect of duloxetine on the reduction of pain associated with fibromyalgia appears to be independent of its effect on mood. Duloxetine was well tolerated, and there was no significant difference in the number of patients who discontinued due to adverse events. Duloxetine-treated patients reported insomnia, dry mouth, and constipation significantly more frequently than placebo-treated patients. Most treatment-emergent adverse events were of mild or moderate severity. The second, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, parallel-group, multisite, 12-week study of duloxetine in fibromyalgia tested the safety and efficacy of both 60 mg BID and a lower dose of 60 mg once a day (QD) in 354 women with fibromyalgia with or without current major depressive disorder [27]. This study included only women to confirm the results of the first duloxetine trial in which women, but not men, responded significantly to duloxetine compared with the same sex placebo-treated patients on efficacy measures. The primary outcome measure was pain severity as measured by the Brief Pain Inventory (short form) average pain severity score (score range 0–10) [21]. Compared with the placebo group, the duloxetine 60 mg QD group and the duloxetine 60 mg BID group experienced significantly greater improvement in the Brief Pain Inventory average pain severity score, beginning at week 1 and continuing through week 12 (Figure 3). Significantly more patients treated with duloxetine 60 mg QD (41%) and duloxetine Arnold Duloxetine and Antidepressants in Fibromyalgia Treatment and effective in the treatment of fibromyalgia in women with or without major depressive disorder. Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trials of Other Antidepressants in Fibromyalgia fibromyalgia. The primary outcome measure was based on change in pain recorded on an electronic diary, comparing baseline to endpoint (last 2 weeks on treatment). The majority of milnacipran-treated patients titrated to the highest daily dose (200 mg), suggesting that milnacipran was well tolerated. The most frequently reported adverse event was nausea, and most adverse events were mild and transient. Patients treated with milnacipran on a twice daily schedule experienced significant improvement in pain compared with those on placebo. Significantly more patients receiving milnacipran twice daily (37%) reported a reduction in the weekly average pain scores by 50% or more, compared with 14% of patients in the placebo group. Milnacipran-treated patients on the once daily schedule did not exhibit the same degree of improvement in pain, suggesting that dosing frequency is important in the use of milnacipran for pain associated with fibromyalgia. Both milnacipran groups (once daily and twice daily dosing) had significantly greater improvement on secondary measures, including the Patient Global Impression of Change score, and the physical function and “days felt good” subscales of the FIQ [20]. As in the duloxetine trials, patients were evaluated for psychiatric comorbidity and those with and without current major depressive disorder were included. Unlike the results of the duloxetine trials in which both depressed and nondepressed patients responded similarly to duloxetine, statistically greater improvement in pain reduction was seen in nondepressed patients vs depressed patients treated with milnacipran. Although this finding needs to be replicated in a larger clinical trial, the positive response in nondepressed patients suggests that, like duloxetine, the pain-relieving effects of milnacipran do not occur only through improvement in mood. Tricyclics Tricyclics agents, which inhibit the reuptake of serotonin and norepinephrine, have been the most commonly studied antidepressants in clinical trials of fibromyalgia, and there are three meta-analyzes of tricyclics in the treatment of fibromyalgia. The first meta-analysis [28] assessed nine placebocontrolled trials of cyclic agents, including amitriptyline [36–39], dothiepin, which is structurally similar to amitriptyline and doxepin [40], cyclobenzaprine [37,41–43], which possesses structural and pharmacological properties of other tricyclics that have antidepressant effects [44]; clo- Downloaded from http://painmedicine.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on November 18, 2016 Selective SNRIs Venlafaxine was the first newer-generation antidepressant to be classified as a dual, selective SNRI. However, unlike duloxetine, venlafaxine sequentially engages serotonin uptake inhibition at low doses and norepinephrine uptake inhibition at higher doses (typically at doses above 100 mg), which is consistent with venlafaxine’s ascending dose–antidepressant response curve [30]. Like duloxetine, venlafaxine lacks the side-effect profile of tricyclics associated with adrenergic, cholinergic, and histaminergic antagonism. Two openlabel studies of venlafaxine showed promise in the treatment of fibromyalgia [31,32]. However, in the only known randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial of venlafaxine in 90 patients with fibromyalgia, published just as an abstract [33], venlafaxine at a fixed dose of 75 mg/day for 6 weeks did not improve the primary measures of pain (visual analog scale [VAS] pain today and McGill Pain Questionnaire [34]) significantly better than placebo. Notably, secondary measures, including the total FIQ [20] and FIQ pain and fatigue subscales improved significantly more in the venlafaxine-treated group than the placebotreated patients. The short duration of this trial and low dose of venlafaxine may explain the mixed results, and controlled studies of doses of venlafaxine at 150 mg/day or higher are needed. Milnacipran is another selective SNRI that has been approved for treatment of depression since 1997 in parts of Europe, Asia, and elsewhere, but is currently unavailable in the United States. Milnacipran is a dual serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibition within its therapeutic dose range and also exerts mild NMDA inhibition [9]. Like duloxetine and venlafaxine, milnacipran lacks the side effects of tricyclics associated with antagonism of adrenergic, cholinergic, and histaminergic receptors. In a double-blind, placebocontrolled, multicenter trial, 125 patients (98% women) with fibromyalgia were randomized to receive placebo or milnacipran for 4 weeks of dose escalation to the maximally tolerated dose followed by 8 weeks of stable dose (25–200 mg/day) [35]. The study evaluated the efficacy and safety of two different dosing regimens of milnacipran (once daily vs twice daily) for the treatment of S67 S68 ment in fibromyalgia and change in depression scores [37,39]. The effect of tricyclics on pain relief appears to be independent of modulation of mood, which is consistent with the findings of the duloxetine studies. No fibromyalgia trials have directly compared duloxetine or other selective SNRIs with tricyclics, and it is unknown whether the selective SNRIs are more effective than the tricyclics in the treatment of fibromyalgia. To date, tricyclics have been the most studied agents in the treatment of fibromyalgia, and they are frequently recommended for the treatment of patients with fibromyalgia [55]. However, the new selective SNRIs provide an alternative for patients who have tolerability or safety concerns related to the anticholinergic, antiadrenergic, antihistaminergic, and quinidine-like effects of tricyclics [56]. SSRIs Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, which have a high affinity for the serotonin transporter, have been examined in six double-blind, placebocontrolled trials in fibromyalgia: two with citalopram [52,57], three with fluoxetine [39,51,58], and one with paroxetine controlled release (CR) [59]. The first study of 42 patients with fibromyalgia randomized to citalopram (20–40 mg/day) or placebo for 8 weeks found no significant differences in efficacy between the citalopram and placebo groups [52]. In the second randomized, doubleblind, placebo-controlled, 4-month study of 40 women with fibromyalgia, citalopram (20–40 mg/ day) treatment resulted in a significant decrease in depressive symptoms compared with placebo, but there were no significant differences between groups in other symptoms of fibromyalgia [57]. The first fluoxetine trial of 20 mg/day did not find a significant therapeutic effect over placebo [51]. In two other controlled trials, fluoxetine was superior to placebo in reducing pain and other symptoms associated with fibromyalgia [39,58]. In a double-blind, crossover study in which 19 subjects with fibromyalgia received four, 6-week trials of fluoxetine 20 mg/day, amitriptyline 25 mg/day, the combination, or placebo, both fluoxetine and amitriptyline produced significant improvement in pain, global well-being, and function compared with placebo. Combination treatment produced significantly greater improvement than did either drug alone [39]. In a randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, flexible-dose, 12-week trial of fluoxetine in fibromyalgia, 60 female subjects who did not have any current comorbid psychiat- Downloaded from http://painmedicine.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on November 18, 2016 mipramine [45], and maprotiline [45], a tetracyclic drug that primarily blocks the reuptake of norepinephrine. Seven outcome measures were assessed, including the patients’ self-ratings of pain, stiffness, fatigue, and sleep; the patient and the physician global assessment of improvement; and tender points. The largest effect was found in measures of sleep quality, with more modest changes in tender point measures and stiffness. Thus, the most consistent improvement may be attributed to the sedative properties of these medications. Overall, significant clinical response to tricyclic agents was observed in 25% to 37% of patients with fibromyalgia, and the degree of efficacy was modest in most studies [28]. The results of a meta-analysis of randomized, placebo-controlled studies of cyclobenzaprine were consistent with the Arnold et al. (2000) [28] meta-analysis. Cyclobenzaprine treatment resulted in moderate improvement in sleep, modest improvement in pain, and no improvement in fatigue or tender points. Patients were about three times as likely to report improvement in their symptoms compared with those on placebo [46]. Another meta-analysis of antidepressants in the treatment of fibromyalgia included 13 trials of antidepressants, including amitriptyline in eight studies [36–39,47–50], and clomipramine and maprotiline in one study [45]. The meta-analysis also included the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), fluoxetine [39,51] and citalopram [52]; a reversible inhibitor of the MAO-A enzyme, moclobemide [47]; and S-adenosylmethionine [53,54]. Outcome measures included the number of tender points, and patients’ self-ratings of pain, sleep, fatigue, and overall well-being. The pooled results showed a significant symptomatic benefit of antidepressants that was moderate for sleep, overall well-being, and pain severity, and mild for fatigue and number of tender points. Patients treated with antidepressants were more than four times as likely to improve as those on placebo [29]. The magnitude of benefit was similar to that found in the Arnold et al. (2000) [28] metaanalysis. None of the controlled tricyclic studies systematically evaluated patients for psychiatric disorders, so the impact of comorbid major depressive disorder on the response to tricyclic antidepressants is unknown. Few of the studies measured depressive symptoms using standardized psychometric instruments, two of which evaluated the impact of these symptoms on response to treatment and found no relationship between improve- Arnold Duloxetine and Antidepressants in Fibromyalgia Treatment ies. On the other hand, positive studies of fluoxetine and paroxetine CR suggest that these SSRIs have unique pharmacologic properties that may underlie their efficacy in fibromyalgia. Indeed, fluoxetine has been shown to increase extracellular concentrations of norepinephrine as well as serotonin in the prefrontal cortex in preclinical models [65], and paroxetine, at higher doses, may exhibit norepinephrine transporter inhibition [66]. Consistent with the results of antidepressants like duloxetine that have dual effects on serotonin and norepinephrine, SSRIs that have additional effects on norepinephrine, at adequate doses, may also be effective for fibromyalgia. Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors (MAOIs) Antidepressant medications that reversibly inhibit the monoamine oxidase (MAO)-A enzyme increase levels of norepinephrine, serotonin, and dopamine, and have improved side effect profiles compared with MAOIs, like phenelzine and tranylcypromine, that have irreversible and nonspecific effects on the MAO-A and MAO-B enzymes [67]. Two MAO-A inhibitors, moclobemide and pirlindole, available in Europe, have been studied in fibromyalgia. In a 12-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled study, 130 female patients with fibromyalgia, but without current psychiatric comorbidity, were randomized to moclobemide (450–600 mg/day), amitriptyline (25–37.5 mg/day), or placebo for 12 weeks [47]. Response to treatment was defined as a rating of minimally improved, much improved, or very much improved on a clinical impression of change scale. Fifty-four percent of patients on moclobemide were judged to be responders, but this did not significantly separate from placebo. Moclobemide treatment also did not improve secondary measures of pain significantly better than placebo. Amitriptyline treatment, on the other hand, led to significant improvement compared with placebo on several outcomes. The treatments were well tolerated, with no differences between the groups in discontinuation rates due to side effects. More promising results were reported in a pilot, 4week, randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled study of 100 patients with fibromyalgia, in which pirlindole 75 mg twice daily was well tolerated and produced significantly superior improvement in pain, the manual tender point score, and patient and physician global evaluation compared with placebo [68]. Downloaded from http://painmedicine.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on November 18, 2016 ric disorders or depressive symptoms based on a score of 10 or greater on the 17-item Hamilton Depression Scale [60] were randomized to receive fluoxetine 10–80 mg/day or placebo and evaluated with the FIQ [20] total score and FIQ pain score as the primary outcome measures. Subjects receiving fluoxetine (mean dose 45 ± 25 mg/day) had significantly greater reductions in FIQ total score, and FIQ subscales of pain, fatigue, and depression compared with subjects receiving placebo. A ≥25% improvement in the total FIQ score was observed in 32% of the fluoxetine-treated subjects compared with 15% of the subjects who received placebo, although the difference was not significant. A ≥25% improvement in the FIQ pain score was observed in significantly more of the fluoxetine-treated subjects (56%) compared with the placebo-treated subjects (15%). There was no significant interaction between treatment and either a history of major depressive disorder or by baseline level of depression, and the effect of fluoxetine on pain was significant after adjustment for change in the depression score. Therefore, as was seen in the duloxetine trials, the effect of fluoxetine on reduction of pain associated with fibromyalgia appears to be independent of an effect on mood. Fluoxetine was generally well tolerated; there were no significant differences between the two groups in dropouts due to side effects. Because of the beneficial effects of higher doses of fluoxetine in this study, some patients who fail to respond to a 20 mg/day dose of fluoxetine may improve with higher doses, if tolerated. In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, flexible-dose, 12-week trial of paroxetine CR (dose 12.5–62.5 mg/day) in 116 patients with fibromyalgia, response to treatment was defined as 25% or greater reduction in the FIQ total score [59]. Significantly more patients in the paroxetine CR group (57%) responded compared with placebo (33%). However, there were no significant differences between treatment groups in reduction of pain. The study of other SSRIs in fibromyalgia is limited, due to either lack of a placebo arm [61,62] or inadequate blinding [63,64]. The mixed results for SSRIs in fibromyalgia suggest that antidepressants with selective serotonin effects are less consistent in relieving pain and other symptoms associated with fibromyalgia. Citalopram, which has the highest selectivity for the serotonin reuptake transporters among the SSRIs, was not effective for the treatment of fibromyalgia in two controlled, albeit small stud- S69 S70 Issues Related to the Design of the Antidepressant Trials in Fibromyalgia The review of duloxetine and other antidepressant studies in fibromyalgia reveals several important trial design issues to be considered in future clinical trials of antidepressants in the treatment of fibromyalgia. Trial Duration Most of the antidepressant trials were of short duration, and there is a need for more data on the long-term efficacy of antidepressants in the treatment of fibromyalgia, a disorder that typically has a chronic course. In the longest study of tricyclics in fibromyalgia that extended to 6 months [37], neither amitriptyline nor cyclobenzaprine demonstrated significantly greater efficacy than placebo after 6 months of treatment. The two duloxetine studies showed efficacy in 12-week trials, but longterm studies with duloxetine and other antidepressants would also be useful to establish maintenance therapies for fibromyalgia. Symptom Domains The clinical presentation of fibromyalgia is heterogeneous. Although most fibromyalgia clinical trials have assessed change in the intensity of pain as the primary outcome, they have inconsistently evaluated other associated symptoms, such as sleep disturbance, fatigue, depression, anxiety, and cog- nitive function, which reduces the comparability and clinical applicability of the trials. For example, among the nine studies included in the Arnold et al. (2000) [28] meta-analysis, seven outcomes that were most commonly used included the patients’ self-ratings of pain, stiffness, fatigue, and sleep; the patient and the physician global assessment of improvement; and tenderness as measured by tender points. However, none of the studies included all of these outcomes. The more recent studies of duloxetine and other SNRIs and SSRIs included an assessment of pain, sleep, fatigue, and depressive symptoms, which are symptom domains thought to be of importance in the treatment of fibromyalgia. But other symptoms of interest, such as anxiety, stiffness, and tenderness, were not evaluated in all of the studies. Advances in the treatment of fibromyalgia have been impeded by the lack of consensus about symptom domains that should be assessed in clinical trials. Outcome Measures Fibromyalgia antidepressant clinical trials have used dissimilar measures to assess symptom domains. For example, there were different methods for collecting information about pain (e.g., electronic daily diaries, or scales completed during a visit), variable time frames for the evaluation of pain (e.g., over the past week or past 24 hours), and different scales (e.g., 0–10 numerical scales, 0– 100 VASs, or 0–20 anchored logarithmic box scale). The method for determining tenderness as a secondary outcome also varied between manual exams, dolorimetry of the 18 tender point sites, and a random sequence of pressure stimuli applied to the nail bed of the thumb. Other important outcomes such as impact on functioning and quality of life were not explored by many of the earlier studies. The duloxetine and milnacipran trials used the SF-36, a generic measure of function and health-related quality of life, and also included the FIQ. Neither the SF-36 domains nor the FIQ scores were consistently responsive to change across the studies, which suggest that either function may not be as responsive as other clinical manifestations of fibromyalgia over 8–12 weeks of treatment or that the measures are not sensitive enough to detect treatment effects. The primary outcome measure of most recent fibromyalgia trials has been the mean reduction of pain in the patients receiving a treatment compared with those receiving placebo. Although this approach provides information about the overall efficacy of a particular treatment in reducing pain, Downloaded from http://painmedicine.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on November 18, 2016 Antidepressant Dosing Most studies of tricyclic antidepressants used low doses that were subtherapeutic for the treatment of depression. This approach may have been influenced by concern about the undesirable side effects of the tricyclics from their anticholinergic, antihistaminergic, and α-adrenergic receptor blockade activities. Considering the possible association between depression and fibromyalgia [69], standard antidepressant doses may be needed to obtain more than moderate improvement in symptoms of fibromyalgia. More recent studies of antidepressants have assessed a wider range of antidepressant doses. The studies of standard therapeutic antidepressant doses of the SNRIs, duloxetine and milnacipran, and the SSRIs fluoxetine and paroxetine CR indicate that these doses were well tolerated by most patients and were effective in reducing many of the symptoms of fibromyalgia. Based on these findings, doses of antidepressants at the therapeutic level for the treatment of depression should be tested in future trials. Arnold Duloxetine and Antidepressants in Fibromyalgia Treatment Comorbidity Patients with fibromyalgia frequently have comorbid disorders that may affect their response to treatment. Despite evidence of elevated prevalence rates of mood and anxiety disorders in patients with fibromyalgia and their possible prognostic significance [31], few clinical trials systemically evaluated patients for comorbid psychiatric disorders. The recent trials of duloxetine were the first to diagnose psychiatric disorders using structured clinical psychiatric interviews and to include patients with and without current major depressive disorder. Because about a third of patients with fibromyalgia report major current problems with depression in the general population [71], the finding that the improvement with duloxetine was independent of the presence or absence of major depressive disorder suggests that duloxetine could be a treatment option for a diverse group of patients with fibromyalgia. Furthermore, the effect of duloxetine on pain reduction was found to be independent of its effect on depressive and anxiety symptoms, consistent with the results of previous trials that included assessment of psychiatric symptoms [37,39,58]. The weight of the evidence from antidepressant trials of fibromyalgia suggests that, although functional deficits of serotonin and norepinephrine neurotransmission may be shared between major depression and fibromyalgia, the pain-modulating effects in spinal and supraspinal pathways are not dependent on modulation of mood. Structured clinical psychiatric interviews are also useful in identifying patients with psychiatric disorders that may not be responsive to antidepressant monotherapy. For example, the duloxetine trials excluded patients with certain forms of comorbid psychopathology, such as bipolar disorder. The co-occurrence of bipolar disorder in fibromyalgia patients has received little attention in previous studies. A recent study found that individuals with fibromyalgia were significantly more likely to have comorbid bipolar disorder than those without fibromyalgia [2]. The presence of comorbid bipolar disorder has important implications for an antidepressant clinical trial, because antidepressants may precipitate hypomanic, manic, or mixed episodes in predisposed individuals who have existing or latent bipolar disorder [72]. The duloxetine trials also excluded patients with primary anxiety disorders. Antidepressants are effective treatments for anxiety disorders, which are also commonly comorbid in patients with fibromyalgia, and more study is needed on the potential impact of anxiety disorders on response to treatment of fibromyalgia with antidepressants. In addition, assessments of personality traits and disorders have rarely been included in fibromyalgia clinical trials and may also be helpful in identifying possible clinical predictors of response to antidepressants. Patients with fibromyalgia also have high rates of other chronic pain disorders, including chronic headache, irritable bowel syndrome, and temporomandibular disorder [73] as well as chronic fatigue syndrome [74]. However, most fibromyalgia trials have not assessed for these conditions or determined the effect of comorbidity on response to treatment. Future trials should include an assessment of comorbid medical conditions. Most trials excluded patients with pain from some other disorders, such as rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory arthritis or autoimmune disease. As many as 25% of patients with these rheumatic conditions have secondary fibromyalgia [75], and Downloaded from http://painmedicine.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on November 18, 2016 it does not determine the proportion of patients who experience clinically important improvement. The duloxetine trials included secondary outcome measures for response to treatment of 30% and 50% reduction in a pain intensity scale. However, more study is needed to establish consensus about the definition of clinically meaningful reduction in pain for fibromyalgia clinical trials. In addition, it is unclear whether improvement in pain intensity alone should define response to treatment in fibromyalgia, which is a syndrome characterized by multiple symptoms in addition to pain. For example, other characteristics of pain might be of particular importance in fibromyalgia patients such as the degree to which the pain is widespread and the level of tenderness. It might also be important to include other domains of interest in a measure of response such as quality of life, physical and emotional function, sleep, fatigue, and cognition. Standardized, operationally defined outcome measures of fibromyalgia activity and improvement would greatly enhance the comparability, validity, and clinical applicability of fibromyalgia trials. Defining efficacy in terms of an individual response to treatment would allow clinicians to compare the efficacy of different therapies and define factors that predict response [70]. With this information, clinicians could determine whether individual patients would improve with a particular treatment. S71 S72 future trials should examine the efficacy of antidepressants in these patients. Summary of Antidepressant Trials in Fibromyalgia Although more trials are needed to explore the efficacy of antidepressants in fibromyalgia, especially in long-term treatment studies, the evidence supports the use of antidepressants in treating pain and other symptoms associated with fibromyalgia. Newer selective SNRIs, like duloxetine, milnacipran, and venlafaxine, that have the dual serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibition activity of tricyclic antidepressants, but lack many of the adverse side effects associated with tricyclics, show promise in the treatment of fibromyalgia, and may become the first-line choice for antidepressant treatment. Disclosures Dr. Lesley Arnold—Grant/Research: Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Cypress Biosciences, Wyeth, SanofiAventis, Boehringer Ingelheim, Allergan, Forest Consultant: Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Cypress Biosciences, Sanofi-Aventis, Wyeth, Forest, Sepracor, Forest, Allergan, Boehringer Ingelheim Speaker: Eli Lilly, Pfizer References 1 Wolfe F, Smythe HA, Yunus MB, et al. The American College of Rheumatology 1990 criteria for the classification of fibromyalgia. Report of the Multicenter Criteria Committee. Arthritis Rheum 1990;33:160–72. 2 Arnold LM, Hudson JI, Keck PE Jr, et al. Comorbidity of fibromyalgia and psychiatric disorders. 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