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Title: WAY-163909, a 5-HT2C agonist, enhances the preclinical potency of current antipsychotics. Author: Grauer SM, Graf R, Navarra R, Sung A, Logue SF, Stack G, Huselton C, Liu Z, Comery TA, Marquis KL, Rosenzweig-Lipson S. Journal: Psychopharmacology (Berl); 2009 May; 204(1):37-48. PubMed ID: 19107466. Abstract: INTRODUCTION: 5-HT(2C) agonists, by decreasing mesolimbic dopamine without affecting nigrostriatal dopamine, are predicted to have antipsychotic efficacy with low extrapyramidal side effects (EPS). Combining 5-HT(2C) agonists with low doses of existing antipsychotics could increase treatment efficacy while reducing treatment liabilities such as EPS (typical antipsychotics), and the propensity for weight gain (atypical antipsychotics). OBJECTIVES: The objectives of these studies were to combine WAY-163909, a selective 5-HT(2C) agonist, with either the typical antipsychotic haloperidol, or the atypical antipsychotic clozapine, at doses that were ineffective on their own, with the expectation that a shift in potency in several rodent behavior models predictive of antipsychotic activity would occur. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: In mice, co-administration of either haloperidol, or clozapine, produced a significant leftward shift in the ability of WAY-163909 to block apomorphine-induced climbing behavior, without any affect on apomorphine-induced stereotypy or an increased propensity for catalepsy. In the rat-conditioned avoidance model, WAY-163909 was combined with either haloperidol or clozapine at doses that individually produced reductions in avoidance response on the order of 10%, while the combination of WAY-163909 and either of the antipsychotics resulted in a greater than 70% reduction in avoidance, with no evidence of response failures, or pharmacokinetic interaction. CONCLUSION: Doses of either haloperidol or clozapine, that failed to antagonize an MK-801 induced deficit in prepulse inhibition, significantly attenuated the sensory gating deficit when combined with WAY-163909. Data support the notion that 5-HT(2C) receptor agonists, co-administered with other marketed antipsychotics, allow for dose sparing with a more favorable side-effect profile.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]