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Vol. 302, Issue 3, 1265-1271, September 2002
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (L.C., U.B., M.Z.),
Psychopharmacology Research Program, Sunnybrook and Women's College
Health Sciences Centre-Sunnybrook Campus (L.K.T., C.A.N., N.H., U.B.),
Ontario, Canada; and Departments of Pharmacology (L.C., U.B, C.A.N,
M.Z.), Pharmaceutical Sciences (L.K.T., U.B.), Medicine (C.A.N., N.H.),
Psychiatry (N.H.), and Public Health Sciences (M.Z.), University of
Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Major depressive disorder (MDD) and nicotine dependence are highly
comorbid. MDD patients may use nicotine to ameliorate depressive symptoms. The pathophysiology of the comorbidity of these two disorders
is unknown. We hypothesized that a dysfunctional dopaminergic brain
reward system (BRS) might be a neurobiological link between MDD and
nicotine dependence and that smoking modulates the activity of the BRS
by enhancing dopaminergic activity and relieving some depressive
symptoms. Eighteen nicotine-dependent, nonmedicated subjects with
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th edition) diagnosis of MDD and 16 nicotine-dependent,
control subjects participated in a double-blind, placebo-controlled,
randomized parallel study. A single 30-mg oral dose of
d-amphetamine (d-amph) was used to
release dopamine and probe the activity of the BRS. The
d-amph-mediated physiological and rewarding effects were
assessed at baseline and post-treatment using standardized and
validated questionnaires. Our results show that d-amph
significantly increased blood pressure (p < 0.001). Subjective rewarding d-amph effects increased in both groups. Negative subjective effects were reported while on placebo during nonsmoking sessions. A significant correlation between depression severity (Hamilton depression scale) and
d-amph rewarding effects was found in MDD smoker
subjects (Addiction Research Center Inventory composite:
r = 0.89, p < 0.000; profile of mood states composite: r = 0.71, p < 0.003; and visual analog scales composite:
r = 0.78, p < 0.005). These
data show that smoking did not modify the response to
d-amph in MDD or control subjects, but decreased overall
negative mood state during placebo sessions. Severity of depression was
significantly correlated with increased rewarding effects of
d-amph. Thus, although the BRS may be dysfunctional in
MDD subjects, chronic nicotine use does not modify response to
d-amph.
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