Observational study links striatal dopamine changes to psychosis remission in schizophrenia patients
This observational study investigated striatal dopamine synthesis and storage in patients with schizophrenia and healthy controls using 18F-DOPA PET scans. The cohort included 28 patients with schizophrenia and 21 healthy controls, assessed at two timepoints: during psychosis and during early psychotic remission. The primary outcome measured the averaged influx constant kicer, while secondary outcomes focused on psychotic relapse over a 12-month follow-up period after the second scan.
The analysis revealed a significant longitudinal decrease in caudate kicer from the psychosis state to psychotic remission. Additionally, significant changes in nucleus accumbens kicer were observed from psychosis to remission when compared to healthy controls. During early psychotic remission, caudate and nucleus accumbens kicer values were significantly lower in patients relative to controls. Furthermore, caudate kicer was higher in relapsing patients versus non-relapsing patients during psychosis, but no difference was found between these groups during psychotic remission.
The authors characterize this work as an exploratory clinical follow-up. Safety data, including adverse events and tolerability, were not reported. The study design is observational, which limits the ability to infer causality. Consequently, the findings should be interpreted with caution, acknowledging the exploratory nature of the analyses and the absence of reported funding conflicts or specific practice relevance statements.