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Mechanism of action of pimavanserin in Parkinson’s disease psychosis: targeting serotonin 5HT2A and 5HT2C receptors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 August 2016

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Abstract

Pimavanserin, a novel agent approved for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease psychosis, has potent actions as an antagonist/inverse agonist at serotonin 5HT2A receptors and less potent antagonist/inverse agonist actions at 5HT2C receptors.

Type
Brainstorms
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2016 

Take-Home Points

  • 1. Pimavanserin is a selective 5HT2A/5HT2C receptor-acting agent and the only approved treatment for Parkinson’s disease psychosis.

  • 2. Pimavanserin is the first example of a drug with antipsychotic actions that does not block dopamine D2 receptors.

  • 3. The antipsychotic actions of pimavanserin, particularly against visual hallucinations in Parkinson’s disease psychosis, do not come at the expense of worsening motor symptoms in Parkinson’s disease.

Introduction

Psychosis, defined as hallucinations and delusions, is present in up to half of patients with Parkinson’s disease,Reference Cummings 1 Reference Goldman, Vaughan and Goetz 4 but there is debate about its cause. In some Parkinson’s disease patients, Parkinson’s disease psychosis (PDP) appears even before motor symptoms occur or before any treatment is given, and is thus a core non-motor feature of their Parkinson’s disease;Reference Cummings 1 Reference Paponabarrage, Martinez-Horta and Fernández de Bobadilla 5 in other patients with Parkinson’s disease, PDP develops concomitantly with dementia, both the Alzheimer type and the Lewy body type, in which Lewy bodies of alpha synuclein accumulate not only in the substantia nigra, first to cause motor symptoms, but also in the cortex, later to cause dementia;Reference Cummings 1 Reference Paponabarrage, Martinez-Horta and Fernández de Bobadilla 5 finally, PDP in yet other patients with Parkinson’s disease seems to be caused or worsened by treatment with dopaminergic agents and improved by dose reduction of dopaminergic therapies.Reference Cummings 1 Reference Goldman, Vaughan and Goetz 4 , Reference Vaillancourt, Schonfeld, Kwak, Bohnen and Seidler 6 Reference Joutsa, Johansson, Seppänen, Nopenen and Kaasinen 8 Whatever the cause of PDP, it is clear that its onset is not good news, since it is associated with dementiaReference Cummings 1 Reference Joutsa, Johansson, Seppänen, Nopenen and Kaasinen 8 and predicts repeated hospitalizations,Reference Klein, Prokhorov, Miniovitz, Dobronevsky and Rabey 9 nursing home placement,Reference Goetz and Stebbins 10 , Reference Aarsland, Larsen, Tandberg and Laake 11 and death.Reference Goetz and Stebbins 12 , Reference Forsaa, Larsen, Wentzel-Larsen and Alves 13 Furthermore, the only previously available treatment for PDP, antipsychotics, can worsen motor symptoms and increase mortality in Parkinson’s disease patients with dementia, many of whom have PDP.Reference Chang and Fox 2 Reference Goldman, Vaughan and Goetz 4 , Reference Schneider, Dagerman and Insel 14 , Reference Ballard, Isaacson and Mills 15 Thus, there is urgent need for a safe and effective treatment for PDP.

From a pharmacologic perspective, PDP likely represents an imbalance between dopamine and serotonin systems in the brain.Reference Chang and Fox 2 Reference Goldman, Vaughan and Goetz 4 , Reference Vaillancourt, Schonfeld, Kwak, Bohnen and Seidler 6 Reference Joutsa, Johansson, Seppänen, Nopenen and Kaasinen 8 , Reference Birkmayer and Birkmayer 16 Reference Birkmayer, Danielczyk, Neumayer and Riederer 31 Treatment of PDP, prior to the approval of pimavanserin, consisted of either lowering the doses of dopaminergic antiparkinsonian agents or adding antipsychotic agents, although the efficacy of antipsychotics for PDP has been poorly documented and is often associated with worsening of motor symptoms of Parkinson’s disease.Reference Chang and Fox 2 Reference Goldman, Vaughan and Goetz 4 , Reference Vaillancourt, Schonfeld, Kwak, Bohnen and Seidler 6 , Reference Zahodne and Fernandez 32 , Reference Desmarais, Massoud, Filion, Nguyen and Bajsarowicz 33 Originally, the notion was that antipsychotics such as quetiapine or clozapine worked in PDP by blocking D2 dopamine receptors,Reference Chang and Fox 2 Reference Goldman, Vaughan and Goetz 4 , Reference Zahodne and Fernandez 32 , Reference Desmarais, Massoud, Filion, Nguyen and Bajsarowicz 33 just as these drugs are thought to work in schizophrenia.Reference Stahl 34 However, a novel line of investigation now suggests that it is actually the potent serotonin 5HT2A antagonist properties of quetiapine and clozapine,Reference Stahl 34 , Reference Hubbard, Hacksell and McFarland 35 not their weak D2 antagonist properties, that cause the apparent efficacy seen in Parkinson’s disease. That is, pimavanserin—which lacks any potent D2 antagonist actionsReference Vanover, Weiner and Makhay 36 —has now been proven effective in PDP.Reference Cummings, Isaacson and Mills 37 Reference Meltzer, Mills and Revell 40

Pharmacologic Mechanism of Action of Pimavanserin

Pimavanserin has relatively selective pharmacologic actions, namely, potent interactions at serotonin 5HT2A receptors and around 40-fold less potent activity at 5HT2C receptors (Figure 1).Reference Vanover, Weiner and Makhay 36 It is not clear whether pimavanserin acts only via 5HT2A receptors or via 5HT2C receptors as well, but the doses of pimavanserin required to treat PDPReference Cummings, Isaacson and Mills 37 Reference Meltzer, Mills and Revell 40 suggest that the 5HT2C receptor actions of pimavanserin are indeed relevant to its therapeutic effects in PDP. That is, doses that essentially saturate the 5HT2A receptorReference Vanover, Robbins-Weilert and Wilbraham 41 , Reference Nordstrom, Mansson and Jovanovic 42 are not effective in PDP.Reference Cummings, Isaacson and Mills 37 Reference Meltzer, Mills and Revell 40 However, twice this dose is effective,Reference Cummings, Isaacson and Mills 37 Reference Meltzer, Mills and Revell 40 and this higher dose—the one that is approved for treatment of PDP by the FDA—not only saturates 5HT2A receptors,Reference Nordstrom, Mansson and Jovanovic 42 but also recruits substantial if lesser degrees of occupancy of 5HT2C receptors.Reference Vanover, Weiner and Makhay 36 This notion of dual activity at both 5HT2A and 5HT2C receptors for therapeutic efficacy of pimavanserin in PDP is consistent with animal studies of PDP, where the actions of pimavanserin on dopamine release are demonstrated at doses that engage both receptors as well.Reference Li, Ichikawa, Huang, Prus, Dai and Meltzer 43

Figure 1 Mechanism of action of pimavanserin. Shown here are the binding properties of pimavanserin, namely potent antagonist actions at serotonin 5HT2A receptors, sometimes called inverse agonist actions, and less potent antagonist/inverse agonist actions at 5HT2C receptors. Note that there is no notable binding to D2 dopamine receptors or any other neurotransmitter receptors.

Another unresolved issue regarding the actions of pimavanserin is whether it acts as a more traditional antagonist at 5HT2A/2C receptors, or as a so-called inverse agonist.Reference Stahl 34 , Reference Vanover, Weiner and Makhay 36 , Reference Kenakin 44 , Reference Brink, Harvey, Bodenstein, Venter and Oliver 45 The vast majority of drugs used in psychiatry are antagonists, ie, they block something. Usually they block the effects of an endogenous neurotransmitter, such as dopamine as in the case of treating schizophrenia. Drugs that have the opposite effects of agonists are inverse agonists. For example, from a behavioral point of view, a benzodiazepine agonist reduces anxiety, and a benzodiazepine inverse agonist causes anxiety. From a pharmacologic point of view, antagonists block the actions of agonists at their receptors, but they do so “silently,” that is, without changing any intrinsic activity of that receptor from what that receptor is expressing in the absence of its agonist. On the other hand, an inverse agonist not only blocks the actions of agonists at the receptor the same as an antagonist, but also decreases the intrinsic activity that receptor has in the absence of its agonist. The point of differentiation pharmacologically is that inverse agonists reduce baseline (constitutive) activity at 5HT2A receptors in the absence of serotonin, whereas antagonists do not, ie, they are “silent.”Reference Stahl 34 , Reference Kenakin 44 , Reference Brink, Harvey, Bodenstein, Venter and Oliver 45

From a clinical point of view, the differentiation of an antagonist from an inverse agonist at 5HT2A receptors may be a distinction without a difference. Indeed, the same assay systems that suggest pimavanserin is an inverse agonistReference Vanover, Weiner and Makhay 36 also show that all the other atypical antipsychotics that interact at 5HT2A receptors are also inverse agonists.Reference Weiner, Burstein and Nash 46 Atypical antipsychotics have been traditionally called 5HT2A antagonists, not inverse agonists.Reference Stahl 34 The clinical relevance of this all depends upon whether there is any baseline intrinsic activity of 5HT2A receptors in the living human brain in the absence of serotonin, and we do not have any convincing evidence of that. Thus, there is not yet any known clinically meaningful differentiation between inverse agonism and antagonism for pimavanserin and atypical antipsychotics in PDP, so it may be useful to continue to refer to them simply as antagonists.

Therapeutic Mechanism of Pimavanserin in PDP

Why does blocking 5HT2A/5HT2C receptors in PDP have antipsychotic efficacy without worsening motor symptoms? Although all traditional antipsychotics block D2 receptorsReference Stahl 34 and all atypical antipsychotics block both D2 and 5HT2A receptors,Reference Stahl 34 pimavanserin is the first 5HT2A/2C antagonist lacking D2 antagonist propertiesReference Weiner, Burstein and Nash 46 that has been proven effective in psychosis, specifically PDP.Reference Cummings, Isaacson and Mills 37 Reference Meltzer, Mills and Revell 40 The antipsychotic efficacy of pimavanserin was at first surprising because longstanding dogma about the pharmacology of psychosis assumed it was due to excessive dopamine activity, and the only way to treat psychosis was therefore to reduce dopamine activity. In PDP, that meant the early interventions were either to reduce dopaminergic therapy or to block D2 receptors with the addition of an antipsychotic; however, these treatments both have limited efficacy and also the propensity to make motor symptoms worse.Reference Chang and Fox 2 Reference Goldman, Vaughan and Goetz 4 , Reference Vaillancourt, Schonfeld, Kwak, Bohnen and Seidler 6 Reference Joutsa, Johansson, Seppänen, Nopenen and Kaasinen 8 , Reference Zahodne and Fernandez 32 , Reference Desmarais, Massoud, Filion, Nguyen and Bajsarowicz 33 This put both PDP patients and their clinicians between a rock and a hard place when trying to balance simultaneously the treatment of both PDP and motor symptoms of Parkinson’s disease.

Pharmacologists working within the traditional antipsychotic paradigm have long considered the 5HT2A antagonist actions of atypical antipsychotic agents to be responsible for reducing the incidence of drug-induced parkinsonism while simultaneously blocking D2 receptors,Reference Stahl 34 but the evidence that 5HT2A receptors mediate antipsychotic actions was sparse.Reference Stahl 34 , Reference Laoutidis and Luckhaus 47 Other selective 5HT2A antagonists were not convincing antipsychotics as monotherapies, although early preclinical and clinical studies of pimavanserin suggested that it could enhance the antipsychotic activity of risperidone.Reference Gardell, Vanover and Pounds 48 , Reference Meltzer, Elkis and Vanover 49 Thus, it was a bit of a surprise that pimavanserin monotherapy, with its 5HT2A/2C antagonist properties, showed antipsychotic efficacy in PDPReference Cummings, Isaacson and Mills 37 Reference Meltzer, Mills and Revell 40 without blocking D2 receptors.Reference Weiner, Burstein and Nash 46

So, how does the selective 5HT2A/2C antagonism without D2 antagonism of pimavanserin exert its antipsychotic effects in PDP without worsening motor symptoms? It seems the answer to this may be that pimavanserin corrects the theoretical serotonin dopamine imbalance in PDP.Reference Vaillancourt, Schonfeld, Kwak, Bohnen and Seidler 6 Reference Joutsa, Johansson, Seppänen, Nopenen and Kaasinen 8 , Reference Birkmayer and Birkmayer 16 Reference Birkmayer, Danielczyk, Neumayer and Riederer 31 That is, the various causes of PDP are all hypothesized to act by the same ultimate common pharmacologic pathway, namely to cause an imbalance between serotonin and dopamine. The dopamine deficiencies of Parkinson’s disease are well known and are obviously linked to motor symptoms.Reference Cummings 1 Reference Vaillancourt, Schonfeld, Kwak, Bohnen and Seidler 6 , Reference Ravina, Marek and Eberly 17 , Reference Kordower, Olanaw and Dodiya 18 Less well appreciated is that both serotonin and dopamine neurons degenerate in Parkinson’s disease.Reference Birkmayer and Birkmayer 16 , Reference Huot and Fox 20 Reference Fox, Chuang and Brotchie 22 Although degeneration of dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra is linked to motor symptoms in Parkinson’s disease,Reference Cummings 1 , Reference Vaillancourt, Schonfeld, Kwak, Bohnen and Seidler 6 Reference Joutsa, Johansson, Seppänen, Nopenen and Kaasinen 8 , Reference Ravina, Marek and Eberly 17 , Reference Kordower, Olanaw and Dodiya 18 loss of serotonin neurons is not.Reference Birkmayer and Birkmayer 16 , Reference Huot and Fox 20 Reference Fox, Chuang and Brotchie 22 Instead, loss of serotonin neurons is accompanied by a presumably compensatory upregulation of post synaptic 5HT2A receptors in the cerebral cortex, setting off an imbalance in the action of serotonin at these receptors.Reference Huot, Hohnston and Darr 23 Reference Albin, Koeppe, Bohnen, Wernette, Kilbourn and Frey 27 That is, excessive stimulation of these receptors is thought to result in psychotic symptoms, especially visual hallucinations, which are the hallmark of PDP.Reference Huot, Hohnston and Darr 23 Reference Birkmayer, Danielczyk, Neumayer and Riederer 31 , Reference Sadzot, Baraban and Glennon 50 Indeed, hallucinogenic drugs cause striking visual hallucinations by stimulating these very same 5HT2A receptors.Reference Sadzot, Baraban and Glennon 50 , Reference McClue, Brazell and Stahl 51 Thus, there is robust pharmacologic rationale to explain why blocking hypothetically overstimulated 5HT2A receptors in PDP would reduce the hypothetical serotonergic imbalance, and thereby stop psychotic symptoms.Reference Huot, Hohnston and Darr 23 Reference Birkmayer, Danielczyk, Neumayer and Riederer 31 , Reference Sadzot, Baraban and Glennon 50 , Reference McClue, Brazell and Stahl 51 Also, 5HT2A receptors in the cortex regulate the downstream release of dopamine,Reference Stahl 34 which has been hypothesized to have undergone a dorsal-to-ventral shift in the striatum in PDP.Reference Joutsa, Johansson, Seppänen, Nopenen and Kaasinen 8 Blocking these receptors could theoretically restore the correct balance by partially reversing this shift.Reference Joutsa, Johansson, Seppänen, Nopenen and Kaasinen 8 , Reference Huot, Hohnston and Darr 23 Reference Birkmayer, Danielczyk, Neumayer and Riederer 31

Future

5HT2A receptors are also upregulated in dementia with Lewy bodies,Reference Cheng, Ferrier and Morris 29 a condition where dementia precedes any motor symptoms, whereas in Parkinson’s disease, the motor symptoms precede the dementia.Reference Stinton, McKeith and Taylor 52 Reference Petrova, Mehrabian-Spasova, Aarsland, Raycheva and Traykov 56 Visual hallucinations are a prominent feature in many patients who have dementia with Lewy bodies,Reference Stinton, McKeith and Taylor 52 Reference Petrova, Mehrabian-Spasova, Aarsland, Raycheva and Traykov 56 so it is rational to hypothesize that these psychotic symptoms might also be treatable with pimavanserin. Indeed, studies are underway to investigate this possibility. Psychotic symptoms also accompany the dementia of Alzheimer’s disease,Reference Cummings 1 , Reference Stahl 34 whether comorbid with Parkinson’s Disease or not, and could possibly be a therapeutic target for pimavanserin as well.Reference Price, Bonhaus and McFarland 57 Finally, pimavanserin and all 5HT2A antagonists enhance slow-wave sleep,Reference Ancoli-Israel, Vanover, Weiner, Davis and van Kammen 58 and there may be therapeutic implications of this action as well.

References

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Figure 0

Figure 1 Mechanism of action of pimavanserin. Shown here are the binding properties of pimavanserin, namely potent antagonist actions at serotonin 5HT2A receptors, sometimes called inverse agonist actions, and less potent antagonist/inverse agonist actions at 5HT2C receptors. Note that there is no notable binding to D2 dopamine receptors or any other neurotransmitter receptors.