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Antidepressant-induced galactorrhea and increases in prolactin levels have been sporadically reported among SSRI-related side effects.
Objectives
Current rapport presents a case of 39 y.o. female who developed several adverse effects on paroxetine - including galactorrhoea - which improved on discontinuation of the drug.
Methods
Case discussion of 39-year old woman who was treated with paroxetine for her panic disorder and developed galactorrhoea with hyperprolactinemia that resolved upon discontinuation of the drug. Additionally, authors performed the literature search using PubMed and Embase to review the similar cases and used PDSP Database to assess the latest pharmacodynamic (PD) properties of paroxetine and other SSRI’s.
Results
Literature review (1966–2020) revealed 24 prior published case reports of SSRI-induced galactorrhea in users of paroxetine (n=4), escitalopram (n=4), sertraline (n=2), citalopram (n=2), fluoxetine (n=3), fluvoxamine (n=2) and other non-assessable reports (n=7). Elevated prolactin levels were mostly observed with paroxetine and escitalopram and rarely with fluoxetine, fluvoxamine and sertraline. PD-assessment showed the highest binding affinity of paroxetine and escitalopram to SERT (kPi = 0.07-0.2 and 0.8-1.1 nmol/L respectively) compared to other SSRI’s, in absence of other relevant PD-properties
Conclusions
Increasing body of evidence shows that galactorrhea does occur among paroxetine female users. Pharmacodynamic mechanism of action is poorly understood but given the modern insights in relationship in serotonin and dopamine circuits, we suggest that strong SERT inhibitory properties of paroxetine might lead to a tonic suppressive influence on dopamine neurotransmission. This physiological link may explain an increase in prolactin levels through dopamine depletion in the tuberoinfundibular pathway.
Galactorrhea wiht antidepressants SSRIs or SNRI is a rarely adverse effect. Some authors believe that the risk of galactorrhea in women who use SSRIs is 8 times higher than in patients treated with other types of drugs. Serotonin is believed to be a potent physiological stimulator of prolactin release.Prolactin stimulates the growth of the mammary glands and the galactorrhea. The SSRIs would activate the serotonergic pathways, these in turn would stimulate the release of prolactin directly in the pituitary and in the hypothalamus, inhibiting the release of dopamine and increasing the release of stimulating factors. The main inhibitor of prolactin secretion is dopamine.
Objectives
The objective is to reveal this rare complication through the report of a clinical case
Methods
A 45-year-old woman with a diagnosis of mixed anxiety-depressive disorder. Treatment with 20 mg of escitalopram was started, with a good therapeutic response, but with breast pain and swelling. She was switched to duloxetine 60 mg, with a good response and adequate tolerance. At 6 months of treatment, she begins to present breast pain and yellow-green breast discharge, with elevated prolactin levels and normal cranial MRI.
Results
She was diagnosed with functional hyperprolactinemia, and treatment with vortioxetine was started. Finally, the Prolactin levels normalize.
Conclusions
Galactorrhea is a very rare and annoying side effect that can lead to discontinuation of treatment and requires a change in the therapeutic strategy.
Benign breast disease includes mastalgia, fibrocystic breast disease (FBD), breast cellulites and abscesses, nipple discharges, and galactorrhea. FBD is the most common benign breast disease. FBD starts as microcysts and accompanying fibrosis in 65% of women. The cysts become larger as the woman ages, and can reach 3 to 4 cm. Breast infections can affect the skin, producing a primary cellulitis, or may be secondary to an infection of a sebaceous gland, axillary gland, or lymph node, such as in hidradenitis supparativa. Most mastitis occurs in breast-feeding women. Nipple discharges are the third most common complaint concerning 5% of women attending breast clinics. Discharges associated with a breast mass are more likely to be related to cancer. Diseases that affect the hypothalamic and pituitary areas such as sarcoidosis, tuberculosis, histocytosis, and multiple sclerosis can cause galactorrhea. Galactorrhea is often physiological or caused by medication or treatable hormonal disorders.
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