Background: This study sought to determine whether changes in thyroid function that may occur during antidepressant treatment are related to a direct effect of the drug on the thyroid axis or to a change in clinical state.
Methods: Morning and evening thyroid function was evaluated in 30 euthyroid inpatients who met DSM-IV criteria for major depressive episode, by determination of free triiodothyronine, free thyroxine, and thyrotropin levels before and after 8 AM and 11 PM protirelin challenges (200 micrograms intravenously), on the same day. Results at baseline were compared with those after 1 month of antidepressant treatment with either amitriptyline hydrochloride, fluoxetine hydrochloride, or toloxatone.
Results: Clinical efficacy and effects on thyroid function did not differ across the 3 antidepressant drugs. Compared with pretreatment values, significant reductions in basal serum 8 AM free thyroxine, 11 PM free thyroxine, and 8 AM free triiodothyronine levels and increases in 11 PM maximum increment in plasma thyrotropin level and the difference between 11 PM and 8 AM maximum increment in plasma thyrotropin values were observed in responders (n = 11) but not in partial responders (n = 6) or nonresponders (n = 13). Moreover, nonresponders exhibited lower pretreatment 11 PM thyrotropin values (basal and maximal increment above basal) than responders.
Conclusions: The results suggest that (1) changes in thyroid function are related to clinical recovery rather than to a direct effect of the antidepressant drug and (2) patients with the lowest pretreatment evening thyrotropin secretion have the lowest rate of antidepressant response, and this may contribute to treatment resistance.