Method in the treatment of schizophrenia

Drug – bio-affecting and body treating compositions – Designated organic active ingredient containing – Peptide containing doai

Reexamination Certificate

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C514S649000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06468973

ABSTRACT:

TECHNICAL FIELD
The present invention relates to the use of a composition comprising at least one substance within the group GnRH-analogues for treatment of schizophrenia.
STATE OF THE ART
Schizophrenia is a chronic psychiatric disease in which the main symptoms are delusions, hallucinations and grossly disorganised or catatonic behaviour. The disorder is chronic and often serious enough to make the patient completely or partially unable to work and live a normal life.
The disorder is described and defined in detail in The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition (DSM-IV) published by the American Psychiatric Association in 1994.
At the present state of the art of science, the only pharmacological treatments which are considered to be effective for the treatment of schizophrenia, are such pharmacological agents which are antagonists at the dopaminergic receptor in the brain.
That this is the present scientific opinion is evident from the following Swedish and English psychiatric textbooks.
1. Ottosson, J-O: Psykiatri. Almqvist & Wiksell Medicin Luber Utildning. Stockholm 1995. Chapter 9. Pages 167-214.
2. Gelder, M., Gath, D., Mayou, R., Cowen, P.: Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry. Oxford Medical Publications. Oxford 1995. Pages 246-293.
Physiological Regulation of Androgenic Hormones Under Normal Conditions (i.e. without Influence of Drugs)
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) stimulates the production of gonadotropins in the hypophysis (at the bottom of the brain). The gonadotropins are released to the blood and transported to the testes and the adrenal glands (of the male) and to the ovaries and the adrenal glands (of the female). There, the gonadotropins stimulate the synthesis and release of, among other hormones, the androgens (the male sex hormones) of which testosterone is one.
The androgenic hormones are released to the blood from the glands in which they are produced. They are transported to different organs where they exert their various actions. One of these organs is the brain. There, the androgenic hormones exert their effects by stimulating certain receptors. The androgenic activity in the brain is dependent both on the concentration of androgenic hormones in the blood, and on the density and sensitivity of the receptors on which the androgenic hormones act. The androgenic activity may thus be high, both at a high concentration of androgenic hormone in the blood, and in cases of a high density and/or sensitivity of the androgenic receptors.
The production of androgenic hormones is normally subjected to a “feed-back” regulation. If the androgenic activity in the brain is high, a compensating reduction in the synthesis and release of GnRH and consequently of the of gonadotropins takes place, with a following reduction in the synthesis and release of androgenic hormones. At a high androgenic activity in the brain, caused by a high density and/or sensitivity of the receptors (and not due to a high concentration of androgenic hormones in the blood), the compensating feed-back-regulation might cause a decrease in the synthesis and release of androgenic hormones which in turn might cause abnormally low blood concentrations of androgenic hormones. Such low concentrations could not be taken as a sign of low androgenic activity; it may still be high (if the compensation has not been sufficient) or normal (if the compensation has been sufficient).
Known Fields of Application for Pharmacological Agents which Reduce the Activity of Androgenic Hormones
There are several drugs which have well-documented anti-androgenic effects. These drugs are mainly used in the treatment of carcinoma of the prostate but also in the treatment of unwanted phenomena, which are caused by a high androgenic activity. Examples of such phenomena are hypersexuality and male pattern baldness in men and hirsutism (a condition with bodily male hair growth) in women.
Groups of Drugs with Anti-androgenic Properties
Anti-androgenic effects may be obtained via three different mechanisms:
Receptor-blocking Substances
These are substances that bind to the androgenic receptors without stimulating them. In this way, the endogenous hormone is prevented from binding to the receptors with a resulting reduced androgenic activity. Preparation example: flutamide (Eulexin®).
Synthesis-inhibiting Substances
These are substances which inhibit production of androgenic hormones in the glands where they are produced. Preparation example: cyproterone acetate (Androcur®) (this substance also has receptor-blocking properties).
GnRH-analogues
These are substances which, in their effect, resemble endogenous GnRH but they produce a more powerful and more protracted effect upon the GnRH-receptors. Initially they have the same effects as endogenous GnRH, i.e. by stimulating the production of gonadotropins, the synthesis and release of androgenic hormones is also stimulated resulting in an increase in androgenic activity. After treatment during a certain period of time the sensitivity in the receptors, on which endogenous GnRH and GnRH-analogues act, will be significantly reduced. Hereby, the release of gonadotropins will also be reduced. The reduction in concentrations of circulating gonadotropins will cause a decrease in synthesis and release of androgenic hormones. Consequently, the androgenic activity in the brain and elsewhere will be dramatically reduced. Preparation example: buserelin (Suprecur®; manufacturer Hoechst Marion Roussel), leuprorelin (Enanton®; manufacturer Orion and Procren®; manufacturer Abbott), goserelin (Zoladex®; manufacturer Zeneca), triptorelin (Decapeptyl®; manufacturer Ferring).
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
One object of the present invention is to provide a pharmaceutical composition which enables for patients with schizophrenia to obtain partial or complete relief of symptoms by treatment with this composition.
THE SOLUTION
For this object, the invention is characterised in that the composition comprises at least one substance within the group GnRH-analogues.
Different variants of the invention are disclosed in the accompanying depending claims.
The method of treatment, described in the following, has its intellectual basis in observations that have been made in contacts with patients at a psychiatric specialist clinic, in combination with established scientific facts. To sum up, the following observations and facts are applied.
1. Remarkably many patients with schizophrenia have been found to have clinical symptoms of a high androgenic activity such as a strong sexual drive, a sebacecus skin and a male pattern baldness.
2. On the basis of observation (1) has, at the above mentioned clinic, as a clinical routine examination, the determination of the free fraction of the androgenic hormone testosterone in blood been introduced. Hereby, it has been noticed that patients suffering from serious forms of schizophrenia have subnormal blood concentrations of free testosterone. This finding has been interpreted as an effect secondary to an increased androgenic activity in the brain.
3. A patient who has been suffering from a very severe form of schizophrenia which has made him totally disabled and for which he has been receiving sickness pension for over twenty years, has after six months of treatment with the GnRH-analogue triptorelin become dramatically improved. The patient had previously been treated with various dopamine receptor antagonists without any major improvement.
The treatment of schizophrenia in accordance with the invention is performed in the following manner:
The following conditions must be fulfilled in order for the described method to be appropriate.
1. The diagnosis should be ensured in accordance with the criteria specified for example in DSM-IV.
2. Those established methods of treatment which do not cause severe side effects should first have been tried.
3. The patient should have been judged to be so severely plagued or otherwise handicapped by the disease that it is obvious that the advantage of a possible cure or relief of symptoms balances the disadvantage of

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