Brain glucose and ketone metabolism in first-episode psychosis: Neuroimaging and brain metabolism before and after antipsychotic treatment: The protocol for the CAST-ATP study
Kevin Zemmour, Guy-Olivier Samson, Mélanie Fortier, Eliot Parent, Alexandra Leus, Sylvain Grignon, Jean-Daniel Carrier, Kevin Whittingstall, Andreas Aalkjær Danielsen, Ole Köhler-Forsberg, Allan Kjeldsen Hansen, Sri Mahavir Agarwal, Anna Cristina Andreazza

TL;DR
This study investigates brain glucose and ketone metabolism in first-episode psychosis patients before and after antipsychotic treatment using PET scans.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel approach to assess brain energy metabolism in FEP and evaluate the impact of antipsychotics on glucose and ketone utilization.
Findings
FEP patients may have impaired glucose metabolism compared to healthy controls.
Antipsychotic treatment could worsen brain glucose metabolism.
Ketone metabolism is expected to remain unaffected by FEP or antipsychotic treatment.
Abstract
First episode of psychosis (FEP) has an early onset and is associated with significant functional impairment, loss of productivity and premature cardiovascular disease. Antipsychotics (AP) remain the cornerstone treatment of FEP yet they fail to improve key symptom domains and contribute to the metabolic burden of this disorder. A growing body of evidence suggests that a metabolic deficit in the brain, specifically of glucose, at the earliest stages of illness could represent an etiopathological phenotype of FEP. Correcting this metabolic deficit could improve outcomes and disease course. The acronym for this study is CAST-ATP for the collaboration between our clinical research sites in Copenhagen, Aarhus, Sherbrooke and Toronto, on the subject of Antipsychotic (AP) treatment, PET and Psychosis. The main aims of CAST-ATP are to evaluate the effect of 1) a diagnosis of FEP, and, 2) 4–6…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiet and metabolism studies · Schizophrenia research and treatment · Tryptophan and brain disorders
