A Case Report of GnRH-Analog-Induced New-Onset Depressive Disorder
10.2185/jjrm.60.627
- VernacularTitle:GnRHアナログによるうつ病の1例
- Author:
Fumi KURITA
;
Naoyuki MIYASAKA
;
Takanori YOSHIDA
;
Kotoi TSURANE
;
Mayumi ONITSUKA
;
Yoko TAMARU
;
Takafumi TSUKADA
;
Ryoko GOTO
;
Maiko ICHIKAWA
;
Seiichi ENDO
;
Masae SAKAMOTO
;
Koji SHIMABUKURO
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- From:Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine
2012;60(5):627-630
- CountryJapan
- Language:Japanese
-
Abstract:
We report a case of new-onset depressive disorder in a patient with a history of rectal endometriosis treated with GnRH analog and no previous psychiatric history. This medical history allowed us to suspect the possibility of a link between GnRH analog and depression. It also highlighted the need to screen patients treated with GnRH analog for depression.
The patient was 41-year-old woman who had been diagnosed with rectal endometriosis. She was referred to the Gynecology Department of Tsuchiura Kyodo General Hospital. The subjective symptoms included cyclic abdominal pains and rectal bleedings. The patient had undergone total abdominal hysterectomy and left salpingo-oophorectomy for endometriosis two years before. She was started by her first gynecologist on GnRH agonist (nafarelin acetate) and the symptoms disappeared soon. But several weeks after the initiation of the GnRH agonist treatment, she began to feel depressed and hopeless. She visited a psychiatric hospital and diagnosed as having depression. She was given anti-depressive drugs and inpatient treatment at the psychiatric hospital. Her clinical course was reviewed by her second gynecologist, and she was suspected to have developed depressive disorder by GnRH analog treatment. She stopped taking GnRH analog medication and started progestin (Dinagest) therapy. She became soon free of depressive disorder and then anti-depressive drugs with rectal endometriosis well controlled. This case also suggested Dinagest is a recommended drug for rectal endometriosis.