The FDA’s pill approval is based on two company studies that showed women who took Zurzuvae had fewer signs of depression over a four- to six-week period when compared with those who received a dummy pill. The benefits, measured using a psychiatric test, appeared within three days for many patients.
Sahar McMahon, 39, had never experienced depression until after the birth of her second daughter in late 2021. She agreed to enrol in a study of the drug, known chemically as zuranolone, after realising she no longer wanted to spend time with her children.
“I planned my pregnancies, I knew I wanted those kids but I didn’t want to interact with them,” said McMahon, who lives in New York City. She says her mood and outlook started improving within days of taking the first pills.
“It was a quick transition for me just waking up and starting to feel like myself again,” she said.
Dr Kimberly Yonkers, of Yale University, said the Zurzuvae effect was “strong” and the drug likely would be prescribed for women who hadn’t responded to antidepressants. She wasn’t involved in testing the drug.
Still, she said, the FDA should have required Sage to submit more follow-up data on how women fared after additional months.
“The problem is we don’t know what happens after 45 days,” said Yonkers, a psychiatrist who specialises in postpartum depression. “It could be that people are well or it could be that they relapse.”
Sage did not immediately announce how it would price the pill, and Yonkers said that would be a key factor in how widely it is prescribed.
Side effects with the new drug are milder than the IV version, and include drowsiness and dizziness.
The drug was co-developed with fellow Massachusetts pharmaceutical company Biogen.
Both the pill and IV forms mimic a derivative of progesterone, the naturally occurring female hormone needed to maintain a pregnancy. Levels of the hormone can plunge after childbirth.
Sage’s drugs are part of an emerging class of medications dubbed neurosteroids. These stimulate a different brain pathway than older antidepressants that target serotonin, the chemical linked to mood and emotions. - AP
(The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.)