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BACKGROUND: Growing evidence from clinical trials and epidemiological studies suggests that statins can have clinically significant antidepressant effects, potentially related to anti-inflammatory action on several neurobiological structures. However, the underlying neuropsychological mechanisms of these effects remain unexplored. AIMS: In this experimental medicine trial, we investigated the 7-day effects of the lipophilic statin, atorvastatin on a battery of neuropsychological tests and inflammation in healthy volunteers. METHODS: Fifty healthy volunteers were randomised to either 7 days of atorvastatin 20 mg or placebo in a double-blind design. Participants were assessed with psychological questionnaires and a battery of well-validated behavioural tasks assessing emotional processing, which is sensitive to putative antidepressant effects, reward learning and verbal memory, as well as the inflammatory marker, C-reactive protein. RESULTS: Compared to placebo, 7-day atorvastatin increased the recognition (p = 0.006), discriminability (p = 0.03) and misclassifications (p = 0.04) of fearful facial expression, independently from subjective states of mood and anxiety, and C-reactive protein levels. Otherwise, atorvastatin did not significantly affect any other psychological and behavioural measure, nor peripheral C-reactive protein. CONCLUSIONS: Our results reveal for the first time the early influence of atorvastatin on emotional cognition by increasing the processing of anxiety-related stimuli (i.e. increased recognition, discriminability and misclassifications of fearful facial expression) in healthy volunteers, in the absence of more general effects on negative affective bias. Further studies exploring the effects of statins in depressed patients, especially with raised inflammatory markers, may clarify this finding and inform future clinical trials.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1177/02698811211060307

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2021-12-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

35

Pages

1479 - 1487

Total pages

8

Keywords

Atorvastatin, depression, emotional processing, experimental medicine, healthy volunteers, inflammation, reward learning, verbal memory, Adolescent, Adult, Atorvastatin, Biomedical Research, C-Reactive Protein, Depression, Double-Blind Method, Emotions, Facial Recognition, Fear, Female, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors, Inflammation, Male, Middle Aged, Reward, Social Perception, Verbal Learning, Young Adult