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Symptom improvement in children with autism spectrum disorder following bumetanide administration is associated with decreased GABA/glutamate ratios

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Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Zhang, Lingli 
Huang, Chu-Chung 
Dai, Yuan 
Luo, Qiang 
Ji, Yiting 

Abstract

Abstract: Bumetanide has been reported to alter synaptic excitation–inhibition (E-I) balance by potentiating the action of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), thereby attenuating the severity of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in animal models. However, clinical evidence of its efficacy in young patients with ASD is limited. This was investigated in the present clinical trial of 83 patients, randomised to the bumetanide group (bumetanide treatment, 0.5 mg twice daily) or the control group (no bumetanide treatment). Primary [Children Autism Rating Scale (CARS)], secondary [Clinical Global Impressions (CGI)], and exploratory [inhibitory (γ-aminobutyric acid, GABA) and excitatory (glutamate, Glx) neurotransmitter concentrations measured in the insular cortex (IC) and visual cortex (VC) by magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS)] outcome measures were evaluated at baseline and at the 3-month follow-up. Side effects were monitored throughout the treatment course. Compared with the control group, the bumetanide group showed significant reduction in symptom severity, as indicated by both total CARS score and number of items assigned a score ≥ 3. The improvement in clinical symptoms was confirmed by CGI. GABA/Glx ratio in both the IC and VC decreased more rapidly over the 3-month period in the bumetanide group than that in the control group. This decrease in the IC was associated with the symptom improvement in the bumetanide group. Our study confirmed the clinical efficacy of bumetanide on alleviating the core symptoms of ASD in young children and it is the first demonstration that the improvement is associated with reduction in GABA/Glx ratios. This study suggests that the GABA/Glx ratio measured by MRS may provide a neuroimaging biomarker for assessing treatment efficacy for bumetanide.

Description

Funder: Shanghai Municipal Commission of Health and Family Planning Shanghai Shenkang Hospital Development Center Shanghai Municipal Education Commission National Natural Science Foundation of China Shanghai Committee of Science and Technology Xinhua Hospital of Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine Guangdong Key Project in "Development of new tools for diagnosis and treatment of Autism "


Funder: Shanghai Municipal Commission of Health and Family Planning Shanghai Municipal Education Commission National Natural Science Foundation of China the National Key Research and Development Program of China ZJ Lab


Funder: National Human Genetic Resources Sharing Service Platform 111 Project ZJ Lab


Funder: National Natural Science Foundation of China ZJ Lab

Keywords

Article, /631/154/53/2423, /692/699/476/1373, article

Journal Title

Translational Psychiatry

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2158-3188

Volume Title

10

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group UK