Source
Department of Psychiatry, Drew University of Medicine and Science, Los Angeles, CA 90059.
Abstract
Although striking ethnic differences in pharmacologic responses to various medications have been documented in the general medical literature, there is a paucity of such information in the psychopharmacologic literature. Recent work has provided a number of studies that illustrate interesting inter-ethnic pharmacogenetic, pharmacokinetic, and pharmacodynamic differences. In general, however, such studies have reported inconsistent findings relative to dose response relationships with various psychotropics. Results of our literature review, with a particular focus on black Americans, suggest that the lack of consistency in these investigations is largely attributable to various methodological and design problems. Prominent among these problems are: diagnostic misclassification, treatment of various ethnic groups in a homogeneous undifferentiated manner, lack of appropriate control for age and gender, and minimal consideration for chronicity of illness. As a result, though there exist some interesting data suggesting inter-ethnic genetic and kinetic differences, the extant literature on black Americans and other ethnic groups should be evaluated with some caution. The purpose of this article is to provide a systematic review of the existing psychopharmacologic literature on the black American population.