Experts found that patients of adolescent mental health services who were treated with the antibiotic doxycycline were significantly less likely to go on to develop schizophrenia in adulthood compared with patients treated with other antibiotics.
Experts say the findings highlight the potential to repurpose an existing, widely used medication as a preventive intervention for severe mental illness.
Lower risk
Schizophrenia is a severe mental disorder that typically emerges in early adulthood and is often associated with hallucinations and delusional beliefs.
To better understand potential ways of preventing the condition, researchers from the University of Edinburgh, in collaboration with the University of Oulu and University College Dublin, applied advanced statistical modelling to large-scale healthcare register data from Finland.
The team analysed data from more than 56,000 adolescents attending mental health services who had been prescribed antibiotics. They found that those treated with doxycycline had a 30–35 per cent lower risk of developing schizophrenia than peers who received other antibiotics.
The researchers hypothesised that the protective effect could be linked to doxycycline’s impact on inflammation and brain development.
Reduce inflammation
Doxycycline is a broad-spectrum antibiotic commonly used to treat infections and acne. Previous studies suggest it can reduce inflammation in brain cells and influence synaptic pruning – a natural process where the brain refines its neural connections. Excessive pruning has been associated with the development of schizophrenia.
Further analyses showed that the lower risk wasn’t simply because the young people may have been treated for acne rather than having infections, and was unlikely to be explained by other hidden differences between the groups.
The study is published in the American Journal of Psychiatry. It involved researchers from the University of Edinburgh, the University of Oulu, University College Dublin, and St John of God Hospitaller Services Group, and was funded by the Health Research Board.