Agomelatine (Melitor, Agotab, Agovance, Agomenta, Agoprex, Valdoxan)

The Circadian Antidepressant That Never Reached Its Potential**

Agomelatine was one of the most intriguing antidepressants to enter the field.
Sold internationally as Valdoxan, and in India as Melitor, Agotab, Agovance, Agomenta, Agoprex, it promised a refreshing approach:

Instead of boosting serotonin directly, fix the body clock—and mood will follow.

This concept appealed immediately to clinicians treating:

  • depression with insomnia

  • depression with fatigue

  • circadian rhythm disruption

  • atypical depression

  • shift workers

  • burnout-related mood disorders

For a brief moment, agomelatine felt like the future.

But despite the excitement, it slowly faded into obscurity.

Let’s explore why.

Why Agomelatine Looked Revolutionary

Agomelatine has a unique mechanism:

  • MT1 and MT2 agonism → improves circadian rhythm

  • 5-HT2C antagonism → boosts dopamine & norepinephrine in frontal regions

This suggested:

  • better sleep

  • better morning energy

  • improved emotional resilience

  • restored biological rhythm

  • minimal sexual side effects

  • no weight gain

  • cognitive clarity

Compared to SSRIs and SNRIs, which often worsen:

  • sleep

  • energy

  • motivation

  • sexual functioning

…Agomelatine felt refreshingly different.

But everyday clinical realities told a different story.

Where Agomelatine Lost Traction

1. Efficacy Was Weaker Than Expected

Although initial studies were positive, real-world data revealed:

  • mild-to-moderate antidepressant effect

  • less potency in moderate–severe depression

  • slow onset

  • smaller mood improvements compared to SSRIs/SNRIs

Patients often said:
“I sleep better… but I’m still depressed.”

It became clear that Agomelatine improves sleep more reliably than mood.

2. Liver Monitoring Killed Its Momentum

Agomelatine carries a risk of:

  • elevated liver enzymes (AST/ALT)

  • rare hepatotoxicity

Guidelines require regular LFTs:

  • baseline

  • 6 weeks

  • 12 weeks

  • 24 weeks

This created huge practical barriers:

  • patients forgot

  • clinics didn’t enforce

  • people disliked repeated blood tests

  • many psychiatrists avoided prescribing altogether

In India, where follow-up compliance is low, this was an even bigger issue.

3. It Was Too Gentle for Severe Depression

For patients with:

  • melancholic depression

  • suicidal ideation

  • psychomotor slowing

  • high anxiety depression

…agomelatine felt like a soft whisper in a hurricane.
It simply couldn’t deliver the intensity required.

4. Cheaper Alternatives Outperformed It

Compared to escitalopram, sertraline, venlafaxine, desvenlafaxine, mirtazapine, and bupropion, agomelatine:

  • worked slower

  • worked weaker

  • cost more

  • required blood tests

In India, brands like Melitor or Agoprex cost significantly more than standard SSRIs.

Patients didn’t see the value.

5. It Became a “Sleep Medicine in Disguise”

Many patients reported:

  • better sleep

  • more regular cycles

  • gentler mornings

But mood improvement lagged behind.
This reputation reduced agomelatine’s positioning to:

“an expensive sleep-regulating antidepressant.”

Not the image it hoped for.

Where Agomelatine Still Works Beautifully

Despite fading from prominence, agomelatine is excellent for a very specific patient profile.

It works well for:

  • mild-moderate depression with insomnia

  • jet lag–related depression

  • shift workers

  • burnout with circadian disruption

  • patients intolerant to SSRIs

  • individuals wanting a “natural-feeling” antidepressant

  • those who value emotional clarity over sedation

In these contexts, patients often say:
“I feel more like myself,”
“I wake up fresher,”
“My routine stabilised,”
“My emotions feel normal again.”

But the group benefitting is narrow.

Agomelatine’s Legacy

Agomelatine teaches psychiatry an important lesson:

Fixing the body clock is powerful—but it isn’t enough for most depressions.

Mood disorders are too complex for a pure circadian approach, unless the depression is primarily circadian.

The molecule was visionary.
But real-world depression needs more horsepower.

Where It Stands in 2025

Today, agomelatine (Melitor, Agovance, Valdoxan) is:

  • respected

  • gentle

  • ideal for circadian-linked depression

  • excellent for sleep-wake correction

  • safe when monitored

But it remains:

  • under-prescribed

  • overshadowed

  • avoided due to LFT monitoring

  • limited in potency

  • too mild for severe depression

A fascinating molecule that carved out a niche but never transformed the field.

About the Author

Dr. Srinivas Rajkumar T, MD (AIIMS), DNB, MBA (BITS Pilani)
Consultant Psychiatrist & Neurofeedback Specialist
Mind & Memory Clinic, Apollo Clinic Velachery (Opp. Phoenix Mall)
srinivasaiims@gmail.com 📞 +91-8595155808

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