One in Three With Serious Depression Recover With First Antidepressant
(January 1, 2006) - A third of people suffering
serious depression recover
with the first
antidepressant they try, and well-educated white women are most
likely to benefit, according to initial results of an eagerly awaited study on
the controversial drugs.
One key finding: Patients whose
depression symptoms disappeared took higher
than typical drug doses, and received close monitoring and frequent dose
adjustments in the first three months — a level of care that few U.S. patients
today receive.
Stay tuned.
The main goal of the government-funded study is to identify what
harder-to-treat patients should try when initial treatment fails, instead of
abandoning therapy in frustration. Those results are due in a few months.
Psychiatrists have long known that for most depression sufferers, the first
antidepressant choice won't be a panacea, just as patients with epilepsy, heart
disease or cancer often must mix and match medications before finding the best
choice.
But unlike those illnesses, physicians have had little scientific evidence
until now to guide their choices of myriad antidepressants — or how to maximize
each patient's chances of benefit.
To do that, "tailor the treatment," stressed Dr. Madhukar Trivedi of the
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, who reported first results from
the study Sunday in The American Journal of Psychiatry.
How? The study created an easy-to-use rating system to quickly assess
depression symptoms and report antidepressant side effects. That rating system —
now posted on a Web site for any doctor to use — allowed patients' drug doses to
be adjusted every two to three weeks until they hit the right balance, or it
became clear that some other therapy was needed.
It's rare today that antidepressant users receive this so-called
measurement-based care, said Dr. Richard Nakamura, deputy director of the
National Institute of Mental Health, which funded the $35 million study.
"Many people, because they're not given follow up, the medications aren't
adjusted ... do end up being frustrated, and any negative side effects, any
trouble with dosage levels, will cause them to end treatment," Nakamura said.
A bonus: The ratings led to closer physician monitoring, with five to six
visits during the critical first months of antidepressant use.
Antidepressants have proved extremely controversial in recent years because
of evidence that they on rare occasions worsen
suicidal tendencies in children
or teenagers. In 2004, the Food and Drug Administration ordered strong warnings
about the pediatric risk be put on antidepressant labels, and began analyzing
whether adults face a similar risk.
Meanwhile, FDA urges that antidepressant users of all ages be closely watched
for agitation of other symptoms that might signal suicidal behavior during the
first weeks of therapy.
There were no
suicides among the almost 3,000 patients in Trivedi's study,
known as STAR-D.
A separate study also published in the psychiatry journal tracked more than
65,000 people — mostly adults — who used antidepressants in a 10-year period and
were insured by the Seattle-based Group Health Cooperative. The risk of a
serious suicide attempt actually was highest in the month before patients
started antidepressants, and the risk of a serious attempt or a completed
suicide dropped in the weeks after treatment began, the Cooperative researchers,
also funded by NIMH, concluded.
"This study lends us some very important information" about adults, but "it
doesn't, however, alter our ongoing concern about children," cautioned Dr. Paul
Seligman, who heads FDA's Office of Drug Safety.
Ten percent of men and a quarter of women will suffer from depression some
time in their lives, and it often recurs. There are about 20 medications and a
variety of talk-based therapies, but little evidence to say who is most likely
to benefit from which approach.
Until now, most research has consisted of industry-funded comparisons of a
single drug with a placebo, among patients not considered particularly difficult
to treat.
The six-year STAR-D study aims to fill that gap.
In step 1, all enrolled patients were given
Celexa, part of a newer class of
antidepressants known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs.
The researchers aren't endorsing Celexa, Trivedi stressed. The odds of
benefit should be similar with any first-choice SSRI. Celexa was chosen for
research-oriented reasons, including once-daily dosing.
Researchers can't explain why white women, especially the well-educated, were
most likely to recover with initial treatment. Also more likely to benefit were
patients with fewer co-existing illnesses and less severe depression.
Those who didn't become symptom-free were moved to step 2, assigned a variety
of different therapies to determine care for harder-to-treat patients.
Study information:
http://www.star-d.org
next:
What Antidepressants Can and
Can't Do
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Reviewed: 01/2006
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