MEDICATIONS: SWITCHING MEDICATIONS,
ADDING PSYCHOTHERAPY MAY HELP TEENS WHOSE INITIAL MEDICATION FOR DEPRESSION IS
INEFFECTIVE
February 27, 2008 — For adolescents with depression not responding to an
initial treatment with a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI; a class
of antidepressant drugs), switching medications and adding cognitive behavioral
therapy resulted in an improvement in symptoms, compared to just changing
medications, according to a study in the February 27 issue of the Journal of
the American Medical Association. Adolescent depression is a common,
chronic, recurrent and impairing condition.
"Untreated depression results in impairment in school, interpersonal
relationships, occupational adjustment, and increases the risk for suicidal
behavior and completed suicide. Therefore, the proper treatment of adolescent
depression has profound public health implications for youth in this critical
stage of development," the researchers write. Clinical guidelines for the
treatment of adolescent depression recommend the prescribing of SSRI
medications, psychotherapy, or both. While these treatments alone or in
combination have been shown to be effective, at least 40 percent of adolescents
with depression do not show an adequate clinical response to these
interventions.
David Brent, M.D., of the University of Pittsburgh, and colleagues examined
the relative efficacy of medication type, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT),
and the combination of both for the treatment of resistant adolescent
depression. The randomized controlled trial, conducted from 2000 to 2006,
included 334 patients, age 12 to 18 years, with a primary diagnosis of major
depressive disorder who had not responded to a two-month initial treatment with
an SSRI. For 12 weeks, participants were randomized to one of four treatments:
switch to a second, different SSRI (paroxetine, citalopram, or fluoxetine);
switch to a different SSRI plus CBT; switch to venlafaxine (a selective
serotonin and noradrenergic reuptake inhibitor [SNRI], an antidepressant shown
in some studies to be superior to an SSRI in the management of treatment-
resistant adult depression); switch to venlafaxine plus CBT.
"In this study of adolescents with moderately severe and chronic depression
who had not responded to an adequate course of treatment with an SSRI
antidepressant, switching to a combination of CBT and another antidepressant
resulted in a higher rate of clinical response [54.8 percent] than switching to
another medication without CBT [40.5 percent]. There was no differential effect
between switching to another SSRI [47.0 percent] or to venlafaxine [48.2
percent]," the authors write.
There were also no differential treatment effects on change in self-rated
depressive symptoms, suicidal ideation, or on the rate of harm-related or other
adverse events. There was a greater increase in diastolic blood pressure and
pulse and more frequent occurrence of skin problems during venlafaxine than SSRI
treatment.
"... the clinician should convey hope to the adolescent with depression and
his or her family that, despite a first unsuccessful treatment for depression,
persistence with additional appropriate interventions can result in substantial
clinical improvement," the researchers conclude.
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