Disorders - Depressive Disorders
Melvin, Glenn
A., Tonge, Bruce J., King, Neville J., Heyne, David, Gordon, Michael S., Klimkeit, Ester
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate cognitive-
behavioral therapy, antidepressant medication alone, and combined CBT and antidepressant medication in the treatment of depressive disorders in
adolescents. METHOD: Seventy-three adolescents (ages 12-18 years) with a primary diagnosis of DSM-IV major depressive disorder, dysthymic disorder,
or depressive disorder not otherwise specified were randomly allocated to one of three treatments. Treatment outcome measures were administered
before and after acute treatment, and at a 6-month follow-up. Depression diagnosis was the primary outcome measure; secondary measures were self- and
other report and clinician rating of global functioning. The trial was conducted at three community-based clinics between July 2000 and December
2002. Data analyses used an intent-to-treat strategy. RESULTS: Following acute treatment, all treatment groups demonstrated statistically significant
improvement on outcome measures (depressive diagnosis, Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale, Revised Children's Manifest Anxiety Scale, Suicidal
Ideation Questionnaire), and improvement was maintained at follow-up. Combined cognitive-behavioral therapy and antidepressant medication was not
found to be superior to either treatment alone. Compared with antidepressant medication alone, participants receiving cognitive-behavioral therapy
alone demonstrated a superior acute treatment response (odds ratio = 6.86; 95% confidence interval 1.12-41.82). Although cognitive-behavioral therapy
was found to be superior to antidepressant medication alone for the acute treatment of mild to moderate depression among youth, this may have stemmed
from the relatively low dose of sertraline used. CONCLUSIONS: All treatments led to a reduction in depression, but the advantages of a combined
approach were not evident.
Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 45(10) : 1151-
61
- Year: 2006
- Problem: Depressive Disorders
- Type: Randomised controlled trials
-
Stage: Disorder established (diagnosed disorder)
-
Treatment and intervention: Biological Interventions
(any), Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), Psychological Interventions
(any), Cognitive & behavioural therapies (CBT)
March, John S., Klee, Brian J., Kremer, Charlotte M.
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the balance between the
benefits of treatment and the risk of suicidality in children and adolescents in multicenter, randomized, controlled trials of sertraline versus
placebo. Method: The published literature was searched for multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled trials of sertraline for pediatric mental
disorders. Four trials were identified: Two (pooled) in pediatric major depressive disorder (MDD; Wagner 2003) and two in obsessive-compulsive
disorder (OCD; March et al. 1998; POTS Team 2004). Using intent-to-treat (ITT) analysis populations, the authors calculated the number needed to
treat (NNT) for response and remission and the number needed to harm (NNH) for suicidality, and their ratio, for each clinical trial. Results: NNTs
ranged from 2 to 10, indicating clinically meaningful benefits. Benefit was greater for OCD than for MDD, and for adolescents as compared with
children in MDD. No age effect was apparent for OCD. Suicidality was reported in 8 patients (5 assigned to sertraline and 3 assigned to placebo). All
but 1 (a placebo-treated patient in the Pfizer OCD trial) were enrolled in the sertraline MDD trial. The NNH for suicidality in MDD was 64. Treatment
emergent suicidality was more common in children (NNH 28.7) than in adolescents (NNH 706.3). Because no patient developed suicidality in sertraline-
treated OCD patients, the NNH for sertraline in OCD approaches infinity. Conclusions: With the stipulation that doctor and patient preferences
necessarily play a critical role in the choice of treatment, NNT to NNH ratios indicate a positive benefit-to-risk ratio for sertraline in
adolescents with MDD and in patients of all ages with OCD. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2007 APA, all rights reserved) (journal abstract).
Journal of Child & Adolescent
Psychopharmacology, 16(1-2) : 91-102
- Year: 2006
- Problem: Depressive Disorders
- Type: Randomised controlled trials
-
Stage: Disorder established (diagnosed disorder)
-
Treatment and intervention: Biological Interventions
(any), Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)
Loo, Colleen, McFarquhar, Tara, Walter, Garry
OBJECTIVE: There are few safe and effective biological treatments for major depression in adolescents. We
aimed to report the use of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) as a treatment for adolescents with this condition. METHODS: The first
two subjects in a double-blind, sham-controlled trial of rTMS that is evaluating the efficacy and safety of rTMS in depressed adolescents are
described. Clinical response was assessed at baseline and at the end of each week. The following scales were used: Montgomery-Asberg Depression
Rating Scale, Clinical Global Impression-Severity Scale, Beck Depression Inventory and Centre for Epidemiological Studies - Depression - Child Scale.
A battery of cognitive tests was also used at several intervals to measure potential change in neuropsychological functioning. RESULTS: Random
allocation of both subjects was to active treatment. Both subjects improved to a clinically significant degree with rTMS treatment and reported no
adverse effects. Neuropsychological testing did not demonstrate any deterioration in the domains of functioning tested. CONCLUSIONS: Repetitive
transcranial magnetic stimulation shows early promise as a treatment for major depression in adolescents. Well-designed, sham-controlled studies are
now indicated to test the efficacy and safety of rTMS in these patients.
Australasian Psychiatry, 14(1) : 81-
5
- Year: 2006
- Problem: Depressive Disorders
- Type: Randomised controlled trials
-
Stage: Disorder established (diagnosed disorder)
-
Treatment and intervention: Biological Interventions
(any), Transcranial magnetic stimulation
(TMS)
Hammerness, Paul G., Vivas, Fe M., Geller, Daniel A.
Journal of Pediatrics, 148(2) : 158-
65
- Year: 2006
- Problem: Depressive Disorders
- Type: Systematic reviews
-
Stage: Disorder established (diagnosed disorder)
-
Treatment and intervention: Biological Interventions
(any), Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)
Kennard, B.,
OBJECTIVE: To ascertain remission rates in depressed youth participating in the Treatment for Adolescents
With Depression Study (TADS), a multisite clinical trial that randomized 439 adolescents with major depressive disorder (MDD) to a 12-week treatment
of fluoxetine (FLX), cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), their combination (COMB), or clinical management with pill placebo (PBO). METHOD: Using an
end-of-treatment Children's Depression Rating Scale-Revised (CDRS-R) total score of 28 or below as the criterion for remission, rates of remission
were examined with logistic regression, controlling for site. Loss of MDD diagnosis and residual symptoms in responders (defined as Clinical Global
Impressions-Improvement (CGI-I) score of 1 (very much improved) or 2 (much improved) were also examined across treatment groups. RESULTS: After 12
weeks of treatment, 102 (23%) of 439 youths had reached remission. The remission rate was significantly higher in the COMB group (37%) relative to
the other treatment groups (FLX, 23%; CBT, 16%; PBO, 17%), with odds ratios of 2.1 for COMB versus FLX, 3.3 for COMB versus CBT, and 3.0 for COMB
versus PBO. In addition, 71% of subjects across treatment groups no longer met criteria for MDD at the end of acute treatment. Fifty percent of the
youths who responded by CGI-I criteria continued to have residual symptoms, such as sleep or mood disturbances, fatigue, and poor concentration.
CONCLUSIONS: The combination of FLX and CBT was superior to both monotherapy and PBO in terms of remission rates, but overall rates of remission
remain low and residual symptoms are common at the end of 12 weeks of treatment. Copyright 2006 copyright American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry.
Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 45(12) : 1404-
1411
- Year: 2006
- Problem: Depressive Disorders
- Type: Randomised controlled trials
-
Stage: Disorder established (diagnosed disorder)
-
Treatment and intervention: Biological Interventions
(any), Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), Psychological Interventions
(any), Cognitive & behavioural therapies (CBT)
Jorm, Anthony F., Allen, Nicholas B., O'Donnell, Colin P., Parslow, Ruth A., Purcell, Rosemary, Morgan, Amy J.
OBJECTIVE: To review the evidence for the effectiveness of complementary and
self-help treatments for depression in children and adolescents. DATA SOURCES: Systematic literature search using PubMed, PsycINFO and the Cochrane
Library for 131 treatments up to February 2006. STUDY SELECTION: There were 13 treatments that had been evaluated in intervention studies. DATA
EXTRACTION: Studies on each treatment were reviewed by one author and checked by a second. A consensus was reached for level of evidence. DATA
SYNTHESIS: Relevant evidence was available for glutamine, S-adenosylmethionine, St John's wort, vitamin C, omega-3 fatty acids, light therapy,
massage, art therapy, bibliotherapy, distraction techniques, exercise, relaxation therapy and sleep deprivation. However, the evidence was limited
and generally of poor quality. The only treatment with reasonable supporting evidence was light therapy for winter depression. CONCLUSIONS: Given
that antidepressant medication is not recommended as a first line treatment for children and adolescents with mild to moderate depression, and that
the effects of psychological treatments are modest, there is a pressing need to extend the range of treatments available for this age group.
[References: 49]
Medical Journal of
Australia, 185(7) : 368-72
- Year: 2006
- Problem: Depressive Disorders
- Type: Systematic reviews
-
Stage: At risk (indicated or selected prevention), Disorder established (diagnosed disorder)
-
Treatment and intervention: Complementary & Alternative
Interventions (CAM)
Horowitz, Jason L., Garber, Judy
Research on the
prevention of depressive symptoms in children and adolescents was reviewed and synthesized with meta-analysis. When all 30 studies were included,
selective prevention programs were found to be more effective than universal programs immediately following intervention. Both selective and
indicated prevention programs were more effective than universal programs at follow-up, even when the 2 studies with college students were excluded.
Effect sizes for selective and indicated prevention programs tended to be small to moderate, both immediately postintervention and at an average
follow-up of 6 months. Most effective interventions are more accurately described as treatment rather than prevention. Suggestions for future
research include testing potential moderators (e.g., age, gender, anxiety, parental depression) and mechanisms, designing programs that are
developmentally appropriate and gender and culturally sensitive, including longer follow-ups, and using multiple measures and methods to assess both
symptoms and diagnoses. Copyright 2006 APA, all rights reserved.
Journal of Consulting & Clinical Psychology, 74(3) : 401-
15
- Year: 2006
- Problem: Depressive Disorders
- Type: Systematic reviews
-
Stage: Universal prevention, At risk (indicated or selected prevention)
-
Treatment and intervention: Psychological Interventions
(any)
Kratochvil, C., Emslie, G., Silva,
S., McNulty, S., Walkup, J., Curry, J., Reinecke, M., et-al
OBJECTIVE: To examine the time to response for both
pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy in the Treatment for Adolescents with Depression Study (TADS). METHOD: Adolescents (N = 439, ages 12 to 17 years)
with major depressive disorder were randomized to fluoxetine (FLX), cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), their combination (COMB), or pill placebo
(PBO). Defining response as very much improved or much improved on the Clinical Global Impression- Improvement Scale (CGI-I), survival analyses using
Cox proportional hazards models, and Kaplan-Meier curves were conducted to evaluate time to first response and time to stable response for subjects
receiving pharmacotherapy (COMB, FLX, PBO) as well as for subjects receiving CBT (COMB, CBT). Direct comparisons between pharmacotherapy and CBT were
not made because of differences in visit schedules. RESULTS: Based on pharmacotherapist CGI-I scores, COMB and FLX showed faster onset of benefit
than PBO on time to response and time to stable response (p < .001), and COMB was faster than FLX on time to stable response (p = .034). The
probability of sustained early response was approximately threefold greater for COMB than PBO, twofold greater for FLX than PBO, and 1.5-fold greater
for COMB than FLX. On the psychotherapist CGI-I scores, both first response and stable response occurred faster in COMB than CBT (p < .001), with a
probability of sustained early response approximately threefold greater for COMB than CBT. CONCLUSIONS: In the acute treatment of depressed
adolescents, FLX and COMB accelerate response relative to PBO, and COMB accelerates response relative to CBT alone. Copyright 2006 copyright American
Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.
Journal of the American Academy of
Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 45(12) : 1412-1418
- Year: 2006
- Problem: Depressive Disorders
- Type: Randomised controlled trials
-
Stage: Disorder established (diagnosed disorder)
-
Treatment and intervention: Biological Interventions
(any), Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), Psychological Interventions
(any), Cognitive & behavioural therapies (CBT)
Weersing, V, Iyengar, S., Kolko, D. J., Birmaher, B., Brent, D. A.
In this study, we examined the effectiveness of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)
for adolescent depression. Outcomes of 80 youth treated with CBT in an outpatient depression specialty clinic, the Services for Teens at Risk Center
(STAR), were compared to a \"gold standard\" CBT research benchmark. On average, youths treated with CBT in STAR experienced significantly slower
symptom improvement than youths in the CBT benchmark. However, outcomes for STAR teens were more similar to the research benchmark when accounting
for differences in referral source (clinical versus advertisement) between the datasets. Results support further efforts to test the effectiveness of
CBT in clinically representative community practice settings and samples.
Behavior Therapy, 37(1) : 36-48
- Year: 2006
- Problem: Depressive Disorders
- Type: Controlled clinical trials
-
Stage: Disorder established (diagnosed disorder)
-
Treatment and intervention: Service Delivery & Improvement, Psychological Interventions
(any), Cognitive & behavioural therapies (CBT), Other service delivery and improvement
interventions
Papanikolaou, K., Richardson, C., Pehlivanidis,
A., Papadopoulou-Daifoti, Z.
OBJECTIVES: To examine whether antidepressant drugs are superior to placebo in the treatment of juvenile depression. METHOD:
Extensive literature search was done to retrieve all randomised controlled and all uncontrolled trials describing children and adolescents with a
diagnosis of depression who underwent any antidepressant drug treatment. In order to combine results, separate analyses using random effect models
were conducted first for controlled and then for both controlled and open studies. RESULTS: 18 controlled and 23 open trials were submitted to meta-
analysis. Tricyclics showed no significant benefit over placebo. Odds ratios for SSRIs were 1.84 (95% CI 1.35-2.50) for controlled and 1.83 (95% CI
1.40-2.40) for controlled and uncontrolled studies suggesting a significant benefit over placebo. Combining all antidepressants also gave confidence
interval excluding the value one. CONCLUSIONS: Despite some promising data concerning the use of SSRIs in the treatment of adolescent depression,
caution is warranted until the long-term safety of these agents can be demonstrated. Insufficient data are available to judge even the short term
merits of these agents in prepubertal children. There is no evidence to support the use of tricyclics in this population.
Journal of Neural Transmission, 113(3) : 399-
415
- Year: 2006
- Problem: Depressive Disorders
- Type: Systematic reviews
-
Stage: Disorder established (diagnosed disorder)
-
Treatment and intervention: Biological Interventions
(any), Antidepressants
(any)
Nabkasorn,
Chanudda, Miyai, Nobuyuki, Sootmongkol, Anek, Junprasert, Suwanna, Yamamoto, Hiroichi, Arita, Mikio, Miyashita, Kazuhisa
BACKGROUND: Regular physical exercise may improve a variety of physiological and psychological factors in depressive persons.
However, there is little experimental evidence to support this assumption for adolescent populations. We conducted a randomized controlled trial to
investigate the effect of physical exercise on depressive state, the excretions of stress hormones and physiological fitness variables in adolescent
females with depressive symptoms. METHODS: Forty-nine female volunteers (aged 18-20 years; mean 18.8 +/- 0.7 years) with mild-to-moderate depressive
symptoms, as measured by the Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression (CES-D) scale, were randomly assigned to either an exercise regimen or usual
daily activities for 8 weeks. The subjects were then crossed over to the alternate regimen for an additional 8-week period. The exercise program
consisted of five 50-min sessions per week of a group jogging training at a mild intensity. The variables measured were CES-D rating scale, urinary
cortisol and epinephrine levels, and cardiorespiratory factors at rest and during exercise endurance test. RESULTS: After the sessions of exercise
the CES-D total depressive score showed a significant decrease, whereas no effect was observed after the period of usual daily activities (ANOVA).
Twenty-four hour excretions of cortisol and epinephrine in urine were reduced due to the exercise regimen. The training group had a significantly
reduced resting heart rate and increased peak oxygen uptake and lung capacity. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this study suggest that a group jogging
exercise may be effective in improving depressive state, hormonal response to stress and physiological fitness of adolescent females with depressive
symptoms.
European
Journal of Public Health, 16(2) : 179-84
- Year: 2006
- Problem: Depressive Disorders
- Type: Randomised controlled trials
-
Stage: At risk (indicated or selected prevention)
-
Treatment and intervention: Complementary & Alternative
Interventions (CAM), Physical activity, exercise
Nemets, Hanah, Nemets, Boris, Apter, Alan, Bracha,
Ziva, Belmaker, R.
Objective: Major depressive disorder in children may be more common than previously thought, and its therapeutics are
unclear. Because of success in a previous study on omega-3 fatty acids in adult major depressive disorder, the authors planned a pilot study of
omega-3 fatty acids in childhood major depression. Method: Children who entered the study were between the ages of 6 and 12. Ratings were performed
at baseline and at 2, 4, 8, 12, and 16 weeks using Children's Depression Rating Scale (CDRS), Children's Depression Inventory (CDI), and Clinical
Global Impression (CGI). Children were randomized to omega-3 fatty acids or placebo as pharmacologic monotherapy. Twenty-eight patients were
randomized, and 20 completed at least 1 month's ratings. Results: Analysis of variance showed highly significant effects of omega-3 on symptoms
using the CDRS, CDI, and CGI. Conclusions: Omega-3 fatty acids may have therapeutic benefits in childhood depression. (PsycINFO Database Record (c)
2007 APA, all rights reserved) (journal abstract).
American Journal of Psychiatry, 163(6) : 1098-1100
- Year: 2006
- Problem: Depressive Disorders
- Type: Randomised controlled trials
-
Stage: Disorder established (diagnosed disorder)
-
Treatment and intervention: Complementary & Alternative
Interventions (CAM), Fish oil (Omega-3 fatty acids), Omega 3 fatty
acids (e.g. fish oil, flax oil)