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Nonresponse to first‐line pharmacotherapy may predict relapse and recurrence of remitted geriatric depression
Author(s) -
Flint Alastair J.,
Rifat Sandra L.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
depression and anxiety
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.634
H-Index - 129
eISSN - 1520-6394
pISSN - 1091-4269
DOI - 10.1002/da.1028
Subject(s) - pharmacotherapy , nortriptyline , depression (economics) , phenelzine , major depressive episode , medicine , antidepressant , lithium (medication) , psychiatry , psychology , mood , amitriptyline , biochemistry , chemistry , monoamine oxidase , economics , hippocampus , macroeconomics , enzyme
The authors examined whether nonresponse to first‐line pharmacotherapy was associated with an increased probability of relapse or recurrence following remission of an episode of geriatric depression. The study group consisted of 74 elderly patients whose index episode of nonpsychotic unipolar major depression had responded to antidepressant pharmacotherapy. In 6 of these patients, the depressive episode had not responded to first‐line pharmacotherapy (8 weeks of nortriptyline, including 2 weeks of adjunctive lithium) but it had responded to second‐line treatment (phenelzine with or without adjunctive lithium). The 74 patients were maintained on acute doses of the medications that had led to response and were followed for 2 years or until relapse or recurrence, whichever occurred first. The cumulative probability of relapse or recurrence was 67% for patients who responded to second‐line treatment compared with 18% for patients who responded to first‐line treatment ( P =0.0003). As expected, mean time to response was significantly longer for patients who responded to second‐line treatment but this factor did not account for the difference in out‐come between the two groups. These findings suggest that pharmacotherapy resistance may constitute a risk factor for relapse or recurrence of remitted geriatric depression, even when patients are maintained on the medication that they eventually respond to. Depression and Anxiety 13:125–131, 2001. © 2001 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.