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Efficacy and safety of antidepressant augmentation of continued antipsychotic treatment in patients with schizophrenia
Author(s) -
Galling B.,
Ver J. A.,
Pagsberg A. K.,
Wadhwa A.,
Grudnikoff E.,
Seidman A. J.,
TsoyPodosenin M.,
Poyurovsky M.,
Kane J. M.,
Correll C. U.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
acta psychiatrica scandinavica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.849
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1600-0447
pISSN - 0001-690X
DOI - 10.1111/acps.12854
Subject(s) - medicine , discontinuation , placebo , antipsychotic , antidepressant , meta analysis , strictly standardized mean difference , adverse effect , schizophrenia (object oriented programming) , confidence interval , adjunctive treatment , cochrane library , randomized controlled trial , relative risk , psychiatry , number needed to treat , depression (economics) , pathology , hippocampus , economics , macroeconomics , alternative medicine
Objective To evaluate the efficacy and safety of antidepressant augmentation of antipsychotics in schizophrenia. Methods Systematic literature search (PubMed/ MEDLINE /Psyc INFO /Cochrane Library) from database inception until 10/10/2017 for randomized, double‐blind, efficacy‐focused trials comparing adjunctive antidepressants vs. placebo in schizophrenia. Results In a random‐effects meta‐analysis (studies = 42, n  = 1934, duration = 10.1 ± 8.1 weeks), antidepressant augmentation outperformed placebo regarding total symptom reduction [standardized mean difference ( SMD ) = −0.37, 95% confidence interval ( CI ) = −0.57 to −0.17, P  < 0.001], driven by negative ( SMD  = −0.25, 95% CI  = −0.44–0.06, P  = 0.010), but not positive ( P  = 0.190) or general ( P  = 0.089) symptom reduction. Superiority regarding negative symptoms was confirmed in studies augmenting first‐generation antipsychotics ( FGA s) ( SMD  = −0.42, 95% CI  = −0.77, −0.07, P  = 0.019), but not second‐generation antipsychotics ( P  = 0.144). Uniquely, superiority in total symptom reduction by Na SSA s ( SMD  = −0.71, 95% CI  = −1.21, −0.20, P  = 0.006) was not driven by negative ( P  = 0.438), but by positive symptom reduction ( SMD  = −0.43, 95% CI  = −0.77, −0.09, P  = 0.012). Antidepressants did not improve depressive symptoms more than placebo ( P  = 0.185). Except for more dry mouth [risk ratio ( RR ) = 1.57, 95% CI  = 1.04–2.36, P  = 0.03], antidepressant augmentation was not associated with more adverse events or all‐cause/specific‐cause discontinuation. Conclusions For schizophrenia patients on stable antipsychotic treatment, adjunctive antidepressants are effective for total and particularly negative symptom reduction. However, effects are small‐to‐medium, differ across antidepressants, and negative symptom improvement seems restricted to the augmentation of FGA s.

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