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Clinical status after two-weeks of antidepressant treatment: A prognostic factor in unipolar major depression?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

I. Domínguez*
Affiliation:
Hospital Clínic, Department of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology, Barcelona, Spain
L. Nuño
Affiliation:
Hospital Clínic, Department of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology, Barcelona, Spain
G. Oriolo
Affiliation:
Hospital Clínic, Department of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology, Barcelona, Spain
R. Quintero
Affiliation:
Hospital Clínic, Department of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology, Barcelona, Spain
V. Navarro
Affiliation:
Hospital Clínic-IDIBAPS-CIBERSAM-UB, Department of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology, Barcelona, Spain
C. Gastó
Affiliation:
Hospital Clínic-IDIBAPS-CIBERSAM-UB, Department of Psychiatry and Clinical Psychology, Barcelona, Spain
*
*Corresponding author.

Abstract

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Although most unipolar depression clinical guidelines advise against evaluating the efficacy of antidepressant pharmacological treatment until it has been administered in therapeutic doses for a minimum of 4–6 weeks, there is an increasing tendency to make therapeutic decisions after only 2 weeks of treatment. We present a study which aim is to determine whether the clinical course, following 2 weeks of antidepressant treatment, allows therapeutic decisions to be made for patients affected by a moderate/severe depressive episode. The study has an 8-week, prospective, observational design in which all consecutive in- and outpatients with moderate/severe unipolar major depression aged over 17 years received antidepressant treatment based on a standardized treatment protocol. Clinical status was assessed at baseline and at 2-, 4-, and 8-weeks. The final sample consisted of a total of 114 subjects. In our sample, the rate of remitters versus non-remitters was similar between the 2-week improvers and the 2-week non-improvers. It should also be emphasized that it was not possible to explain, based on the epidemiological and clinical characteristics assessed, which 2-week non-improvers would tend towards remission and which would show a partial or full response. Based on these results, for patients affected by a moderate/severe unipolar depressive episode, it would not be appropriate to make new therapeutic decisions following 2 weeks of anti-depressive pharmacological treatment depending on whether the patient has shown clinical improvement or not.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
EV493
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2016
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