Himelhoch Seth, Medoff Deborah R
Department of Psychiatry, Divisdion of Services Research, University of Maryland School of Medicine, 737 Lombard Street, Rm. 516, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA.
AIDS Patient Care STDS. 2005 Dec;19(12):813-22. doi: 10.1089/apc.2005.19.813.
Depression is highly prevalent among HIV-positive individuals yet some, but not all, have not found antidepressant medication to be efficacious in this population. We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of double-blinded, randomized controlled trials to examine efficacy of antidepressant treatment among HIV-positive depressed individuals and evaluate whether the results are generalizable to women and minorities. We used PubMed, the Cochrane Database, a search of bibliographies, and consultation with experts to find double-blinded, controlled clinical trials with random assignment to antidepressants or control condition for which HIV-positive patients met standard diagnostic criteria for depression. The principal measure of effect size was the standard difference between means on the Hamilton Depression Score (HDS). We identified 7 studies that included 494 subjects. Three of the 7 studies reported significant antidepressant effects. The pooled effect size from the random effects model was 0.57 (95% confidence interval [CI]: [0.28-0.85]). Heterogeneity across studies was significant (Q, 13.22; p = 0.07; I(2) = 47.1%). When stratified by placebo response, the pooled effect size for placebo response greater than 33% was 0.20 (-0.11-0.52) and not significant while the pooled effect size for placebo response greater than 33% was 0.80 (0.52-1.08) and was significant. Placebo response explained nearly 62% of the variance in effect sizes across studies. Women were nearly absent from and minorities were underrepresented in the studies investigated. Antidepressant medication is efficacious in treating depression among depressed, HIV-positive individuals. However, the underrepresentation of women and minorities limits the generalizability of these findings and suggests that future studies be directed to address this disparity.
抑郁症在HIV阳性个体中极为普遍,但部分(而非全部)患者发现抗抑郁药物对此群体并无疗效。我们对双盲随机对照试验进行了系统评价和荟萃分析,以研究抗抑郁治疗对HIV阳性抑郁症患者的疗效,并评估结果是否适用于女性和少数族裔。我们利用PubMed、Cochrane数据库、文献检索及专家咨询,查找将HIV阳性患者随机分配至抗抑郁药物组或对照组的双盲对照临床试验,这些患者需符合抑郁症的标准诊断标准。效应量的主要衡量指标是汉密尔顿抑郁量表(HDS)得分均值之间的标准差。我们纳入了7项研究,共494名受试者。7项研究中有3项报告了显著的抗抑郁效果。随机效应模型的合并效应量为0.57(95%置信区间[CI]:[0.28 - 0.85])。各研究间的异质性显著(Q = 13.22;p = 0.07;I² = 47.1%)。按安慰剂反应分层时,安慰剂反应大于33%的合并效应量为0.20(-0.11 - 0.52),无显著意义;而安慰剂反应大于33%的合并效应量为0.80(0.52 - 1.08),具有显著意义。安慰剂反应解释了各研究中效应量差异的近62%。在所调查的研究中,几乎没有女性参与,少数族裔的代表性也不足。抗抑郁药物对抑郁的HIV阳性个体治疗有效。然而,女性和少数族裔代表性不足限制了这些研究结果的普遍性,这表明未来的研究应致力于解决这一差异。