Dunner David L, Rush A John, Russell James M, Burke Michael, Woodard Stacy, Wingard Peggy, Allen John
Center for Anxiety and Depression, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle 98105, USA.
J Clin Psychiatry. 2006 May;67(5):688-95. doi: 10.4088/jcp.v67n0501.
Treatment-resistant depression (TRD) is a long-term, disabling illness. We report on the characteristics and outcomes of a large cohort of patients with a level of treatment resistance that is very substantial and who were treated for 2 years with standard care.
This 2-year prospective, multicenter, observational study (patients enrolled from January 2001 through July 2004) tracked the outcomes of 124 patients with treatment-resistant, nonpsychotic major depressive disorder (N = 109) or bipolar depressed phase disorder (N = 15) who received treatment as usual (TAU) (i.e., any therapeutic regimen agreed to by patients and psychiatrists, including medications, electroconvulsive therapy [ECT], and psychotherapy). Treatments could be adjusted, started, and stopped as necessary. The primary outcome, treatment response, was defined a priori as > or = 50% improvement from baseline as measured by the 30-item Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology-Self-Report (IDS-SR-30). Remission was defined as an IDS-SR-30 score of < or = 14. The Medical Outcomes Study (MOS) 36-item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) was used to monitor quality-of-life changes.
The 12- and 24-month IDS-SR-30 response rates were 11.6% (13/112) and 18.4% (19/103), respectively. Of the 13 responders at 12 months, only 5 were responders at 24 months. The 12- and 24-month IDS-SR-30 remission rates were 3.6% (4/112) and 7.8% (8/103), respectively. Only 1 of the 4 12-month remitters was also a remitter at 24 months. The SF-36 indicated globally poor quality of life in this sample.
Despite the wide range of treatment options available for depression, the response rates, remission rates, and quality-of-life results in this study show that most patients with a substantial degree of treatment resistance continue to have significant symptomatology and functional disability when receiving TAU.
难治性抑郁症(TRD)是一种长期的致残性疾病。我们报告了一大群具有非常严重治疗抵抗水平且接受了2年标准治疗的患者的特征和治疗结果。
这项为期2年的前瞻性、多中心观察性研究(患者于2001年1月至2004年7月入组)追踪了124例难治性非精神病性重度抑郁症(N = 109)或双相抑郁相障碍(N = 15)患者的治疗结果,这些患者接受了常规治疗(TAU)(即患者和精神科医生商定的任何治疗方案,包括药物治疗、电休克治疗[ECT]和心理治疗)。治疗可根据需要进行调整、开始和停止。主要结局指标治疗反应,事先定义为通过30项抑郁症状自评量表(IDS-SR-30)测量,较基线改善≥50%。缓解定义为IDS-SR-30评分≤14。医学结局研究(MOS)36项简短健康调查(SF-36)用于监测生活质量变化。
12个月和24个月时IDS-SR-30的反应率分别为11.6%(13/112)和18.4%(19/103)。12个月时的13例反应者中,24个月时只有5例仍为反应者。12个月和24个月时IDS-SR-30的缓解率分别为3.6%(4/112)和7.8%(8/103)。12个月时的4例缓解者中,24个月时只有1例仍为缓解者。SF-36表明该样本的总体生活质量较差。
尽管抑郁症有多种治疗选择,但本研究中的反应率、缓解率和生活质量结果表明,大多数具有严重治疗抵抗程度接受TAU的患者在接受治疗时仍有明显症状和功能残疾。