Rooney Alasdair, Grant Robert
Edinburgh Centre for Neuro-Oncology (ECNO), Western General Hospital, Crewe Road, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK, EH4 2XU.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2010 Mar 17(3):CD006932. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD006932.pub2.
Patients with a primary brain tumour often experience depression, for which drug treatment may be prescribed. However, these patients are also at high risk of epileptic seizures, cognitive impairment and fatigue, all of which are potential side-effects of antidepressants. The benefit, or harm, of pharmacological treatment of depression in brain tumour patients is unclear.
To assess the benefits and harms of pharmacological treatment of depression in patients with a primary brain tumour.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane Library 2009, Issue 3), MEDLINE (1950 to July 2009) and EMBASE (1980 to July 2009). We searched PsycINFO, the British Nursing Index, LILACS, Psyndex, the NHS National Research Register, the NHS Centre for Reviews and Disseminations' Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effectiveness (DARE) and Web of Knowledge (covering Science Scisearch, Social Sciences Citation Index and Biological Abstracts) (up to July 2009). We handsearched Neuro-oncology, the Journal of Neuro-oncology, the Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry and the Journal of Clinical Oncology (July 1999 to June 2009) and wrote to all the pharmaceutical companies manufacturing antidepressants for use in the UK.
We included all randomised controlled trials (RCTs), controlled clinical trials, cohort studies and case-control studies of any pharmacological treatment of depression in patients with a histologically diagnosed primary brain tumour.
No studies met the inclusion criteria for this review.
We found no eligible studies evaluating the benefits or harms of any pharmacological treatment of depression in brain tumour patients suffering from depression.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: No high-quality studies have examined the value of any drug treatment of depression in patients with primary brain tumours. Detailed prospective studies and RCTs are needed to inform the safe and effective treatment of this common and important complication of brain tumours.
原发性脑肿瘤患者常出现抑郁症状,可能会采用药物治疗。然而,这些患者还面临癫痫发作、认知障碍和疲劳的高风险,而这些都是抗抑郁药的潜在副作用。脑肿瘤患者药物治疗抑郁的益处或危害尚不清楚。
评估原发性脑肿瘤患者药物治疗抑郁的益处和危害。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(《Cochrane图书馆》2009年第3期)、MEDLINE(1950年至2009年7月)和EMBASE(1980年至2009年7月)。我们检索了PsycINFO、英国护理索引、LILACS、Psyndex、英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)国家研究注册库、NHS综述与传播中心的有效性综述摘要数据库(DARE)以及知识网络(涵盖科学引文索引、社会科学引文索引和生物学文摘)(截至2009年7月)。我们手工检索了《神经肿瘤学》《神经肿瘤学杂志》《神经病学、神经外科学与精神病学杂志》以及《临床肿瘤学杂志》(1999年7月至2009年6月),并写信给所有在英国生产用于治疗抑郁的抗抑郁药的制药公司。
我们纳入了所有关于组织学诊断为原发性脑肿瘤患者抑郁的任何药物治疗的随机对照试验(RCT)、对照临床试验、队列研究和病例对照研究。
没有研究符合本综述的纳入标准。
我们未发现有符合条件的研究评估脑肿瘤抑郁患者任何药物治疗抑郁的益处或危害。
尚无高质量研究考察原发性脑肿瘤患者抑郁的任何药物治疗的价值。需要进行详细的前瞻性研究和随机对照试验,以为安全有效地治疗这种常见且重要的脑肿瘤并发症提供依据。