Analysis Group, Inc., New York, New York 10020, USA.
Drugs Aging. 2011 Jan 1;28(1):51-62. doi: 10.2165/11539900-000000000-00000.
Published studies indicate that depression in older adults is severely under-recognized and under-treated.
To characterize primary-care physicians' decisions to prescribe antidepressants to older patients with depression.
Electronic medical record (EMR) notes from office visits of older patients (aged ≥65 years), treated in a central Massachusetts multi-specialty medical group practice, were screened every 2 weeks between August 2007 and July 2008 for mention of depression. Electronic surveys containing questions about depression severity and onset, and antidepressant treatment, were sent to physicians whose EMR notes indicated that they had treated an older patient with depression, until approximately 400 responses had been received. Physicians were asked about whether they prescribed antidepressants or made changes to antidepressant treatment and were asked about the extent to which they agreed with a set of pre-specified reasons for treatment recommendations. Physicians were also allowed to document any other reasons that influenced their decision. Patient characteristics and treatment were identified from administrative claims. Univariate analyses were used to describe patient characteristics and physician survey responses.
Physicians responded to the survey and confirmed a depression diagnosis for 396 patients, for whom the average age was 77.1 years and 76.5% were female. Most patients had physician-reported depression onset after age 60 years (72.2%) and moderately severe depression (58.8%). Physicians reported that 62.9% of patients were already being treated with antidepressants prior to their visit, 28.5% were recommended antidepressant initiation and 8.6% were not prescribed antidepressants. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors were most frequently prescribed. Maintaining prior therapy was recommended for 81.1% of treated patients and treatment modification for 18.9%. Almost all physicians (>92%) agreed that experience in use of prescription drugs, safety/tolerability and patient improvement influenced their decision to maintain prior therapy or recommend new therapy. 85.8% of physicians agreed that availability of efficacy data in the elderly influenced their decision to prescribe new therapy. 38.9% of patients who were recommended new therapy initiation did not fill an antidepressant prescription.
Despite previous reports of under-treatment of depression in the elderly, this study suggests that physicians are comfortable prescribing antidepressants to the elderly, and the majority of older patients with depression were prescribed antidepressants. Rather than a physician's prescribing decision, it may be patient factors, such as refusal to accept diagnosis/treatment and noncompliance, that may lead to under-treatment--approximately 40% of patients who were recommended new antidepressant therapy did not fill an antidepressant prescription.
已发表的研究表明,老年人的抑郁症严重未被识别和治疗不足。
描述初级保健医生为患有抑郁症的老年患者开抗抑郁药的决定。
在 2007 年 8 月至 2008 年 7 月期间,每隔两周从马萨诸塞州中部一家多专科医疗集团的老年患者(年龄≥65 岁)的就诊电子病历(EMR)记录中筛选出提到抑郁症的记录。向 EMR 记录表明他们曾治疗过患有抑郁症的老年患者的医生发送包含有关抑郁严重程度和发病、抗抑郁治疗问题的电子调查,直到收到大约 400 份回复。医生被问及他们是否开了抗抑郁药或对抗抑郁治疗进行了调整,并被问及他们对一系列预先指定的治疗建议的认同程度。医生还被允许记录任何其他影响他们决策的原因。患者特征和治疗方法从行政索赔中确定。使用单变量分析来描述患者特征和医生调查答复。
医生对调查做出了回应,并为 396 名患者确认了抑郁症诊断,这些患者的平均年龄为 77.1 岁,76.5%为女性。大多数患者有医生报告的抑郁症发病年龄在 60 岁以后(72.2%),抑郁程度中等严重(58.8%)。医生报告说,62.9%的患者在就诊前已经接受了抗抑郁药治疗,28.5%被推荐开始使用抗抑郁药,8.6%的患者没有开抗抑郁药。最常开的是选择性 5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂。治疗患者中有 81.1%的患者建议继续使用以前的治疗方法,18.9%的患者建议调整治疗方法。几乎所有医生(>92%)都认为使用处方药物的经验、安全性/耐受性和患者改善会影响他们维持以前治疗或推荐新治疗的决定。85.8%的医生认为老年患者疗效数据的可用性会影响他们开新治疗处方的决定。38.9%被推荐开始新的抗抑郁治疗的患者未开抗抑郁药处方。
尽管之前有报道称老年人的抑郁症治疗不足,但本研究表明,医生愿意为老年人开抗抑郁药,大多数患有抑郁症的老年患者都开了抗抑郁药。导致治疗不足的可能不是医生的处方决定,而是患者的因素,如拒绝接受诊断/治疗和不依从,大约 40%的被推荐新抗抑郁治疗的患者未开抗抑郁药处方。