Ostuzzi Giovanni, Matcham Faith, Dauchy Sarah, Barbui Corrado, Hotopf Matthew
Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Section of Psychiatry, University of Verona, Policlinico "GB Rossi", Piazzale L.A. Scuro, 10, Verona, Italy, 37134.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Jun 1;2015(6):CD011006. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011006.pub2.
Major depression and other depressive conditions are common in people with cancer. These conditions are not easily detectable in clinical practice, due to the overlap between medical and psychiatric symptoms, as described by diagnostic manuals such as the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) and International Classification of Diseases (ICD). Moreover, it is particularly challenging to distinguish between pathological and normal reactions to such a severe illness. Depressive symptoms, even in subthreshold manifestations, have been shown to have a negative impact in terms of quality of life, compliance with anti-cancer treatment, suicide risk and likely even the mortality rate for the cancer itself. Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) on the efficacy and tolerability of antidepressants in this population group are few and often report conflicting results.
To assess the effects and acceptability of antidepressants for treating depressive symptoms in adults (18 years or older) with cancer (any site and stage).
We searched the following electronic bibliographic databases: the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL 2014, Issue 3), MEDLINE Ovid (1946 to April week 3, 2014), EMBASE Ovid (1980 to 2014 week 17) and PsycINFO Ovid (1987 to April week 4, 2014). We additionally handsearched the trial databases of the most relevant national, international and pharmaceutical company trial registers and drug-approving agencies for published, unpublished and ongoing controlled trials.
We included RCTs allocating adults (18 years or above) with any primary diagnosis of cancer and depression (including major depressive disorder, adjustment disorder, dysthymic disorder or depressive symptoms in the absence of a formal diagnosis) comparing antidepressants versus placebo, or antidepressants versus other antidepressants.
Two review authors independently checked eligibility and extracted data using a form specifically designed for the aims of this review. The two authors compared the data extracted and then entered data into RevMan 5 with a double-entry procedure. Information extracted included study and participant characteristics, intervention details, outcome measures for each time point of interest, cost analysis and sponsorship by a drug company. We used the standard methodological procedures expected by The Cochrane Collaboration.
We retrieved a total of nine studies (861 participants), with seven studies contributing to the meta-analysis for the primary outcome. Four of these compared antidepressants and placebo, two compared two antidepressants and one-three armed study compared two antidepressants and a placebo arm. For the acute phase treatment response (6 to 12 weeks), we found very low quality evidence for the effect of antidepressants as a class on symptoms of depression compared with placebo when measured as a continuous outcome (standardised mean difference (SMD) -0.45, 95% confidence interval (CI) -1.01 to 0.11, five RCTs, 266 participants) or as a proportion of people who had depression (risk ratio (RR) 0.82, 95% CI 0.62 to 1.08, five RCTs, 417 participants). No trials reported data on the follow-up response (more than 12 weeks). In head-to-head comparisons we only retrieved data for selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) versus tricyclic antidepressants, providing very low quality evidence for the difference between these two classes (SMD -0.08, 95% CI -0.34 to 0.18, three RCTs, 237 participants). No clear evidence of an effect of antidepressants versus either placebo or other antidepressants emerged from the analyses of the secondary efficacy outcomes (dichotomous outcome, response at 6 to 12 weeks, very low quality evidence). We found very low quality evidence for the effect of antidepressants as a class in terms of dropouts due to any cause compared with placebo (RR 0.87, 95% CI 0.49 to 1.53, six RCTs, 455 participants), as well as between SSRIs and tricyclic antidepressants (RR 0.83, 95% CI 0.53 to 1.30, three RCTs, 237 participants). We downgraded the quality of the evidence because the included studies were at an unclear or high risk of bias due to poor reporting, imprecision arising from small sample sizes and wide confidence intervals, and inconsistency due to statistical or clinical heterogeneity.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Despite the impact of depression on people with cancer, available studies were very few and of low quality. This review found very low quality evidence for the effects of these drugs compared with placebo. On the basis of these results clear implications for practice cannot be made. The use of antidepressants in people with cancer should be considered on an individual basis and, considering the lack of head-to-head data, the choice of which agent should be prescribed may be based on the data on antidepressant efficacy in the general population of individuals with major depression, also taking into account that data on medically ill patients suggest a positive safety profile for the SSRIs. Large, simple, randomised, pragmatic trials comparing commonly used antidepressants versus placebo in people with cancer with depressive symptoms, with or without a formal diagnosis of a depressive disorder, are urgently needed to better inform clinical practice.
重度抑郁症和其他抑郁状况在癌症患者中很常见。由于医学症状和精神症状之间存在重叠,正如《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》(DSM)和《国际疾病分类》(ICD)等诊断手册所描述的那样,这些状况在临床实践中不易被察觉。此外,区分对如此严重疾病的病理反应和正常反应尤其具有挑战性。抑郁症状,即使是阈下表现,已被证明在生活质量、抗癌治疗依从性、自杀风险以及甚至可能对癌症本身的死亡率方面都有负面影响。关于抗抑郁药在该人群中的疗效和耐受性的随机对照试验(RCT)很少,且结果常常相互矛盾。
评估抗抑郁药对患有癌症(任何部位和阶段)的成年人(18岁及以上)抑郁症状的治疗效果和可接受性。
我们检索了以下电子文献数据库:Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL 2014年第3期)、MEDLINE Ovid(1946年至2014年4月第3周)、EMBASE Ovid(1980年至2014年第17周)和PsycINFO Ovid(1987年至2014年4月第4周)。我们还手工检索了最相关的国家、国际和制药公司试验注册库以及药物审批机构的试验数据库,以查找已发表、未发表和正在进行的对照试验。
我们纳入了将患有任何原发性癌症且患有抑郁症(包括重度抑郁症、适应障碍、心境恶劣障碍或无正式诊断的抑郁症状)的成年人(18岁及以上)随机分配至抗抑郁药组与安慰剂组,或抗抑郁药组与其他抗抑郁药组进行比较的随机对照试验。
两位综述作者独立检查纳入资格,并使用专门为本综述目的设计的表格提取数据。两位作者对提取的数据进行比较,然后通过双录入程序将数据录入RevMan 5。提取的信息包括研究和参与者特征、干预细节、每个感兴趣时间点的结局测量、成本分析以及制药公司的资助情况。我们采用了Cochrane协作网期望的标准方法程序。
我们共检索到9项研究(861名参与者),其中7项研究为主要结局的荟萃分析提供了数据。其中4项研究比较了抗抑郁药与安慰剂,2项研究比较了两种抗抑郁药,1项三臂研究比较了两种抗抑郁药和一个安慰剂组。对于急性期治疗反应(6至12周),当以连续结局测量时(标准化均数差(SMD)-0.45,95%置信区间(CI)-1.01至0.11,5项随机对照试验,266名参与者),或作为患有抑郁症的人群比例(风险比(RR)0.82,95%CI 0.62至1.08,5项随机对照试验,417名参与者),我们发现与安慰剂相比,抗抑郁药作为一类对抑郁症状影响的证据质量非常低。没有试验报告关于随访反应(超过12周)的数据。在直接比较中,我们仅检索到选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂(SSRI)与三环类抗抑郁药的数据,为这两类药物之间的差异提供了质量非常低的证据(SMD -0.08,95%CI -0.34至0.18,3项随机对照试验,237名参与者)。从次要疗效结局(二分结局,6至12周时的反应,质量非常低的证据)分析中,未发现抗抑郁药与安慰剂或其他抗抑郁药相比有明显疗效的证据。我们发现与安慰剂相比,抗抑郁药作为一类因任何原因导致的退出率影响的证据质量非常低(RR 0.87,95%CI 0.49至1.53,6项随机对照试验,455名参与者),以及在SSRI和三环类抗抑郁药之间(RR 0.83,95%CI 0.53至1.30,3项随机对照试验,237名参与者)。我们降低了证据质量,因为纳入的研究由于报告不佳、样本量小导致的不精确性和宽置信区间以及由于统计或临床异质性导致的不一致性而存在不明确或高偏倚风险。
尽管抑郁症对癌症患者有影响,但现有研究非常少且质量低。本综述发现与安慰剂相比,这些药物疗效的证据质量非常低。基于这些结果,无法得出明确的实践意义。在癌症患者中使用抗抑郁药应个体化考虑,并且鉴于缺乏直接比较的数据,开哪种药物的选择可能基于重度抑郁症普通人群中抗抑郁药疗效的数据,同时考虑到内科疾病患者的数据表明SSRI具有良好的安全性。迫切需要进行大型、简单、随机、实用的试验,比较常用抗抑郁药与安慰剂在有或无抑郁障碍正式诊断的癌症抑郁症状患者中的疗效,以更好地为临床实践提供信息。