Corruble Emmanuelle, Swartz Holly A, Bottai Thierry, Vaiva Guillaume, Bayle Frank, Llorca Pierre-Michel, Courtet Philippe, Frank Ellen, Gorwood Philip
INSERM UMR 1178, Paris XI University, Department of Psychiatry, Bicêtre University Hospital, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, 94230 Le Kremlin Bicêtre, France.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
J Affect Disord. 2016 Jan 15;190:6-11. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2015.07.052. Epub 2015 Oct 8.
Telephone-administered psychotherapies (T-P) provided as an adjunct to antidepressant medication may improve response rates in major depressive disorder (MDD). The goal of this study was to compare telephone-administered social rhythm therapy (T-SRT) and telephone-administered intensive clinical management (T-ICM) as adjuncts to antidepressant medication for MDD. A secondary goal was to compare T-P with Treatment as Usual (TAU) as adjunctive treatment to medication for MDD.
221 adult out-patients with MDD, currently depressed, were randomly assigned to 8 sessions of weekly T-SRT (n=110) or T-ICM (n=111), administered as an adjunct to agomelatine. Both psychotherapies were administered entirely by telephone, by trained psychologists who were blind to other aspects of treatment. The 221 patients were a posteriori matched with 221 depressed outpatients receiving TAU (controls). The primary outcome measure was the percentage of responders at 8 weeks post-treatment.
No significant differences were found between T-SRT and T-ICM. But T-P was associated with higher response rates (65.4% vs 54.8%, p=0.02) and a trend toward higher remission rates (33.2% vs 25.1%; p=0.06) compared to TAU.
Short term study.
This study is the first assessing the short-term effects of an add-on, brief, telephone-administered psychotherapy in depressed patients treated with antidepressant medication. Eight sessions of weekly telephone-delivered psychotherapy as an adjunct to antidepressant medication resulted in improved response rates relative to medication alone.
作为抗抑郁药物辅助手段的电话心理治疗(T-P)可能会提高重度抑郁症(MDD)的缓解率。本研究的目的是比较电话社交节律疗法(T-SRT)和电话强化临床管理(T-ICM)作为MDD抗抑郁药物辅助治疗的效果。第二个目的是比较T-P与常规治疗(TAU)作为MDD药物辅助治疗的效果。
221名目前处于抑郁状态的成年MDD门诊患者被随机分配接受为期8周的每周一次的T-SRT(n = 110)或T-ICM(n = 111),作为阿戈美拉汀的辅助治疗。两种心理治疗均完全通过电话进行,由对治疗其他方面不知情的训练有素的心理学家实施。这221名患者事后与221名接受TAU的抑郁门诊患者(对照组)进行匹配。主要结局指标是治疗后8周时缓解者的百分比。
T-SRT和T-ICM之间未发现显著差异。但与TAU相比,T-P的缓解率更高(65.4%对54.8%,p = 0.02),且缓解率有升高趋势(33.2%对25.1%;p = 0.06)。
短期研究。
本研究首次评估了在接受抗抑郁药物治疗的抑郁症患者中,一种附加的、简短的电话心理治疗的短期效果。作为抗抑郁药物的辅助手段,每周进行8次电话心理治疗相对于单纯药物治疗可提高缓解率。