Suterwala Anisha M, Rethorst Chad D, Carmody Thomas J, Greer Tracy L, Grannemann Bruce D, Jha Manish, Trivedi Madhukar H
No institutional affiliation.
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas, USA.
J Clin Psychiatry. 2016 Aug;77(8):1036-42. doi: 10.4088/JCP.15m10104.
Remission rates are low with first-step or even second-step antidepressant treatments. Furthermore, despite extensive investments from National Institutes of Health and from industry, novel treatments are not yet available in clinical care for depression. Predictors of treatment response very early in the course of treatment can avoid unnecessarily lengthy trials with ineffective treatments and reduce the trial and error process. This article examines the expression of positive affect immediately following an acute exercise session at the end of the first exercise session as a predictor of treatment response in the National Institute of Mental Health-funded TREAD (Treatment with Exercise Augmentation for Depression) study, which was conducted from April 2003 to August 2007.
122 subjects with DSM-IV-diagnosed major depressive disorder were randomized to public health dose (16 kcal/kg/wk) or low dose (4 kcal/kg/wk) of exercise for 12 weeks. Affect following the first exercise session was assessed using the Positive and Negative Affect Scale (PANAS), and depressive symptoms were assessed weekly using the Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology, Clinician Rating (IDS-C) (primary outcome measure).
The PANAS composite affect score (positive-negative total) predicted change in IDS-C score (P < .05), as well as treatment response (P < .02) and remission (P < .03) for those in the high-dose group but not in the low-dose group.
These findings suggest that the composite positive affect following the first exercise session has clinical utility to predict treatment response to exercise in depression and match the "right patient" with the "right" treatment.
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00076258.
第一步甚至第二步抗抑郁治疗的缓解率都很低。此外,尽管美国国立卫生研究院和制药行业投入巨大,但抑郁症的临床治疗中仍未出现新的治疗方法。在治疗过程非常早期就能预测治疗反应,可避免不必要的长期无效治疗试验,并减少试错过程。本文探讨在国立精神卫生研究所资助的TREAD(运动增强治疗抑郁症)研究中,首次运动训练结束时急性运动后立即出现的积极情绪表达,作为治疗反应的预测指标。该研究于2003年4月至2007年8月进行。
122名符合《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)诊断标准的重度抑郁症患者被随机分为接受公共卫生剂量(16千卡/千克/周)或低剂量(4千卡/千克/周)运动,为期12周。首次运动训练后的情绪使用正负情绪量表(PANAS)进行评估,抑郁症状每周使用临床医生评定的抑郁症状量表(IDS-C)(主要结局指标)进行评估。
PANAS综合情绪评分(正性-负性总分)可预测高剂量组而非低剂量组的IDS-C评分变化(P < .05)、治疗反应(P < .02)和缓解情况(P < .03)。
这些发现表明,首次运动训练后的综合积极情绪对于预测抑郁症运动治疗反应具有临床实用性,并能使“合适的患者”匹配“合适的”治疗方法。
ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT00076258。