Department of Psychiatry, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Psychiatry, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; Epidemiological and Social Psychiatric Research Institute (ESPRI), Department of Psychiatry, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
J Affect Disord. 2018 Jan 15;226:36-44. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2017.09.019. Epub 2017 Sep 20.
Depressive symptoms in pregnant women, which are common and debilitating, are often co-morbid with other mental disorders (e.g. anxiety and personality disorders), and related to low socioeconomic status (SES). This situation may hamper treatment outcome, which has often been neglected in previous studies on the treatment of depression during pregnancy. We developed a new group-based multicomponent treatment (GMT) comprising cognitive behavioral therapy, psycho-education and body-oriented therapy and compared the effect on depressive symptoms with individual counseling (treatment as usual, TAU) in a heterogeneous group of pregnant women with co-morbid mental disorders and/or low SES.
An outpatient sample from a university hospital of 158 pregnant women who met DSM-IV criteria for mental disorders were included and 99 participants were randomized to GMT or TAU from January 2010 until January 2013. The Edinburgh Depression Scale (EDS) was used at baseline, every 5 weeks during pregnancy and as the primary outcome measure of depressive symptoms at 6 weeks postpartum. Secondary outcome measures included the clinician-reported Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS), obstetric outcomes and a 'Patient Satisfaction' questionnaire.
155 participants were included the intention-to-treat (ITT)-analysis. GMT was not superior above TAU according to estimated EDS (β = 0.13, CI = - 0.46-0.71, p = 0.67) and HDRS scores (β = - 0.39, CI = - 0.82-0.05, p = 0.08) at 6 weeks postpartum. There were no differences in secondary outcomes between the GMT and TAU, nor between the randomized condition and patient-preference condition.
The ability to detect an effect of GMT may have been limited by sample size, missing data and the ceiling effect of TAU.
GMT is an acceptable treatment for a heterogeneous group of pregnant women with depressive symptoms and co-morbid mental disorders and/or low SES, but not superior to TAU. Further research should focus on understanding and treating co-morbid disorders and psychosocial problems during pregnancy.
Dutch trial registry, www.trialregister.nl under reference number: NTR3015.
孕妇的抑郁症状很常见且使人虚弱,往往与其他精神障碍(如焦虑和人格障碍)共病,并与社会经济地位较低有关。这种情况可能会影响治疗效果,而这在之前关于怀孕期间抑郁症治疗的研究中经常被忽视。我们开发了一种新的基于团体的多成分治疗(GMT),包括认知行为疗法、心理教育和身体导向疗法,并在一组患有共病精神障碍和/或社会经济地位较低的异质孕妇中,将其与个体咨询(常规治疗,TAU)进行比较,以评估其对抑郁症状的影响。
从 2010 年 1 月至 2013 年 1 月,我们纳入了一家大学医院的门诊样本,其中 158 名孕妇符合 DSM-IV 精神障碍标准,并随机分为 GMT 或 TAU 组。在基线时、怀孕期间每 5 周以及产后 6 周使用爱丁堡抑郁量表(EDS)作为抑郁症状的主要测量指标。次要结果指标包括临床医生报告的汉密尔顿抑郁评定量表(HDRS)、产科结局和“患者满意度”问卷。
155 名参与者进行了意向治疗(ITT)分析。GMT 在产后 6 周时,在估计的 EDS(β=0.13,CI=-0.46-0.71,p=0.67)和 HDRS 评分(β=-0.39,CI=-0.82-0.05,p=0.08)方面并不优于 TAU。GMT 和 TAU 之间以及随机条件和患者偏好条件之间在次要结局方面没有差异。
GMT 的效果可能因样本量、缺失数据和 TAU 的上限效应而受到限制。
GMT 是一种可接受的治疗方法,适用于患有抑郁症状和共病精神障碍和/或社会经济地位较低的异质孕妇,但并不优于 TAU。进一步的研究应侧重于理解和治疗怀孕期间的共病障碍和心理社会问题。