In recent years, the standard for successful treatment of major depression has switched from response to remission; however, little is known about patients who have achieved remission, but still have some residual symptoms and whether they regain previous levels of functioning. In a large, nationwide, cross-sectional, naturalistic survey (VIVAL-D) of 907 patients with major depression treated with a new course of an antidepressant in 41 Italian community psychiatric centers, patients with a Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, 17-item version (HAM-D17) score up to 14 were selected (n=499). Of these, 169 were considered to be in remission (HAM-D17 ≤ 7) and the other 330 to be mildly depressed. Their level of functioning was evaluated using the SF-12. Only a few (3%) patients in remission were completely symptom free; most were affected by residual symptoms. Patients in remission had better SF-12 scores than those with mild depression, but their functioning was significantly worse than general population norms. In the logistic regression analysis, the HAM-D17 total score and individual items were predictive of poor functioning. Analysis of sensitivity and specificity values showed that a lower cut-off score (4/5) of the HAM-D17 scale was best for predicting poor performance so that a reconsideration of the usual cut-off for remission of 7/8 for HAM-D17 seems overdue.

Sacchetti, E., Frank, E., Siracusano, A., Racagni, G., Vita, A., Turrina, C. (2015). Functional impairment in patients with major depression in clinical remission: Results from the VIVAL-D-Rem, a nationwide, naturalistic, cross-sectional survey. INTERNATIONAL CLINICAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 30(3), 129-141 [10.1097/YIC.0000000000000074].

Functional impairment in patients with major depression in clinical remission: Results from the VIVAL-D-Rem, a nationwide, naturalistic, cross-sectional survey

SIRACUSANO, ALBERTO;
2015-01-01

Abstract

In recent years, the standard for successful treatment of major depression has switched from response to remission; however, little is known about patients who have achieved remission, but still have some residual symptoms and whether they regain previous levels of functioning. In a large, nationwide, cross-sectional, naturalistic survey (VIVAL-D) of 907 patients with major depression treated with a new course of an antidepressant in 41 Italian community psychiatric centers, patients with a Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, 17-item version (HAM-D17) score up to 14 were selected (n=499). Of these, 169 were considered to be in remission (HAM-D17 ≤ 7) and the other 330 to be mildly depressed. Their level of functioning was evaluated using the SF-12. Only a few (3%) patients in remission were completely symptom free; most were affected by residual symptoms. Patients in remission had better SF-12 scores than those with mild depression, but their functioning was significantly worse than general population norms. In the logistic regression analysis, the HAM-D17 total score and individual items were predictive of poor functioning. Analysis of sensitivity and specificity values showed that a lower cut-off score (4/5) of the HAM-D17 scale was best for predicting poor performance so that a reconsideration of the usual cut-off for remission of 7/8 for HAM-D17 seems overdue.
2015
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MED/25 - PSICHIATRIA
English
Adult; Antidepressive Agents; Cross-Sectional Studies; Depressive Disorder, Major; Female; Humans; Italy; Male; Middle Aged; Remission Induction; Psychiatric Status Rating Scales; Recovery of Function
Sacchetti, E., Frank, E., Siracusano, A., Racagni, G., Vita, A., Turrina, C. (2015). Functional impairment in patients with major depression in clinical remission: Results from the VIVAL-D-Rem, a nationwide, naturalistic, cross-sectional survey. INTERNATIONAL CLINICAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 30(3), 129-141 [10.1097/YIC.0000000000000074].
Sacchetti, E; Frank, E; Siracusano, A; Racagni, G; Vita, A; Turrina, C
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/162296
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