TY - JOUR
T1 - Predicting 6-week treatment response to escitalopram pharmacotherapy in late-life major depressive disorder
AU - Saghafi, Ramin
AU - Brown, Charlotte
AU - Butters, Meryl A.
AU - Cyranowski, Jill
AU - Dew, Mary Amanda
AU - Frank, Ellen
AU - Gildengers, Ariel
AU - Karp, Jordan F.
AU - Lenze, Eric J.
AU - Lotrich, Francis
AU - Martire, Lynn
AU - Mazumdar, Sati
AU - Miller, Mark D.
AU - Mulsant, Benoit H.
AU - Weber, Elizabeth
AU - Whyte, Ellen
AU - Morse, Jennifer
AU - Stack, Jacqueline
AU - Houck, Patricia R.
AU - Bensasi, Salem
AU - Reynolds, Charles F.
PY - 2007/11
Y1 - 2007/11
N2 - Objective: Approximately half of older patients treated for major depressive disorder (MDD) do not achieve symptomatic remission and functional recovery with first-line pharmacotherapy. This study aims to characterize sociodemographic, clinical, and neuropsychologic correlates of full, partial, and non-response to escitalopram monotherapy of unipolar MDD in later life. Methods: One hundred and seventy-five patients aged 60 and older were assessed at baseline on demographic variables, depression severity, hopelessness, anxiety, cognitive functioning, co-existing medical illness burden, social support, and quality of life (disability). Subjects received 10mg/d of open-label escitalopram and were divided into full (n = 55; 31%), partial (n = 75; 42.9%), and non-responder (n = 45; 25.7%) groups based on Hamilton depression scores at week 6. Univariate followed by multivariate analyses tested for differences between the three groups. Results: Non-responders to treatment were found to be more severely depressed and anxious at baseline than both full and partial responders, more disabled, and with lower self-esteem than full responders. In general partial responders resembled full responders more than they resembled non-responders. In multivariate models, more severe anxiety symptoms (both psychological and somatic) and lower self-esteem predicted worse response status at 6 weeks. Conclusion: Among treatment-seeking elderly persons with MDD, higher anxiety symptoms and lower self-esteem predict poorer response after six weeks of escitalopram treatment.
AB - Objective: Approximately half of older patients treated for major depressive disorder (MDD) do not achieve symptomatic remission and functional recovery with first-line pharmacotherapy. This study aims to characterize sociodemographic, clinical, and neuropsychologic correlates of full, partial, and non-response to escitalopram monotherapy of unipolar MDD in later life. Methods: One hundred and seventy-five patients aged 60 and older were assessed at baseline on demographic variables, depression severity, hopelessness, anxiety, cognitive functioning, co-existing medical illness burden, social support, and quality of life (disability). Subjects received 10mg/d of open-label escitalopram and were divided into full (n = 55; 31%), partial (n = 75; 42.9%), and non-responder (n = 45; 25.7%) groups based on Hamilton depression scores at week 6. Univariate followed by multivariate analyses tested for differences between the three groups. Results: Non-responders to treatment were found to be more severely depressed and anxious at baseline than both full and partial responders, more disabled, and with lower self-esteem than full responders. In general partial responders resembled full responders more than they resembled non-responders. In multivariate models, more severe anxiety symptoms (both psychological and somatic) and lower self-esteem predicted worse response status at 6 weeks. Conclusion: Among treatment-seeking elderly persons with MDD, higher anxiety symptoms and lower self-esteem predict poorer response after six weeks of escitalopram treatment.
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U2 - 10.1002/gps.1804
DO - 10.1002/gps.1804
M3 - Article
C2 - 17486678
AN - SCOPUS:36249009011
SN - 0885-6230
VL - 22
SP - 1141
EP - 1146
JO - International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry
JF - International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry
IS - 11
ER -