Title of article :
Differential impact of isolated psychotic symptoms on treatment outcome of major depressive disorder in the STAR*D cohort of Whites, Blacks and Latinos
Author/Authors :
Cassano، نويسنده , , Paolo and Chang، نويسنده , , Trina and Trinh، نويسنده , , Nhi-Ha and Baer، نويسنده , , Lee and Fava، نويسنده , , Maurizio and Mischoulon، نويسنده , , David، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
Objective
ermine whether isolated psychotic symptoms are more likely to be endorsed by depressed Latinos as opposed to other ethnic–racial groups; whether these symptoms affect Latinos similarly to other ethnic–racial groups in terms of treatment response; and whether they are more likely to be associated with anxiety disorders in depressed Latinos.
s
lyzed data from STAR⁎D subjects who self identified as White, Black, or Latino. Rates of isolated psychotic symptoms were assessed by the self-rated Psychiatric Diagnostic Screening Questionnaire (PDSQ) and compared between ethnic–racial groups. Depressive remission outcomes were compared within each ethnic–racial group between subjects who endorsed psychotic symptoms versus no psychotic symptoms. Associations between isolated psychotic symptoms and anxiety disorders were also examined.
s
2597 eligible subjects with at least one post-baseline assessment and available PDSQ data excluding first-rank symptoms, the prevalence of auditory–visual hallucination was 2.5% in Whites (n=49/1928), 11.3% in Blacks (n=45/398) 6.3% in Latinos (n=17/270) (χ2=64.9; df=2; p<0.001). Prevalence of paranoid ideation was 15.5% in Whites (n=299/1927), 31.5% in Blacks (n=126/400), and 21.1% in Latinos (n=57/270) (χ2=57.3; df=2; p<0.001). Among Whites and Blacks but not Latinos, depressive remission rates were worse in subjects with auditory–visual hallucinations compared to those without them. Paranoid ideation had a significant negative impact on remission in Whites only. In all ethnic–racial groups, a significant association was found between auditory–visual hallucinations and PTSD and panic disorder.
tions
AR*D study did not include any structured clinician-based assessment of psychotic symptoms.
sion
s do not appear to have worse outcomes when treated for MDD with auditory–visual hallucinations, differently from Whites and Blacks.
Keywords :
Latinos , Major depressive disorder , Antidepressants , Remission , Psychosis-like symptoms , Hispanic
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders