Title of article :
Impact of self-reported juvenile abuse on treatment outcome in patients with major depressive disorder
Author/Authors :
Pandina، نويسنده , , Gahan and Turkoz، نويسنده , , Ibrahim and Bossie، نويسنده , , Cynthia، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
AbstractBackground
essed the impact of juvenile abuse (emotional, physical, or sexual) on response to treatment in adults with major depressive disorder (MDD) suboptimally responsive to antidepressant therapy.
s
hoc analysis explored the relationship between self-reported history of juvenile abuse and response to risperidone or placebo augmentation during a 6-week double-blind study period in patients with MDD suboptimally responsive to a previous adequate trial of antidepressant monotherapy.
s
l, only one clinical measure showed a small, but statistically significant difference in outcome between patients with abuse versus without abuse (HRSD-17). In patients reporting abuse (n=141), improvement with risperidone versus placebo augmentation was greater on several measures: HRSD-17 total and 2 subscale scores, responder rates, Q-LES-Q, and PaRTS-D. In patients without abuse (n=127), only two measures showed significant improvement: HRSD-17 subscale and PaRTS-D. Responder rates (HRSD-17) were: 40.9% (risperidone) versus 23.1% (placebo; p=0.01; odds ratio=2.7) in those with abuse, and 41.0% versus 34.4% (p=0.39; odds ratio=1.4) in those without. Adverse events rates were: 37.0% (risperidone) and 54.4% (placebo) in patients with abuse, and 56.3% and 55.6% in those without.
tions
is not preplanned. Validated questionnaire not used to determine abuse status.
sions
eported juvenile abuse history may impact response to risperidone augmentation therapy in adults with MDD suboptimally responsive to antidepressants. Abuse status may reduce placebo response and reporting of adverse events.
Keywords :
depression , Juvenile abuse , Placebo , Risperidone
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders