Title of article :
Does comorbid subthreshold anxiety predict treatment response in depression? Results from a naturalistic cohort study (the CRESCEND study)
Author/Authors :
Seo، نويسنده , , Ho-Jun and Song، نويسنده , , Hoo Rim and Jeong، نويسنده , , Seunghee and Kim، نويسنده , , Jung-Bum and Lee، نويسنده , , Min-Soo and Kim، نويسنده , , Jae-Min and Yim، نويسنده , , Hyeon-Woo and Jun، نويسنده , , Tae-Youn، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages :
8
From page :
352
To page :
359
Abstract :
AbstractObjective estigate whether the anxious depression defined as depression with clinically significant anxiety but not comorbid anxiety disorder predicts poor outcomes of depression treatment in naturalistic clinical setting. ationwide sample of 18 hospitals, 674 patients with moderate to severe depression who completed the DSM-IV-based Structured Clinical Interview (SCID) were recruited. Anxious depression was defined as not having comorbid anxiety disorder by SCID and having a Hamilton Rating Scale for Anxiety (HAM-A) total score ≥20. Participants were classified into three groups: anxious depression (N=259), non-anxious depression (N=351), or comorbid anxiety disorder (N=64). Rates of and time to remission and response and changes in scale scores were compared between these groups during 12 weeks treatment with antidepressant interventions freely determined by clinicians. s nificant differences were observed in the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HAM-D) remission rate and the time to achieve HAM-D remission between anxious and non-anxious depression after adjustment for variables is not equally distributed at baseline. There were also no significant differences in HAM-D and HAM-A response rate and time to responses between two groups. Patients with comorbid anxiety disorder showed less improvement on HAM-D and HAM-A score than did those with anxious depression despite similar baseline symptom severity. tion tudy was observational, and the treatment modality was naturalistic. sions s depression did not predict worse outcome to antidepressants treatment. This finding might result from exclusion of comorbid anxiety disorder from anxious depression population and allowance of broad treatment modality.
Keywords :
Predictor , Treatment outcome , Anxious depression , Comorbid anxiety
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Serial Year :
2014
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Record number :
1434467
Link To Document :
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