Title of article
The Prevention of Recurrent Episodes of Depression with Venlafaxine for Two Years (PREVENT) Study: Outcomes from the Acute and Continuation Phases
Author/Authors
Martin B. Keller، نويسنده , , Madhukar H. Trivedi، نويسنده , , Michael E. Thase، نويسنده , , Richard C. Shelton، نويسنده , , Susan G. Kornstein، نويسنده , , Charles B. Nemeroff، نويسنده , , Edward S. Friedman، نويسنده , , Alan J. Gelenberg، نويسنده , , James H. Kocsis، نويسنده , , David L. Dunner، نويسنده , , Boadie W. Dunlop، نويسنده , , Robert M. Hirschfeld، نويسنده , , Anthony J. Rothschild، نويسنده , , James M. Ferguson، نويسنده , , Alan F. Schatzberg، نويسنده , , John M. Zajecka، نويسنده , , Ron Pedersen، نويسنده , , Hongxue Qu and Bing Yan، نويسنده , , Saeeduddin Ahmed، نويسنده , , Michael Schmidt، نويسنده , , et al.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
9
From page
1371
To page
1379
Abstract
Background
We evaluated the comparative efficacy and safety of venlafaxine extended release (ER) and fluoxetine in the acute and continuation phases of treatment.
Methods
In this multicenter, double-blind study, outpatients with recurrent unipolar major depression were randomly assigned to receive venlafaxine ER (75–300 mg/day; n = 821) or fluoxetine (20–60 mg/day; n = 275). After a 10-week acute treatment phase, responders entered a 6-month continuation phase of ongoing therapy with double-blind venlafaxine ER (n = 530) or fluoxetine (n = 185). In the acute phase, the primary outcome was response, defined as a 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) score ≤12 or ≥50% decrease from baseline; the secondary outcome was remission, defined as a HDRS score ≤7. In the continuation phase, the primary outcome was the proportion of patients who sustained response or remission. Secondary measures included time to onset of sustained response or remission (i.e., meeting criteria at two or more consecutive visits), relapse rates, and quality-of-life measures.
Results
At the acute treatment phase end point, response rates were 79% for both venlafaxine ER and fluoxetine; remission rates were 49% and 50% for venlafaxine ER and fluoxetine, respectively. In the continuation phase, response rates were 90% and 92%, and remission rates were 72% and 69% for venlafaxine ER and fluoxetine, respectively. Rates of sustained remission at the end of the continuation phase were 52% and 58% for venlafaxine ER and fluoxetine, respectively.
Conclusion
Venlafaxine ER and fluoxetine were comparably effective during both acute and continuation phase therapy.
Keywords
continuation therapy , venlafaxine ER , major depression , Antidepressants , Acute therapy , Fluoxetine
Journal title
Biological Psychiatry
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Biological Psychiatry
Record number
503559
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