Author:
Sunderajan Prabha,Gaynes Bradley N.,Wisniewski Stephen R.,Miyahara Sachiko,Fava Maurizio,Akingbala Felicia,DeVeaugh-Geiss Joanne,Rush A. John,Trivedi Madhukar H.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Introduction: Insomnia symptoms, which are common
in depression, have a significant impact on function and quality of life.
However, little is known about the prevalence and associated features of
insomnia symptoms in representative treatment-seeking patients with
depression.
Methods: Data from the Sequenced Treatment
Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) trial were analyzed. STAR*D
recruited 3,743 adult outpatients diagnosed with nonpsychotic major
depressive disorder (MDD) from primary (n=18) and psychiatric care (n=23)
clinics across the United States. Baseline sociodemographic and clinical
features were compared between those with insomnia symptoms (84.7%) and
those without (15.3%).
Results: The most common presentation was the
simultaneous presence of sleep onset, mid-nocturnal, and early morning
insomnia symptoms (27.1%). Of these three types of insomnia symptoms,
mid-nocturnal insomnia symptoms were the most commonly found alone (13.5%)
and in combination with one or more other types (82.3%). Insomnia symptoms
were associated with several indicators of a more severe depressive illness.
Only a small proportion of participants with insomnia symptoms were
receiving treatment for sleep disturbances at study initiation, and the vast
majority of those receiving treatment still reported having insomnia
symptoms.
Conclusion: In outpatients who seek treatment for
nonpsychotic MDD in typical clinical settings, insomnia symptoms are very
common, undertreated, and indicative of a more severe depression.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Neurology
Cited by
128 articles.
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