Affiliation:
1. Depression Research Unit, Department of Psychiatry Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA
2. Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundFew studies have systematically examined the safety and effectiveness of antidepressant versus mood stabilizer monotherapy of bipolar II depression. To date, there are no aggregated or mega‐analyses of prospective trials of individual participant‐level data (IPD) to inform future treatment guidelines on the relative safety and effectiveness of antidepressant or lithium monotherapy.MethodsData from a series of four independent, similarly designed trials of antidepressant or lithium monotherapy (where longitudinal IPD were available) (n = 393) were aggregated into an IPD dataset (i.e., mega‐analysis). Hierarchical log‐linear growth models were used to analyze primary outcome of change over time in Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) scores; while secondary outcomes examined Clinical Global Impressions severity (CGI/S) and change (CGI/C) scores, and change over time in Young Mania Rating (YMR) scores.ResultsRelative to lithium monotherapy, antidepressant monotherapy demonstrated significantly greater symptom reduction on HRSD scores across time (b = −2.33, t = −6.68, p < 0.0001), significantly greater symptom reduction on the CGI/S across time (b = −0.414, t = −6.32, p < 0.001), and a significant improvement in CGI/C across time (b = −0.47, t = −7.43, p < 0.0001). No differences were observed in change over time for YMR scores between antidepressant and lithium monotherapy (b = 0.06, t = 0.49, p = 0.62).ConclusionFindings from this IPD mega‐analysis of bipolar II depression trials suggest a divergence from current evidence‐based guidelines recommending combined mood stabilizer plus antidepressant therapy. The current mega‐analysis suggests that antidepressant monotherapy may provide superior short‐term effectiveness without clinically meaningful increase in treatment‐emergent hypomanic symptoms compared to lithium monotherapy.
Funder
Eli Lilly and Company
National Institute of Mental Health
Stanley Medical Research Institute
Subject
Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
4 articles.
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