Author:
Uher Rudolf,Maier Wolfgang,Hauser Joanna,Marušič Andrej,Schmael Christine,Mors Ole,Henigsberg Neven,Souery Daniel,Placentino Anna,Rietschel Marcella,Zobel Astrid,Dmitrzak-Weglarz Monika,Petrovic Ana,Jorgensen Lisbeth,Kalember Petra,Giovannini Caterina,Barreto Mara,Elkin Amanda,Landau Sabine,Farmer Anne,Aitchison Katherine J.,McGuffin Peter
Abstract
BackgroundTricyclic antidepressants and serotonin reuptake inhibitors are
considered to be equally effective, but differences may have been
obscured by internally inconsistent measurement scales and inefficient
statistical analyses.AimsTo test the hypothesis that escitalopram and nortriptyline differ in
their effects on observed mood, cognitive and neurovegetative symptoms of
depression.MethodIn a multicentre part-randomised open-label design (the Genome Based
Therapeutic Drugs for Depression (GENDEP) study) 811 adults with moderate
to severe unipolar depression were allocated to flexible dosage
escitalopram or nortriptyline for 12 weeks. The weekly Montgomery–Åsberg
Depression Rating Scale, Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, and Beck
Depression Inventory were scored both conventionally and in a more novel
way according to dimensions of observed mood, cognitive symptoms and
neurovegetative symptoms.ResultsMixed-effect linear regression showed no difference between escitalopram
and nortriptyline on the three original scales, but symptom dimensions
revealed drug-specific advantages. Observed mood and cognitive symptoms
improved more with escitalopram than with nortriptyline. Neurovegetative
symptoms improved more with nortriptyline than with escitalopram.ConclusionsThe three symptom dimensions provided sensitive descriptors of
differential antidepressant response and enabled identification of
drug-specific effects.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
166 articles.
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