How Long does it Take for Antidepressant Therapies to Act?

Author:

Parker Gordon1,Roy Kay1,Menkes David B.2,Snowdon John3,Boyce Philip1,Grounds David4,Hughson Bernard5,Stringer Catherine6

Affiliation:

1. Gordon Parker, Professor of Psychiatry; Kay Roy, Research Assistant, School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Psychiatry Unit, Prince of Wales Hospital, Randwick, New South Wales 2031, Australia.

2. David B. Menkes, Liaison Psychiatrist, Dunedin Hospital, Dunedin, New Zealand

3. John Snowdon, Associate Professor; Philip Boyce, Professor, Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

4. David Grounds, Psychiatrist, Melbourne Clinic, Melbourne, Australia

5. Bernard Hughson, Psychiatrist, Canberra Hospital, Canberra, Australia

6. Catherine Stringer, North Hobart, Australia

Abstract

Objective: To review the proposition that antidepressants have a delayed onset of action by employing measurement and analytic strategies that overcome problems confounding interpretation of many efficacy studies. Method: A subset of patients was recruited to the longitudinal component of the Australasian database study, was assessed at baseline, and then completed measures of depression and anxiety when treatment commenced, and every 3 days over the next 4 weeks. The trajectories of defined 4-week outcome responders and non-responders were compared. Results: Both groups showed a similar decrease in depression (and anxiety) over the first 3 days. A clear trend break then occurred, with little further improvement in the non-responders, as against distinct and progressive improvement in the responders. Ongoing early improvement (across days 3–6) was a strong predictor of responder status. Conclusions: The small sample size limits firm interpretation, although distinct interpretive advantages to the study design are evident. Findings are compatible with a number of recent studies arguing against any extensive delayed onset of action for the antidepressant drugs, but argue for caution in interpreting immediate improvement as predicting likely responder status, and more for examining early and sustained improvement as such a marker.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Medicine

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