Characterising anxiety in major depressive disorder and its use in predicting antidepressant treatment outcome: An iSPOT-D report

Author:

Braund Taylor A123ORCID,Palmer Donna M13,Williams Leanne M45,Harris Anthony WF12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Brain Dynamics Centre, The Westmead Institute for Medical Research, Sydney, NSW, Australia

2. Discipline of Psychiatry, Sydney Medical School, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia

3. The Brain Resource Company, Sydney, NSW, Australia

4. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

5. Sierra-Pacific Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center (MIRECC), Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA, USA

Abstract

Objective: Major depressive disorder commonly co-occurs with one or more anxiety disorders or with clinically significant levels of anxiety symptoms. Although evidence suggests that anxious forms of depression are prognostic of poorer antidepressant outcomes, there is no clear definition of anxious depression, and inferences about clinical outcomes are thus limited. Our objective was to compare and evaluate definitions of anxious depression and anxiety-related scales according to clinical and antidepressant outcome criteria. Method: A total of 1008 adults with a current diagnosis of single-episode or recurrent, nonpsychotic, major depressive disorder were assessed at baseline on clinical features. Participants were then randomised to one of three antidepressants and reassessed at 8 weeks regarding remission and response of the 17-item Hamilton Rating Scale Depression (HRSD17) and the 16-item Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS-SR16). Anxious depression was defined as major depressive disorder with one or more anxiety disorders or major depressive disorder with a HRSD17 anxiety/somatisation factor score ⩾7. Anxiety-related scales included the HRSD17 anxiety/somatisation factor and the 42-item Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS42) anxiety and stress subscales. Results: Anxious depression definitions showed poor agreement (κ = 0.15) and the HRSD17 anxiety/somatisation factor was weakly correlated with both DASS42 anxiety ( r = 0.24) and stress subscales ( r = 0.20). Anxious depression definitions were also associated with few impairments on clinical features and did not predict poorer antidepressant treatment outcome. However, higher DASS42 anxiety predicted poorer HRSD17 and QIDS-SR16 remission, and item-level analysis found higher scores on items 9 (situational anxiety) and 23 (somatic anxiety) of the DASS42 predicted poorer treatment outcome, even after adjusting for covariates and multiple comparisons. Conclusion: Common definitions of anxious depression show poor agreement and do not predict poorer treatment outcome. Anxiety symptoms may be better characterised dimensionally using DASS42 when predicting treatment outcome.

Funder

The Brain Resource Company

NSW Ministry of Health

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Medicine

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