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Number of cortisol time-points and dexamethasone suppression test sensitivity for major depression
Authors:I Extein  A L Pottash  M S Gold
Affiliation:1. Fair Oaks Hospital at Boca/Delray, Delray Beach, FL, U.S.A.;2. Fair Oaks Hospital, Summit, NJ, U.S.A.;3. Psychiatric Diagnostic Laboratories of America, Summit, NJ, U.S.A.
Abstract:
Failure to suppress cortisol secretion after administration of dexamethasone has been reported to be a diagnostic marker for major depression and to have prognostic implications when repeated after antidepressant treatment. The pulsatile pattern of cortisol secretion suggested to us that increasing the number of post-dexamethasone cortisol determinations might significantly increase the sensitivity of the dexamethasone suppression test (DST) for major depression. With a conventional two-point DST (1600 h and midnight), 5% of 20 normal volunteers, 8% of 13 inpatients with non-major depressions, and 31% of 65 inpatients with primary major depression failed to suppress. With six post-dexamethasone points (0800 h, 1200 h, 1600 h, 2000 h, 2200 h, midnight), the respective percentages were 10, 15 and 44%. The additional points increased the sensitivity from 31 to 44%, mostly by identifying more major depressives with a "late escape" pattern. If a clinician is using the DST to establish a marker for major depression that can be repeated to monitor response to treatment and the likelihood of relapse, then perhaps the increased sensitivity of the six-point DST would be helpful, despite a modest decrease in specificity from 94 to 88%.
Keywords:Dexamethasone suppression test  depression  sensitivity  specificity  cortisol
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