Clinical characteristics and treatment outcome in a representative sample of depressed inpatients - findings from the Munich Antidepressant Response Signature (MARS) project |
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Authors: | Hennings Johannes M Owashi Toshimi Binder Elisabeth B Horstmann Sonja Menke Andreas Kloiber Stefan Dose Tatjana Wollweber Bastian Spieler Derek Messer Thomas Lutz Rita Künzel Heike Bierner Thomas Pollmächer Thomas Pfister Hildegard Nickel Thomas Sonntag Annette Uhr Manfred Ising Marcus Holsboer Florian Lucae Susanne |
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Affiliation: | a Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, Kraepelinstr. 2-10, 80804 Munich, Germany b Department of Psychiatry, Showa University Fujigaoka Hospital, 1-30, Aoba-ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa 227-8501, Japan c Bezirkskrankenhaus Augsburg, Dr.-Mack-Straße 1, 86156 Augsburg, Germany d Klinikum Ingolstadt GmbH, Krumenauerstraße 25, 85049 Ingolstadt, Germany |
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Abstract: | Depression is a common and often difficult-to-treat clinical condition with a high rate of patients showing insufficient treatment response and persistence of symptoms. We report the characteristics of a representative sample of depressed inpatients participating in the Munich Antidepressant Response Signature (MARS) project. Eight hundred and forty-two inpatients admitted to a psychiatric hospital for treatment of a major depressive episode, recurrent or bipolar depression were thoroughly characterized with respect to demographic factors, clinical history, and the degree of HPA-axis dysregulation evaluated by means of combined dex/CRH tests, and the predictive value of these factors for treatment outcome is investigated. 80.8% of patients responded to treatment (i.e., improvement in symptom severity of at least 50%) and 57.9% reached remission (i.e., near absence of residual depressive symptoms) at discharge after a mean treatment period of 11.8 weeks. Regression analysis identified early partial response (within 2 weeks) as the most important positive predictor for achieving remission. Previous ineffective treatment trials in the current episode and presence of a migration background are potent negative predictors for treatment outcome. In addition, remitters were characterized by a more pronounced normalization of an initially dysregulated HPA-axis. We could show that a large majority of inpatients suffering from depression benefits from antidepressant treatment during hospitalization. However, a considerable number of patients failed to achieve remission. We demonstrated that this subgroup can be characterized by a set of demographic, clinical and neuroendocrine variables allowing to predict unfavorable outcome at an early stage of treatment. |
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Keywords: | ACTH, adrenocotropic hormone Abase, baseline ACTH AAUC, ACTH AUC AAUCnet, ACTH AUC - baseline AD, antidepressant AUC, area under the concentration curve BP, bipolar depression CRH, corticotropin-releasing hormone Cbase, baseline cortisol CAUC, cortisol AUC CAUCnet, cortisol AUC - baseline BMI, body mass index HAM-A, Hamilton anxiety rating scale HAM-D21, 21-item Hamilton depression rating scale HAM-D17, 17-item HAM-D HPA-axis, hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenocortical axis MARS, Munich Antidepressant Response Signature MDE, major depressive episode NaSSA, noradrenergic, specific serotonergic antidepressant RD, recurrent depression SD, standard deviation SNRI, serotonergic-noradrenergic reuptake inhibitor SSRI, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor TCA, tricyclic antidepressant |
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