1. Quality of life in geriatric depression: a comparison of remitters, partial responders, and nonresponders.
- Author
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Doraiswamy PM, Khan ZM, Donahue RM, and Richard NE
- Subjects
- Aged, Antidepressive Agents, Second-Generation administration & dosage, Bupropion administration & dosage, Delayed-Action Preparations, Depressive Disorder, Major diagnosis, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Remission Induction, Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors administration & dosage, Severity of Illness Index, Antidepressive Agents, Second-Generation therapeutic use, Bupropion therapeutic use, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Depressive Disorder, Major therapy, Quality of Life, Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors therapeutic use
- Abstract
The authors examined patterns of improvement in quality of life (QOL) in elderly patients with recurrent major depression (MDD) after acute treatment. One hundred elderly (age 60-88 years) patients with recurrent MDD were randomized to receive either bupropion sustained-release (100 mg-300 mg/day) or paroxetine (10 mg-40 mg/day) for 6 weeks. Treatment with both paroxetine and bupropion was associated with improvements in QOL. Lower perceived Physical- and Social-Functioning QOL ratings at baseline were associated with lower treatment response. Improvement in depression symptom ratings correlated significantly with improvement in QOL on many domains, but accounted for less than one-quarter of the total variance. Remitters showed significantly (P<0.001) greater improvement than both Partial Responders and Nonresponders on various measures. Findings support the importance of treating elderly depressed patients to full remission to maximize impact on both emotional and physical QOL domains.
- Published
- 2001