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Psychosocial outcomes in patients with recurrent major depressive disorder during 2 years of maintenance treatment with venlafaxine extended release.

Authors :
Trivedi MH
Dunner DL
Kornstein SG
Thase ME
Zajecka JM
Rothschild AJ
Friedman ES
Shelton RC
Keller MB
Kocsis JH
Gelenberg A
Trivedi, Madhukar H
Dunner, David L
Kornstein, Susan G
Thase, Michael E
Zajecka, John M
Rothschild, Anthony J
Friedman, Edward S
Shelton, Richard C
Keller, Martin B
Source :
Journal of Affective Disorders. Nov2010, Vol. 126 Issue 3, p420-429. 10p.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Psychosocial outcomes from the Prevention of Recurrent Episodes of Depression with Venlafaxine ER for Two Years (PREVENT) study were evaluated.<bold>Methods: </bold>Adult outpatients with recurrent major depressive disorder (MDD) and response or remission following 6-month continuation treatment with venlafaxine extended release (ER) were randomized to receive venlafaxine ER or placebo for 1 year. Patients without recurrence on venlafaxine ER during year 1 were randomized to venlafaxine ER or placebo for year 2. Psychosocial functioning was assessed using the Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire-Short Form (Q-LES-Q), Life Enjoyment Scale-Short Version (LES-S), Social Adjustment Scale-Self-Report (SAS-SR) total and individual factors, Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) (vitality, social functioning, and role function-emotional items), and Longitudinal Interval Follow-up Evaluation (LIFE).<bold>Results: </bold>At year 1 end, better overall psychosocial functioning was seen among patients randomly assigned to venlafaxine ER (n=129) vs placebo (n=129), with significant differences at end point on SF-36 role function-emotional, Q-LES-Q, and SAS-SR total, and work, house work, social/leisure, and extended-family factor scores (p≤0.05). At year 2 end, significant differences favored venlafaxine ER (n=43) vs placebo (n=40) on SF-36 vitality and role function-emotional, Q-LES-Q, LES-S, LIFE, and SAS-SR total, social/leisure, and extended-family factor scores (p≤0.05).<bold>Limitations: </bold>Patients with chronic MDD or treatment resistance were excluded and long-term specialist care was a financial incentive for treatment compliance. Discontinuation-related adverse events may have compromised the integrity of the treatment blind.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>For patients with recurrent MDD, 2 years' maintenance therapy with venlafaxine ER may improve psychosocial functioning vs placebo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01650327
Volume :
126
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
104926501
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2010.04.011