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Chronic vs non-chronic depression in psychiatric inpatient care - Data from a large naturalistic multicenter trial

Authors :
Peter Falkai
Michael Riedel
Miriam Kolter
Michael Bauer
Rebecca Schennach
Peter Brieger
Richard Musil
Gerd Laux
Mazda Adli
Hans-Jürgen Möller
Frank Padberg
Florian Seemüller
Source :
Journal of Affective Disorders. 299:73-84
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Background : Around 20% - 30% of depressed individuals experience a chronic form of depression lasting two or more years. This naturalistic study investigates the characteristics and the course of chronic depressed patients (CD) during standard antidepressant treatment in comparison to not chronically depressed (NCD) patients. Methods : Data of 954 patients were drawn from the prospective naturalistic, multicenter study of the German research network on depression, CD was met as classifier by 113 patients (11.8%), whereas 841 patients (88.2%) had non-chronic courses (NCD). Results : CD was significantly associated with a low age at onset, use of benzodiazepines, psychotherapy at baseline, substance abuse, a depressive personality disorder and a low degree of extraversion. CD patients showed a longer hospital stay, lower remission rates, increased rates of suicidal ideation as well as higher depression scores at discharge. In addition, individuals with chronic depression continued to obtain higher neuroticism scores and lower extraversion scores at discharge. Limitation : Results were assessed by a post-hoc analysis, based on prospectively collected data. Conclusion : CD patients have an inferior outcome in clinical measures as well as personality dimensions (i.e. low extraversion) compared to non-CD patients. These findings support the notion that CD patients entering a setting of standard psychiatric inpatient care will show less benefit compared to non-CD patients, and that this difference as such may be used as a stratifying marker for providing specialized psychiatric treatment with optimized pharmacological and psychotherapeutic protocols.

Details

ISSN :
01650327
Volume :
299
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4674049a6f35435ecdb5029059db26bb