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An individualized treatment rule to optimize probability of remission by continuation, switching, or combining antidepressant medications after failing a first-line antidepressant in a two-stage randomized trial
- Source :
- Psychological Medicine. 52:3371-3380
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2021.
-
Abstract
- BackgroundThere is growing interest in using composite individualized treatment rules (ITRs) to guide depression treatment selection, but best approaches for doing this are not widely known. We develop an ITR for depression remission based on secondary analysis of a recently published trial for second-line antidepression medication selection using a cutting-edge ensemble machine learning method.MethodsData come from the SUN(^_^)D trial, an open-label, assessor blinded pragmatic trial of previously-untreated patients with major depressive disorder from 48 clinics in Japan. Initial clinic-level randomization assigned patients to 50 or 100 mg/day sertraline. We focus on the 1549 patients who failed to remit within 3 weeks and were then rerandomized at the individual-level to continuation with sertraline, switching to mirtazapine, or combining mirtazapine with sertraline. The outcome was remission 9 weeks post-baseline. Predictors included socio-demographics, clinical characteristics, baseline symptoms, changes in symptoms between baseline and week 3, and week 3 side effects.ResultsOptimized treatment was associated with significantly increased cross-validated week 9 remission rates in both samples [5.3% (2.4%), p = 0.016 50 mg/day sample; 5.1% (2.7%), p = 0.031 100 mg/day sample] compared to randomization (30.1–30.8%). Optimization was also associated with significantly increased remission in both samples compared to continuation [24.7% in both: 11.2% (3.8%), p = 0.002 50 mg/day sample; 11.7% (3.9%), p = 0.001 100 mg/day sample]. Non-significant gains were found for optimization compared to switching or combining.ConclusionsAn ITR can be developed to improve second-line antidepressant selection, but replication in a larger study with more comprehensive baseline predictors might produce stronger and more stable results.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Randomization
Mirtazapine
01 natural sciences
law.invention
010104 statistics & probability
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Randomized controlled trial
law
Internal medicine
medicine
030212 general & internal medicine
0101 mathematics
Major depressive episode
Applied Psychology
Depression (differential diagnoses)
Sertraline
business.industry
medicine.disease
Psychiatry and Mental health
Major depressive disorder
Antidepressant
medicine.symptom
business
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14698978 and 00332917
- Volume :
- 52
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Psychological Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e359d38b352f7dcfa3c094fc2ade721a
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0033291721000027