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Effect of Antidepressant Switching vs Augmentation on Remission Among Patients With Major Depressive Disorder Unresponsive to Antidepressant Treatment: The VAST-D Randomized Clinical Trial.

Authors :
Mohamed, Somaia
Mohamed, Somaia
Johnson, Gary R
Chen, Peijun
Hicks, Paul B
Davis, Lori L
Yoon, Jean
Gleason, Theresa C
Vertrees, Julia E
Weingart, Kimberly
Tal, Ilanit
Scrymgeour, Alexandra
Lawrence, David D
Planeta, Beata
Thase, Michael E
Huang, Grant D
Zisook, Sidney
and the VAST-D Investigators
Rao, Sanjai D
Pilkinton, Patricia D
Wilcox, James A
Iranmanesh, Ali
Sapra, Mamta
Jurjus, George
Michalets, James P
Aslam, Muhammed
Beresford, Thomas
Anderson, Keith D
Fernando, Ronald
Ramaswamy, Sriram
Kasckow, John
Westermeyer, Joseph
Yoon, Gihyun
D'Souza, D Cyril
Larson, Gunnar
Anderson, William G
Klatt, Mary
Fareed, Ayman
Thompson, Shabnam I
Carrera, Carlos J
Williams, Solomon S
Juergens, Timothy M
Albers, Lawrence J
Nasdahl, Clifford S
Villarreal, Gerardo
Winston, Julia L
Nogues, Cristobal A
Connolly, K Ryan
Tapp, Andre
Jones, Kari A
Khatkhate, Gauri
Marri, Sheetal
Suppes, Trisha
LaMotte, Joseph
Hurley, Robin
Mayeda, Aimee R
Niculescu, Alexander B
Fischer, Bernard A
Loreck, David J
Rosenlicht, Nicholas
Lieske, Steven
Finkel, Mitchell S
Little, John T
Mohamed, Somaia
Mohamed, Somaia
Johnson, Gary R
Chen, Peijun
Hicks, Paul B
Davis, Lori L
Yoon, Jean
Gleason, Theresa C
Vertrees, Julia E
Weingart, Kimberly
Tal, Ilanit
Scrymgeour, Alexandra
Lawrence, David D
Planeta, Beata
Thase, Michael E
Huang, Grant D
Zisook, Sidney
and the VAST-D Investigators
Rao, Sanjai D
Pilkinton, Patricia D
Wilcox, James A
Iranmanesh, Ali
Sapra, Mamta
Jurjus, George
Michalets, James P
Aslam, Muhammed
Beresford, Thomas
Anderson, Keith D
Fernando, Ronald
Ramaswamy, Sriram
Kasckow, John
Westermeyer, Joseph
Yoon, Gihyun
D'Souza, D Cyril
Larson, Gunnar
Anderson, William G
Klatt, Mary
Fareed, Ayman
Thompson, Shabnam I
Carrera, Carlos J
Williams, Solomon S
Juergens, Timothy M
Albers, Lawrence J
Nasdahl, Clifford S
Villarreal, Gerardo
Winston, Julia L
Nogues, Cristobal A
Connolly, K Ryan
Tapp, Andre
Jones, Kari A
Khatkhate, Gauri
Marri, Sheetal
Suppes, Trisha
LaMotte, Joseph
Hurley, Robin
Mayeda, Aimee R
Niculescu, Alexander B
Fischer, Bernard A
Loreck, David J
Rosenlicht, Nicholas
Lieske, Steven
Finkel, Mitchell S
Little, John T
Source :
JAMA; vol 318, iss 2, 132-145; 0098-7484
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

ImportanceLess than one-third of patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) achieve remission with their first antidepressant.ObjectiveTo determine the relative effectiveness and safety of 3 common alternate treatments for MDD.Design, setting, and participantsFrom December 2012 to May 2015, 1522 patients at 35 US Veterans Health Administration medical centers who were diagnosed with nonpsychotic MDD, unresponsive to at least 1 antidepressant course meeting minimal standards for treatment dose and duration, participated in the study. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1:1) to 1 of 3 treatments and evaluated for up to 36 weeks.InterventionsSwitch to a different antidepressant, bupropion (switch group, n = 511); augment current treatment with bupropion (augment-bupropion group, n = 506); or augment with an atypical antipsychotic, aripiprazole (augment-aripiprazole group, n = 505) for 12 weeks (acute treatment phase) and up to 36 weeks for longer-term follow-up (continuation phase).Main outcomes and measuresThe primary outcome was remission during the acute treatment phase (16-item Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology-Clinician Rated [QIDS-C16] score ≤5 at 2 consecutive visits). Secondary outcomes included response (≥50% reduction in QIDS-C16 score or improvement on the Clinical Global Impression Improvement scale), relapse, and adverse effects.ResultsAmong 1522 randomized patients (mean age, 54.4 years; men, 1296 [85.2%]), 1137 (74.7%) completed the acute treatment phase. Remission rates at 12 weeks were 22.3% (n = 114) for the switch group, 26.9% (n = 136)for the augment-bupropion group, and 28.9% (n = 146) for the augment-aripiprazole group. The augment-aripiprazole group exceeded the switch group in remission (relative risk [RR], 1.30 [95% CI, 1.05-1.60]; P = .02), but other remission comparisons were not significant. Response was greater for the augment-aripiprazole group (74.3%) than for either the switch group (62.4%; RR, 1.19 [95% CI, 1.09-1.29]) or t

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
JAMA; vol 318, iss 2, 132-145; 0098-7484
Notes :
application/pdf, JAMA vol 318, iss 2, 132-145 0098-7484
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1377981845
Document Type :
Electronic Resource