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A critical evaluation of QIDS-SR-16 using data from a trial of psilocybin therapy versus escitalopram treatment for depression.

Authors :
Weiss, Brandon
Weiss, Brandon
Erritzoe, David
Giribaldi, Bruna
Nutt, David
Carhart-Harris, Robin
Weiss, Brandon
Weiss, Brandon
Erritzoe, David
Giribaldi, Bruna
Nutt, David
Carhart-Harris, Robin
Source :
Journal of Psychopharmacology; vol 37, iss 7
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In a recent clinical trial examining the comparative efficacy of psilocybin therapy (PT) versus escitalopram treatment (ET) for major depressive disorder, 14 of 16 major efficacy outcome measures yielded results that favored PT, but the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology, Self-Report, 16 items (QIDS-SR16) did not. AIMS: The present study aims to (1) rationally and psychometrically account for discrepant results between outcome measures and (2) to overcome psychometric problems particular to individual measures by re-examining between-condition differences in depressive response using all outcome measures at item-, facet-, and factor-levels of analysis. METHOD: Four depression measures were compared on the basis of their validity for examining differences in depressive response between PT and ET conditions. RESULTS/OUTCOMES: Possible reasons for discrepant findings on the QIDS-SR16 include its higher variance, imprecision due to compound items and whole-scale and unidimensional sum-scoring, vagueness in the phrasing of scoring options for items, and its lack of focus on a core depression factor. Reanalyzing the trial data at item-, facet-, and factor-levels yielded results suggestive of PTs superior efficacy in reducing depressed mood, anhedonia, and a core depression factor, along with specific symptoms such as sexual dysfunction. CONCLUSION/INTERPRETATION: Our results raise concerns about the adequacy of the QIDS-SR16 for measuring depression, as well as the practice of relying on individual scales that tend not to capture the multidimensional structure or core of depression. Using an alternative approach that captures depression more granularly and comprehensively yielded specific insight into areas where PT therapy may be particularly useful to patients and clinicians.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of Psychopharmacology; vol 37, iss 7
Notes :
application/pdf, Journal of Psychopharmacology vol 37, iss 7
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1401036753
Document Type :
Electronic Resource