Project Details
Description
Description (provided by applicant): Chronic depression affects approximately 5
percent of adults in the United States and is associated with significant
functional impairment and high health care utilization. Recent work supports
the efficacy of established antidepressant medications with chronic depression.
However, only a minority of patients with chronic depression attain full
remission in these trials: approximately 50 percent do not respond, and an
additional 20 percent achieve only a partial response. A recent multi-site
study (Keller et al., 2000) demonstrated that the combination of medication and
psychotherapy produced a significantly better response than either monotherapy.
Unfortunately, combination treatment is expensive. It may be more efficient to
employ a stepped approach, in which patients first receive medication, and only
non-responders and partial responders receive adjunctive psychotherapy. We
propose to conduct the first large-scale study of adjunctive psychotherapy in
chronic depressives who fail to respond, or respond only partially, to an
initial trial of medication.
This multi-center trial will compare 12 weeks of adjunctive treatment with the
Cognitive Behavioral Analysis System of Psychotherapy (CBASP), the form of
psychotherapy with the best evidence for treating chronic depression, with
adjunctive treatment with Supportive Psychotherapy (SP) and continued
pharmacotherapy alone, in patients with chronic forms of major depression.
Separate trials will be conducted in patients who fail to respond to an initial
open trial of serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) and in patients who achieve
only a partial response. In addition, we will conduct naturalistic follow-up
assessments at 6- and 12-months post-treatment.
The specific aims of the project include: (1) comparing the efficacy of
adjunctive psychotherapy to continued SSR] alone; (2) determining whether
adjunctive CBASP is specifically efficacious compared to adjunctive SP; (3)
testing the hypothesized mechanism of action of CBASP, as well as exploring
potential moderators of response, and (4) comparing the cost-effectiveness of
the three treatment conditions for treatment resistant chronic depression. The
outcomes examined will include both symptomatology and psychosocial
functioning. In addition, we will conduct exploratory analyses comparing the
effect of the three treatment conditions on relapse and post-treatment service
utilization.
This would be the first large-scale study ever to test the efficacy of any
therapy for treatment resistant chronic depression, and to study the value of
psychotherapy augmentation in medication non-responders with any form of
depression.
| Status | Finished |
|---|---|
| Effective start/end date | 09/24/02 → 06/30/05 |
Funding
- National Institute of Mental Health: $860,440.00
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