Skip Navigation U.S. Department of Health and Human Services www.hhs.gov
Agency for Healthcare Research Quality www.ahrq.gov
Archive print banner

Depression Pharmacotherapies

This information is for reference purposes only. It was current when produced and may now be outdated. Archive material is no longer maintained, and some links may not work. Persons with disabilities having difficulty accessing this information should contact us at: https://info.ahrq.gov. Let us know the nature of the problem, the Web address of what you want, and your contact information.

Please go to www.ahrq.gov for current information.

Full Title: Treatment of Depression—Newer Pharmacotherapies

March 1999

View or download Summary/Report


Structured Abstract

Objectives: Depressive disorders are persistent, recurring illnesses that impose enormous personal suffering on individuals and their families. Major depression alone is estimated as the fourth most important cause of worldwide loss in disability-adjusted life years and is likely to become the second most important within 20 years. A continued quest for more effective treatments has spawned newer antidepressants and herbal treatments, which have contributed to explosive growth in the prescribing of antidepressants, increasing pharmacy costs, and wider but sometimes confusing choices for clinicians and patients.

This evidence report provides a comprehensive evaluation of the benefits and adverse effects of newer pharmacotherapies and herbal treatments for depressive disorders in adults and children.

Search Strategy: Pertinent literature from 1980 to January 1998 was identified from a specialized registry of controlled trials, meta-analyses, and experts. The registry contained trials addressing depression that had been identified from multiple electronic bibliographic databases, handsearching of journals, and pharmaceutical companies. The search, which yielded 1,277 records, combined terms "depression," "depressive disorder," or "dysthymic disorder" with a list of 32 specific "newer" antidepressant and herbal treatments.

Selection Criteria: Randomized controlled trials that were at least 6 weeks in duration; compared a "newer" antidepressant with another antidepressant (newer or older), placebo, or psychosocial intervention; involved participants with depressive disorders; and had a clinical outcome were reviewed. Two or more independent reviewers identified 315 trials that met these criteria.

Data Collection and Analysis: Two persons independently abstracted data from each trial. Data were synthesized descriptively; attention was paid to participant and diagnostic descriptors, intervention characteristics, study designs, and clinical outcomes. Some data were analyzed quantitatively through the use of an empirical Bayes random-effects estimator method. Primary outcomes were response rate, total discontinuation rates (dropouts), and discontinuation rates due to adverse events. Response rates were defined as a 50 percent or greater improvement in symptoms as assessed by a depression symptoms rating scale or a rating of much or very much improved as assessed by a global assessment method.

Main Results: There were 264 trials that evaluated antidepressants in patients, adults and children, with major depression. Of these, 81 compared newer agents with placebo, 150 newer to older agents, 32 newer to newer agents, and 1 newer agent to psychotherapy. There were 14 trials evaluating hypericum (St. John's wort), 27 trials each in primary care patients and older adults, 10 trials limited to patients with specific concomitant illnesses, 9 trials in patients with dysthymia, 3 trials each in patients with mixed anxiety depression and subsyndromal depression, 2 trials in adolescents, and 1 in the postpartum setting. Most trials were conducted in outpatients and only examined acute phase treatment lasting less than 12 weeks.

Newer antidepressants were more effective than placebo in treating major depression and dysthymia. They were effective in older adults and in primary care patients. In general, there were no significant differences in efficacy among individual newer agents or between newer and older agents. Hypericum (St. John's wort) was more effective than placebo in treating mild to moderately severe depressive disorders. Whether hypericum (St. John's wort) is as effective as standard antidepressant agents given in adequate doses was not established.

No significant differences were found between newer and older antidepressants in overall discontinuation rates. Administration of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), reversible inhibitors of monoamine oxidase A (RIMAs), and hypericum (St. John's wort) resulted in fewer dropouts due to adverse effects than administration of first generation tricyclic agents (TCAs). When compared with first generation TCAs, SSRIs resulted in higher rates of diarrhea, headache, insomnia, and nausea. SSRIs resulted in lower rates of blurred vision, constipation, dizziness, dry mouth, tremors, and urinary disturbances.

Conclusions: Newer antidepressants are clearly effective in treating depressive disorders in a variety of settings. Multiple agents are effective. In general, there are no significant differences in efficacy between newer antidepressants and first and second generation tricyclic antidepressants nor among different classes of newer antidepressants. Newer antidepressants have similar overall discontinuation rates as do older antidepressants but have varying side effect profiles. Some newer agents, such as RIMAs and SSRIs, have fewer dropout rates due to adverse events compared with first generation tricyclic agents.

Available trial data have several limitations. Most (74 percent) trials lasted 6 to 7 weeks; 81 percent reported dropout rates of greater than 20 percent. Fewer than 5 percent reported health-related quality-of-life outcomes. The actual treatment environment within which trials were carried out was rarely described. Few trials addressed effectiveness, and little information exists for children and adolescents, refractory depression, depression co-occurring with comorbid illness, and specific disorders such as mixed anxiety depression, subsyndromal depression, and depression in the postpartum setting.


Download Report

Treatment of Depression—Newer Pharmacotherapies

Evidence-based Practice Center: University of Texas Health Sciences Center
Topic Nominators: National Institute of Mental Health, American Psychiatric Association, American Pharmaceutical Association, Vermont Department of Mental Health/Mental Retardation, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts, American College of Physicians, Kaiser Permanente of North Carolina

Current as of March 1999

 

The information on this page is archived and provided for reference purposes only.

 

AHRQ Advancing Excellence in Health Care