EVALUATING CLINICAL-RESPONSE OF OPEN NORTRIPTYLINE PHARMACOTHERAPY IN ADOLESCENT MAJOR DEPRESSION

被引:16
作者
AMBROSINI, PJ
BIANCHI, MD
METZ, C
RABINOVICH, H
机构
[1] Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Medical College of Pennsylvania/Eastern Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute, Philadelphia, PA
[2] Division of Child Psychiatry, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH
关键词
D O I
10.1089/cap.1994.4.233
中图分类号
R72 [儿科学];
学科分类号
100202 ;
摘要
Adolescents with major depressive disorder (N = 25) were treated with nortriptyline 100 mg for 6 to 10 weeks. Clinical change was assessed by three treatment outcome measures: the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia (K-SADS-III-R) (to assess syndromal recovery, i.e., no longer fulfilling diagnostic criteria for the disorder), the self-rated Beck Depression Inventory, and a clinician-rated 17-item Depression Scale (derived from the K-SADS-III-R). At 6 weeks, recovery rates for full response were 44% to 57%, for partial response were 26% to 32%, and for nonresponse were 12% to 28%. Better outcome was not associated with concurrent treatment (hospital or outpatient), endogenous or nonendogenous status, or pretreatment depression severity. A significantly greater number of full and partial responders had plasma nortriptyline levels in the adult range of 50-150 ng/ml. None of the response measures, when analyzed as continuous variables, were curvilinearly associated with plasma nortriptyline levels, a finding which does not support the therapeutic window hypothesis. The 17 adolescents who were treated for 10 weeks continued to improve on all three outcome measures (syndrome, p < 0.07; Beck, p < 0.05; 17-Item, p < 0.004) relative to their response at 6 weeks. By 10 weeks, all three measures suggested clinical improvement, but no conclusions about efficacy can be offered in view of the open-label design, absence of placebo controls, diagnostic subtype heterogeneity, small sample size, and concurrent treatments. These data suggest that apparent improvement in adolescent major depressive disorder may vary, depending on treatment outcome criteria, plasma nortriptyline level, and treatment duration. Clinical recovery appears more rapid when treatment response is defined by the clinician-rating (17-Item Depression Scale) and slower when defined by self-rating (Beck Depression Inventory) or by diagnostic status (syndromal criteria). The clinician-rated scale may be more sensitive to early improvements in adolescents, as in adults. Extending treatment from 6 to 10 weeks increased the response rate by about 50%, so a 10-week trial of nortriptyline might be clinically indicated before nonresponse status in adolescents is established.
引用
收藏
页码:233 / 244
页数:12
相关论文
共 42 条
  • [1] Ambrosini P.J., Bianchi M.D., Rabinovich J., Elia J., Antidepressant treatments in children and adolescents. I. Affective disorders, J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry, 32, pp. 1-6, (1993)
  • [2] Ambrosini P.J., Metz C., Prabucki K., Lee J.-C., Videotape reliability of the third revised edition of the K-SADS, J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry, 28, pp. 723-728, (1989)
  • [3] Ambrosini P.J., Metz C., Bianchi M., (1990)
  • [4] Ambrosini P.J., Metz C., Bianchi M., Rabinovich H., Undie A., Concurrent validity and psychometric properties of the Beck Depression Inventory in outpatient adolescents, J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry, 30, pp. 51-57, (1991)
  • [5] Asberg M., Cronholm B., Sjoqvist F., Tuck D., Relationship between plasma level and therapeutic effect of nortriptyline, Brit Med J, 3, pp. 331-334, (1971)
  • [6] Beck A.T., Steer R.A., Beck Depression Inventory Manual, (1987)
  • [7] Boyer W.F., Lake C.R., Initial severity and diagnosis influence the relationship of tricyclic plasma levels to response: A statistical review, J Clin Psychopharmacol, 7, pp. 67-71, (1987)
  • [8] Brown W.A., Dornseif B.E., Wernicke J.F., Placebo response in depression, Psych Res, 26, pp. 259-264, (1988)
  • [9] Burrows G.D., Davies B., Scoggins B.A., Plasma concentration of nortriptyline and clinical response in depressive illness, Lancet, 2, pp. 619-623, (1972)
  • [10] Burrows G., Scoggins B.A., Tureck L.R., Davies B., Plasma nortriptyline and clinical response, Clin J Pharmacol Ther, 16, pp. 639-644, (1974)