SHORT REPORTS |
Department of Psychiatry, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, and Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Amsterdam
Department of Psychiatry & Department of Internal Medicine, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, and Centre of Research on Psychology and Somatic Disease, Department of Medical Psychology, Tilburg University
Department of Psychiatry, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, The Netherlands
Correspondence: Henk Jan Conradi, Department of Psychiatry, University Medical Center Groningen, P.O. Box 30.001, 9700 RB Groningen, The Netherlands. Email: h.j.conradi{at}med.umcg.nl
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Unfortunately, several issues remain unresolved. First, the studies mentioned concern preventive cognitive therapy, whereas cognitive therapy in daily practice consists almost exclusively of acute-phase treatment. Second, these studies used mixed samples of patients recruited from community healthcare facilities and by media announcements, whereas the vast majority of depressed patients are treated in primary care. Third, it is unclear through which particular depressive symptom(s) cognitive therapy exerts its effect in patients with multiple previous episodes.
Therefore, this study examines whether this differential treatment response can be replicated in depressed primary care patients, treated by acute-phase cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT) v. usual care. In addition, we set out to examine whether the difference CBT may make is predominantly due to its impact on cognitive symptoms of depression. This may be expected, since rumination is seen as a source of recurrence, and treatment of dysfunctional thinking is central to CBT.5 Thus, we anticipate that in patients with multiple previous episodes, the effect of CBT will be particularly noticeable at the cognitive-symptoms level of depression.
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Usual care, according to clinical guidelines, consists of brief supportive counselling, possible antidepressant prescription and/or referral.
The psychoeducational prevention programme is a protocolised low-intensity programme consisting of three face-to-face sessions and short 3-monthly telephone contacts thereafter. Psychoeducation alone had no effect on long-term outcomes of depression.6
Cognitive–behavioural therapy plus psychoeducation consists of 10–12 protocolised CBT sessions with a psychotherapist and aims at promoting (social) reactivation and restructuring of dysfunctional cognitions. Subsequently patients followed the psychoeducational programme.
Two instruments were used to assess the course of depression. First, to determine severity of depression, the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) was administered every 3 months during a 2-year follow-up. Second, an adapted version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI), a structured psychiatric interview which has shown good reliability and validity, was administered every 3 months: face-to-face at baseline and by telephone thereafter. With this we measured the presence of the individual DSM–IV7 symptoms of depression per week over the previous 3 months. Thus, we could establish the percentage of time during the 2-year follow-up that patients had: depressed mood and/or diminished interest, eating problems, sleeping problems, psychomotor problems, fatigue, worthlessness or guilt, cognitive problems and death ideations. The number of previous depressive episodes was established with the baseline lifetime CIDI.
Linear mixed-model analysis was used to evaluate differential change over time in the eight repeated BDI measurements for usual care v. psychoeducation and usual care v. CBT plus psychoeducation. Baseline BDI score and timing of assessment were incorporated as covariates. This analysis was carried out for all patients and two subgroups, namely patients who had experienced three or fewer, or four or more depressive episodes before baseline. To evaluate the appropriateness of conducting subgroup analyses, we added an interaction term to the model, representing the interaction effect of CBT v. usual carexprior episodes. Alpha was set at 50.10.
Mann–Whitney non-parametric tests were used to examine per subgroup
whether treatments differed regarding the percentage of time the discrete
DSM–IV depressive symptom clusters, as measured by the CIDI, were
present during follow-up. We set
<0.05.
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0.5). |
View this table: [in a new window] | Table 1 Analyses of the eight repeated BDI measurements conducted during the 2-year follow-up, adjusted for baseline BDI |
Finally, we compared per subgroup whether the treatments differed on each of the DSM–IV depressive symptom clusters (CIDI) during the 2-year follow-up. Only one significant difference emerged. In the group with four or more previous episodes, the median percentage of follow-up time during which usual care patients reported having cognitive problems was 47% (interquartile range 25–88; representing 11.3 months) compared with 15% for CBT plus psychoeducation patients (interquartile range 8–64; representing 3.6 months), which was significantly better (Z=–2.328, P=0.020).
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This study makes three clinically valuable contributions to earlier findings of a differential treatment response depending on number of prior depressive episodes. First, we observed a comparable differential treatment response in the primary care setting, in which the vast majority of depressed patients are treated, instead of mixed samples of patients.
Second, we found this differential treatment response not to be restricted to preventive cognitive therapy: it can also be observed with the far more common acute-phase CBT. We found that in patients with three or fewer prior episodes the three treatments perform equally well, whereas in patients with four or more episodes, CBT plus psychoeducation performs clinically better than usual care. This effect is assumed to be attributable to the CBT component of CBT plus psychoeducation, since psychoeducation did not differ from usual care (although a favourable interaction between psychoeducation and CBT cannot be ruled out completely). Therefore, GPs may consider the number of previous depressive episodes, which is a strong predictor of an unfavourable course of depression,8 as a treatment indicator in order to optimise allocation of scarce treatment capacity. Patients with few prior episodes show no additional benefit with CBT, whereas for patients with multiple prior episodes, GPs may advise CBT in addition to usual care.
Third, we found that in the group with multiple prior episodes, treatments differed significantly only on cognitive symptoms (indecisiveness, unclear and slow thinking, and concentration problems). This may suggest that CBT is able to manage ruminative styles of thinking, which are seen as a risk factor for recurrence. Dissolving dysfunctional thinking is central to CBT.
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