BACKGROUND: A number of studies of major depressive disorder suggest that psychiatric co-morbidity may contribute to treatment resistance. The purpose of this study was to test whether the presence of comorbid Axis I and Axis II disorders predicts clinical response to an open trial of nor-triptyline among patients with treatment-resistant depression. METHOD: Ninety-two outpatients with treatment-resistant DSM-III-R major depressive disorder were enrolled in a 6-week open trial of nor-triptyline (Nov. 1992-Jan. 1999). The presence of comorbid Axis I and Axis II disorders was established at baseline with the use of the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R. Chi-square analyses were used to test Axis I or Axis II co-morbid conditions as a predictor of clinical response to nortriptyline. RESULTS: Thirty-nine patients (42.4%) responded to nortriptyline. The presence of avoidant personality disorder (p <.01) predicted poorer response to nortriptyline. The response rate was 16.7% for patients with and 48.6% for patients without comorbid avoidant personality disorder. No other comorbid diagnoses were found to predict clinical response in a statistically significant manner. CONCLUSION: The presence of avoidant personality disorder conferred a poorer prognosis in treatment-resistant depression patients treated with nortriptyline.
BACKGROUND: A number of studies of major depressive disorder suggest that psychiatric co-morbidity may contribute to treatment resistance. The purpose of this study was to test whether the presence of comorbid Axis I and Axis II disorders predicts clinical response to an open trial of nor-triptyline among patients with treatment-resistant depression. METHOD: Ninety-two outpatients with treatment-resistant DSM-III-R major depressive disorder were enrolled in a 6-week open trial of nor-triptyline (Nov. 1992-Jan. 1999). The presence of comorbid Axis I and Axis II disorders was established at baseline with the use of the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R. Chi-square analyses were used to test Axis I or Axis II co-morbid conditions as a predictor of clinical response to nortriptyline. RESULTS: Thirty-nine patients (42.4%) responded to nortriptyline. The presence of avoidant personality disorder (p <.01) predicted poorer response to nortriptyline. The response rate was 16.7% for patients with and 48.6% for patients without comorbid avoidant personality disorder. No other comorbid diagnoses were found to predict clinical response in a statistically significant manner. CONCLUSION: The presence of avoidant personality disorder conferred a poorer prognosis in treatment-resistant depressionpatients treated with nortriptyline.
Authors: José V Pardo; Sohail A Sheikh; Graeme Schwindt; Joel T Lee; David E Adson; Barry Rittberg; Faruk S Abuzzahab Journal: PLoS One Date: 2020-01-13 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: A Kautzky; M Dold; L Bartova; M Spies; G S Kranz; D Souery; S Montgomery; J Mendlewicz; J Zohar; C Fabbri; A Serretti; R Lanzenberger; D Dikeos; D Rujescu; S Kasper Journal: Acta Psychiatr Scand Date: 2018-10-05 Impact factor: 6.392