Literature DB >> 21071096

Clinical value of early partial symptomatic improvement in the prediction of response and remission during short-term treatment trials in 3369 subjects with bipolar I or II depression.

David E Kemp1, Stephen J Ganocy, Martin Brecher, Berit X Carlson, Suzanne Edwards, James M Eudicone, Gary Evoniuk, Wim Jansen, Andrew C Leon, Margaret Minkwitz, Andrei Pikalov, Hans H Stassen, Armin Szegedi, Mauricio Tohen, Arjen P P Van Willigenburg, Joseph R Calabrese.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the clinical value of early partial symptomatic improvement in predicting the probability of response during the short-term treatment of bipolar depression.
METHODS: Blinded data from 10 multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials in bipolar I or II depression were used to determine if early improvement (≥20% reduction in depression symptom severity after 14 days of treatment) predicted later short-term response or remission. Sensitivity, specificity, efficiency, and positive and negative predictive values (PPV, NPV) were calculated using an intent to treat analysis of individual and pooled study data.
RESULTS: 1913 patients were randomized to active compounds (aripiprazole, lamotrigine, olanzapine/olanzapine-fluoxetine, and quetiapine), and 1456 to placebo. In the pooled positive studies, early improvement predicted response and remission with high sensitivity (86% and 88%, respectively), but rates of false positives were high (53% and 59%, respectively). Pooled negative predictive values for response/remission (i.e. confidence in knowing the drug will not result in response or remission) were 74% and 82%, respectively, with low rates of false negatives (14% and 12%, respectively).
CONCLUSION: Early improvement in an individual patient does not appear to be a reliable predictor of eventual response or remission due to an unacceptably high false positive rate. However, the absence of early improvement appears to be a highly reliable predictor of eventual non-response, suggesting that clinicians can have confidence in knowing when a drug is not going to work during short-term treatment. Patients who fail to demonstrate early improvement within the first two weeks of treatment may benefit from a change in therapy.
Copyright © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21071096      PMCID: PMC3073691          DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2010.10.026

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Affect Disord        ISSN: 0165-0327            Impact factor:   4.839


  42 in total

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2.  Predictive value of early improvement in bipolar depression trials: a post-hoc pooled analysis of two 8-week aripiprazole studies.

Authors:  D E Kemp; J R Calabrese; J M Eudicone; S Ganocy; Q V Tran; R D McQuade; R N Marcus; E Vester-Blokland; R Owen; B X Carlson
Journal:  Psychopharmacol Bull       Date:  2010

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10.  Early improvement in the first 2 weeks as a predictor of treatment outcome in patients with major depressive disorder: a meta-analysis including 6562 patients.

Authors:  Armin Szegedi; Wim T Jansen; Arjen P P van Willigenburg; Egbert van der Meulen; Hans H Stassen; Michael E Thase
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