| Literature DB >> 27206634 |
Florian Seemüller1,2, Michael Obermeier3, Rebecca Schennach3, Michael Bauer4, Mazda Adli5, Peter Brieger6,7, Gerd Laux8, Michael Riedel3,9, Peter Falkai3, Hans-Jürgen Möller3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Remission is a common outcome of short-term trials and the main goal of acute and longterm treatment. The longitudinal stability of remission has rarely been investigated under naturalistic treatment conditions.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27206634 PMCID: PMC4875666 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-016-0851-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1Flow-chart for patients showing the number of available patients
Differences between patients lost to follow-up (drop-outs) and the completer sample
| Drop-out ( | Completer ( | OR |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | 375 (59 %) | 96 (67 %) | 1.39 | 0.017 | |
| Positive family anamnesis | 241 (38 %) | 59 (41 %) | 1.12 | 0.42 | |
| Recurrent depression | 337 (53 %) | 84 (59 %) | 1.24 | 0.11 | |
| Any personality disorder | 260 (41 %) | 44 (31 %) | 0.64 | 0.043 | |
| Suicidality admission reason | 337 (53 %) | 61 (43 %) | 0.66 | 0.001 | |
| Living with a partner | 248 (39 %) | 81 (57 %) | 2.04 | <0.001 | |
| Discharged against medical advise | 64 (10 %) | 7 (5 %) | 0.47 | 0.009 | |
| Number of hospitalisations before admission | 0 ± 2.00 (0–21) | 0.5 ± 2.00 (0–15) | 0.15 | ||
| Inpatient treatment time (days) | 49 ± 47.50 (1–278) | 56 ± 46.00 (1–363) | 0.007 | ||
| Age | 44.4 ± 12.30 (18.2–69.6) | 45.7 ± 11.70 (18.6–65.9) | 0.1 | ||
| Age at onset | 38.1 ± 12.81 (10–69) | 38.3 ± 12.61 (9–65) | 0.89 | ||
| HAMD 17 baseline | 22.8 ± 5.88 (2–40) | 21.7 ± 6.08 (1–40) | 0.005 | ||
| HAMD 17 discharge | 7.8 ± 5.79 (0–31) | 7.7 ± 5.46 (0–30) | 0.77 |
MADRS and HAMD total scores (and standard deviation) and proportion of responders (50 % HAMD-17 baseline reduction) and remitters (HAMD-17 ≤ 7) at discharge, year 1, year 2 and year 3: last observation carried forward and completer analysis
|
| DISCHARGE | YEAR 1 | YEAR 2 | YEAR 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Remission rate (LOCF) | 423 (54 %) | 431 (55 %) | 436(56 %) | 451 (58 %) | |
| Remission rate (OC) | 92 (64 %) | 89 (62 %) | 84 (59 %) | 99 (69 %) | |
| HAMD-17 (LOCF) | 8.8 (±6.8) | 7.4 (±7.4) | 6.3 (±6.8) | 6.6 (±6.8) | |
| HAMD-17 (OC) | 7.6 (±5.9) | 7.2 (±7.8) | 7.1 (±7.4) | 6.1 (±6.4) | |
| MADRS (LOCF) | 12.5 (±7.6) | 10.9 (±9.9) | 10.6 (±10.1) | 10.6 (±10.1) | |
| MADRS (OC) | 11.9 (±6.8) | 9.4 (±11.2) | 9.3 (±10.8) | 8.3 (±9.6) |
Fig. 2The year to year movement from discharge on until the end of the 3-year follow-up of patients being in HMAD-17 remission (dark) or non-remission (light) for the LOCF sample (N = 784). The width of the arrows corresponds to the magnitude of the percentage. For example, from discharge to year one 86 % stayed in remission whereas 82 % stayed non-remitters. 14 % of non-remitted patients became remitters and 18 % of remitted patients lost remission at the 1-year follow-up
Fig. 3The year to year movement from discharge on until the end of the 3-year follow-up of patients being in HMAD-17 remission (dark) or non-remission (light) for the OC sample (N = 143). The width of the arrows corresponds to the magnitude of the percentage. For example, from discharge to year one 75 % stayed in remission whereas 61 % stayed non-remitters. 39 % of non-remitted patients became remitters and 25 % of remitted patients lost remission at the 1-year follow-up
Total numbers (%) of patients remaining remitters/no remitters/respondents/no respondents after three years: last observation carried forward and completer analysis
| LOCF | OC | |
|---|---|---|
| Remission | 337 (43 %) | 51 (36 %) |
| No Remission | 259 (33 %) | 17 (12 %) |
Fig. 4Naturalistic treatment of patients at discharge and after 1, 2 and 3 years of follow-up, the data presented here relates to the 3-year completer sample (OC, N = 143)