| Literature DB >> 28178306 |
Frédérique C W van Krugten1, Meriam Kaddouri1, Maartje Goorden1, Anton J L M van Balkom2, Claudi L H Bockting3, Frenk P M L Peeters4, Leona Hakkaart-van Roijen1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Early identification of patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) that cannot be managed by secondary mental health services and who require highly specialized mental healthcare could enhance need-based patient stratification. This, in turn, may reduce the number of treatment steps needed to achieve and sustain an adequate treatment response. The development of a valid tool to identify patients with MDD in need of highly specialized care is hampered by the lack of a comprehensive understanding of indicators that distinguish patients with and without a need for highly specialized MDD care. The aim of this study, therefore, was to systematically review studies on indicators of patients with MDD likely in need of highly specialized care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28178306 PMCID: PMC5298252 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0171659
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow chart of study selection process.
RCT, Randomized controlled trial; MDD, major depressive disorder; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; ICD, International Classification of Diseases.
General characteristics of the included studies.
| Outcome examined and study | Population | Sample size (C/NC) | Mean age C/NC (SD) | Diagnostic criteria | Study design (follow-up length) | Country | NHBLI Quality Score (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kaplan et al. 2000 [ | Outpatients from a university clinic | 40 (20/20) | 47 ( | DSM-IV and ICD-10 | Nested case-control | USA | 50 |
| Souery et al. 2007 [ | Outpatients and inpatients from specialist referral centres | 702 (356/346) | 50.5 (14.1) / 51.5 (14.6) | DSM-IV | Cross-sectional | European countries | 57 |
| Amital et al. 2008 [ | Outpatients from community psychiatric clinics | 107 (42/65) | 54.7 (16.3) / 49.6 (16.2) | ICD-10 | Cross-sectional | Israel | 43 |
| Dudek et al. 2010 [ | Outpatients from psychiatric clinics | 1,051 (570/481) | 47 (11) / 46 (11) | DSM-IV-TR | Cross-sectional | Poland | 36 |
| Takahashi et al. 2013 [ | Outpatients from university clinics | 62 (35/27) | 38.74 (9.42) / 39.07 (9.19) | DSM-IV | Cross-sectional | Japan | 36 |
| Takahashi et al. 2013 [ | Outpatients from university clinics | 66 (35/31) | 35.94 (8.93) / 38.00 (8.42) | DSM-IV | Cross-sectional | Japan | 36 |
| Riso et al. 2003 [ | Outpatients from a university mood disorders unit | 69 (42/27) | 39.3 (10.3) / 39.1 (10.3) | DSM-IV | Cross-sectional | USA | 43 |
| Gilmer et al. 2005 [ | Outpatients from primary or psychiatric care sites | 1,380 (293/1,087) | 41.9 (13.5) / 39.7 (13.0) | DSM-IV | Cross-sectional | USA | 43 |
| Wiersma et al. 2009 [ | Subjects from the community, primary care settings, and specialized mental healthcare facilities | 1,204 (395/809) | 42.4 (11.8) / 39.7 (12.3) | DSM-IV | Cross-sectional | NL | 50 |
| Wiersma et al. 2011 [ | Subjects from the community, primary care settings, and specialized mental healthcare facilities | 1,002 (312/690) | 40.5 (12.2) / 43.2 (11.8) | DSM-IV | Cross-sectional | NL | 50 |
| Melartin et al. 2004 [ | Secondary-level care psychiatric outpatients and inpatients | 198 (76/122) | 41.0 (11.1) | DSM-IV | Longitudinal (18 months) | Finland | 86 |
| Solomon et al. 2004 [ | Outpatients and inpatients from academic medical centers | 290 (143/147) | 39 (15) | RDC | Longitudinal (15 years) | USA | 71 |
| Bos et al. 2005 [ | Female outpatients | 50 (30/20) | DSM-IV | Cross-sectional | NL | 43 | |
| Hollon et al. 2006 [ | Outpatients from primary and psychiatric care sites | 1,426 (1,061/365) | 41.2 (13.2) / 38.9 (13.4 | DSM-IV | Cross-sectional | USA | 50 |
| Gerrits et al. 2014 [ | Subjects from the community, primary care settings, and specialized mental healthcare facilities | 43.4 (12.8) | DSM-IV | Longitudinal (4 years) | NL | 71 | |
| Lamers et al. 2011 [ | Subjects from the community, primary care settings, and specialized mental healthcare facilities | 789 (19%/81%) | 41.8 (12.0) | DSM-IV | Longitudinal (1 year) | NL | 64 |
C/NC, Cases/Non-Cases; SD, standard deviation; NHBLI, National Heart, Blood and Lung Institute; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; ICD, International Classification of Diseases; RDC, Research Diagnostic Criteria; USA, United States of America; NL, The Netherlands.
a For the overall sample.
b For the overall sample (n = 1122), including anxiety patients.
Indicators of patients with a depression in need of highly specialized care.
| Indicator |
|---|
| Greater (baseline [ |
| Current suicidal risk [ |
| Higher rates of melancholic features [ |
| Higher levels of rumination [ |
| Younger age of onset [ |
| Longer time since first onset [ |
| History of prior suicide attempts [ |
| Shorter current episode [ |
| Less likely to meet criteria for chronic depression [ |
| More than three previous depressive episodes [ |
| Fewer prior episodes of depression [ |
| Lack of remission or partial remission after the previous depressive episode [ |
| Nonresponse to first antidepressant treatment lifetime [ |
| A higher number of comorbid psychiatric disorders [ |
| Comorbid (generalized [ |
| Higher levels of chronic PTSD [ |
| More symptoms of bipolarity [ |
| Higher scores on the MMPI-2 subscales [ |
| Lower levels of extraversion on the NEO-FFI [ |
| Lower levels of reward dependence on the TCI-125 [ |
| Lower levels of self-directedness on the TCI-125 [ |
| Higher levels of harm avoidance on the TCI-125 [ |
| Higher levels of impaired autonomy on the YSQ [ |
| Higher levels of disconnection and rejection on the YSQ [ |
| Higher levels of overvigilance on the YSQ [ |
| Higher levels of external locus of control on the SMS [ |
| Higher levels of neuroticism on the NEO-FFI [ |
| Greater general medical comorbidity [ |
| Worse physical health function [ |
| Lower physical quality of life [ |
| Severe neck, chest and abdominal pain [ |
| A higher number of pain locations [ |
| Higher pain severity of pain [ |
| Higher prevalence of childhood trauma [ |
| Greater levels of childhood emotional abuse [ |
| Higher levels of trauma sequelae [ |
| Worse work function and social adjustment [ |
| Impaired psychosocial functioning [ |
| Lower quality of life [ |
| Older age [ |
| Less education [ |
| Higher educational level [ |
| Lower monthly household income [ |
| No private insurance [ |
| Unemployment [ |
| Prior job loss [ |
| A greater likelihood of being Black as opposed to white or other [ |
| A greater likelihood of being Hispanic as opposed to non-Hispanic [ |
MMPI-2, Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2; NEO-FFI, NEO Five-Factor Inventory; TCI-125, Cloninger's 125-question Temperament and Character Inventory; YSQ, Young Schema Questionnaire; SMS, Self-Mastery Scale.