| Literature DB >> 28693583 |
B Nussbaumer-Streit1,2, D Winkler3, M Spies1, S Kasper1, E Pjrek1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Seasonal affective disorder (SAD) is a seasonally recurrent type of major depression. This predictable aspect makes it promising for preventive treatment. However, evidence for the efficacy and harm of preventive treatment of SAD is scarce, as are recommendations from clinical practice guidelines. The aim of this study was to assess the current use of preventive treatment of SAD in clinical practice in German-speaking countries for the first time.Entities:
Keywords: Austria; Germany; Prevention; Seasonal affective disorder; Switzerland; Winter depression
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28693583 PMCID: PMC5504611 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-017-1403-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Characteristics of participating hospitals
| Characteristics | Number of hospitals (response in %) |
|---|---|
| Country ( | |
| Austria | 18 (18%) |
| Germany | 71 (71%) |
| Switzerland | 11 (11%) |
| Type of hospital ( | |
| University hospital | 21 (21%) |
| Teaching hospital | 23 (23%) |
| Specialized psychiatric hospital | 33 (33%) |
| Psychiatric department in general hospital | 22 (22%) |
| Patients treated because of acute SAD in 2014/2015 ( | |
| 0% SAD patients treated 2014/2015 | 14 (15%) |
| ≤ 5% of patients treated because of SAD | 58 (63%) |
| 5,1%–10% of patients treated because of SAD | 13 (14%) |
| ≥ 10% of patients treated because of SAD | 5 (5%) |
| Interventions used to treat acute SAD ( | |
| Antidepressants | 85 (99%) |
| Lifestyle changes | 78 (91%) |
| Light therapy | 75 (87%) |
| Psychotherapy | 73 (85%) |
| Agomelatine | 61(71%) |
| Dietary changes | 48 (56%) |
| Alternative methods (e.g. meditation) | 47 (55%) |
| Melatonin | 17 (20%) |
| Methylphenidate | 5 (6%) |
n, total number of participating hospitals that answered this question; SAD, seasonal affective disorder
Fig. 1Percentage of hospitals recommending types of SAD prevention (n = 81)
Details on type, frequency, and timing of preventive interventions recommended in clinical practice
| Preventive intervention | Hospitals recommending intervention | Average percentage of SAD patients being given this recommendation (min-max) | Timing of preventive intervention | Type of preventive intervention recommended (multiple mentions possible) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lifestyle changes | 85% (69/81) | 83% (10%–100%) | • 12% (8/69) recommend starting with lifestyle changes by the end of summer for 4–32 weeks | Based on 69 hospitals recommending lifestyle changes: |
| Antidepressants | 84% (68/81) | 70% (10%–100%) | • 21% (14/68) recommend starting preventive treatment by the end of summer for 4–28 weeks | Based on 68 hospitals recommending antidepressants: |
| Psychotherapy | 73% (59/81) | 62% (10%–100%) | • 22% (13/59) recommend starting preventive psychotherapy by the end of summer for 1–30 weeks | Based on 59 hospitals recommending psychotherapy: |
| Light therapy | 72% (58/81) | 64% (10%–100%) | • 47% (27/58) recommend to start preventive light therapy by the end of summer for 3–16 weeks | Based on 58 hospitals recommending light therapy: |
| Diet change | 47% (38/81) | 71% (10%–100%) | • 11% (4/38) recommend to start diet changes by the end of summer for 8–26 weeks | Based on 38 hospitals recommending diet changes: |
| Agomelatine | 47% (38/81) | 24% (10%–70%) | • 21% (8/38) recommend to start by the end of summer for 4–36 weeks | Based on 38 hospitals recommending agomelatine: |
| Alternative approaches | 35% (28/81) | 57% (10%–100%) | • 18% (5/28) recommend to start preventive alternative treatments by the end of summer for 4–32 weeks | Based on 28 hospitals recommending alternative treatments: |
| Melatonin | 11% (9/81) | 23% (10%–70%) | • 78% (7/9) recommend to start by the end of summer for 3–30 weeks | Based on 9 hospitals recommending melatonin: |
| Methylphenidate | 5% (4/81) | 10% (10%–10%) | • 1 institution recommends preventive treatment for 12 weeks | Based on 4 hospitals recommending methylphenidate |
Max, highest percentage named; min, lowest percentage named; n, total number of hospitals answering this question; SAD, seasonal affective disorder
Differences in use of preventive treatment between countries, type of hospital, and region
| Subgroups | Use of preventive treatment | Fisher’s |
|---|---|---|
| Country ( | 0.134 | |
| Austria ( | 94% | |
| Germany ( | 79% | |
| Switzerland ( | 100% | |
| Type of hospital ( | 0.923 | |
| University hospital ( | 85% | |
| Teaching hospital ( | 82% | |
| Specialized psychiatric hospital ( | 90% | |
| Psychiatric department in general hospital ( | 81% | |
| Northern vs. southern regions ( | 0.261 | |
| South ( | 89% | |
| North ( | 79% | |
n, total number of participating hospitals that answered this question
SAD seasonal affective disorder
Differences between type of preventive treatment between northern and southern regions
| Type of preventive treatment | North | South | Fisher’s |
|---|---|---|---|
| Antidepressants | 90% ( | 83% ( | 0.519 |
| Lifestyle changes | 87% ( | 88% ( | 1.000 |
| Psychotherapy | 73% ( | 76% ( | 0.802 |
| Light Therapy | 72% ( | 73% ( | 1.000 |
| Agomelatine | 61% ( | 37% ( | 0.044a |
| Dietary suggestions | 49% ( | 50% ( | 1.000 |
| Alternative approaches | 38% ( | 34% ( | 0.815 |
| Melatonin | 5% ( | 17% ( | 0.159 |
| Methylphenidate | 0% ( | 10% ( | 0.117 |
aStatistically significant
n, total number of participating hospitals that answered this question