Literature DB >> 29446186

Longterm persistence and nonrecurrence of depression treatment in Germany: a four-year retrospective follow-up using linked claims data.

Christoph J Wagner1, Charalabos Markos Dintsios2, Florian G Metzger3, Helmut L'Hoest4, Ursula Marschall4, Bjoern Stollenwerk5, Stephanie Stock1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To measure persistence and nonrecurrence of depression treatment and investigate potential risk factors.
METHODS: We retrospectively observed a closed cohort of insurees with new-onset depression treatment in 2007 and without most psychiatric comorbidity for 16 quarters (plus one to ascertain discontinuation). We linked inpatient/outpatient/drug-data per person and quarter. Person-quarters containing specified depression services were classified as depression-treatment-person-quarters (DTPQ). We defined longterm-DTPQ-persistence as 16 + 1 continuous DTPQ and longterm-DTPQ-nonrecurrence as 12 continuous quarters without DTPQ and used multivariate logistic regression to explore associations with these outcomes.
RESULTS: Within first 16 quarters, 28,348 patients' first period (total time) persisted for a mean/median 5.4/3 (8.7/8) quarters. Fourteen percent had longterm-DTPQ-persistence, associated (p < .05) with baseline hospital (odds ratio, OR = 1.80), psychotherapy/specialist-interview and antidepressants (OR = 1.81), age (years, OR = 1.03), unemployment (OR = 1.21), retirement (OR = 1.31), and insured as a dependent (OR = 1.32). Thirty-four percent had longterm-DTPQ-nonrecurrence, associated with psychotherapy/specialist-interview (OR = 1.40), antidepressants (OR = 0.54), female sex (OR = 0.84), age (years, OR = 0.99), retirement (OR = 1.18), and insured as a dependent (OR = 0.88). Women differed for episodic and not chronic treatment.
CONCLUSION: Treatment measures compared to survey's symptoms measures. We suggest further research on "treatment-free-time." Antidepressants(-) and psychotherapy/specialist-interview(+) were significantly associated with longterm-DTPQ-nonrecurrence. This was presumably moderated by possible short-time/low-dosage antidepressants use(-) and selective therapy assignment(+). Sample selectivity limited data misclassification.
Copyright © 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  depressive disorder; longitudinal studies; psychotherapy; recurrence; risk factors

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29446186      PMCID: PMC6877203          DOI: 10.1002/mpr.1607

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Methods Psychiatr Res        ISSN: 1049-8931            Impact factor:   4.035


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  1 in total

1.  Longterm persistence and nonrecurrence of depression treatment in Germany: a four-year retrospective follow-up using linked claims data.

Authors:  Christoph J Wagner; Charalabos Markos Dintsios; Florian G Metzger; Helmut L'Hoest; Ursula Marschall; Bjoern Stollenwerk; Stephanie Stock
Journal:  Int J Methods Psychiatr Res       Date:  2018-02-15       Impact factor: 4.035

  1 in total

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