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Clinical and Research Reports |
Received June 30, 2000; revised November 22, 2000; November 28, 2000. From the Service of Psychiatry and Medical Psychology, Hospital do Servidor Publico Estadual; Department of Psychiatry, Universidade Federal de São Paulo UNIFESP; Faculdade de Ciencias Medicas da Santa Casa de São Paulo; and Department of Preventive Medicine, University of São Paulo Medical School, São Paulo, Brazil. Address correspondence to Dr. Feijó de Mello, Rua Jorge Coelho 157 apt. 21, São Paulo Brazil 01451020.
| Abstract |
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Key Words: Psychotherapy, Interpersonal (IPT) Dysthymic Disorder Moclobemide
| Introduction |
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Empirical studies in the 1970s influenced psychiatric nosology, underscoring the recurrence of major depressive disorder and improving and validating the diagnosis of dysthymic disorder. However, dysthymic disorder is still underrecognized and undertreated.6 It has a lifetime prevalence of about 3% to 6% in the general population and up to 36% among psychiatric outpatients. Most dysthymic patients present with comorbidity, and 40% have associated major depressive episodes (double depression).6
Studies consistently show that antidepressants are effective in the treatment of double depression. Studies with pure dysthymic patients show improvement with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), and monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs).7 Unfortunately, this efficacy is not always spectacular: about 50% of patients do not respond to medication, others cannot tolerate adverse effects, some refuse to take it, and some become hypomanic.8 A multicenter controlled, randomized double-blind clinical trial compared the efficacy of 12 weeks of sertraline, imipramine, and placebo for "pure" dysthymic patients (with no major depression associated)6 and found significant improvement with active drug treatment. However, a significantly greater number of patients in the imipramine group discontinued the treatment because of adverse effects. Placebo response rates for dysthymia, usually around 20%,9 were surprisingly high in this clinical trial, around 40%.6 In other studies, moclobemide, a reversible MAOI, has been used successfully and has been well tolerated with dysthymic patients.10,11
Studies on the efficacy of psychotherapy in dysthymia are not as advanced. Dysthymic disorder is a challenging potential field for psychotherapy research because of its low placebo response rate. A major study in this area has just been published. It compared nefazodone alone, CBASP (Cognitive-Behavioral Analysis System of Psychotherapyan amalgam of cognitive, behavioral, interpersonal, and psychodynamic techniques) and combined nefazodone/CBASP in 682 patients with either chronic major depression or double depression. In the 12-week acute phase, roughly half of subjects in each monotherapy responded, compared with 75% of patients on combined therapy.12
Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), a brief, structured psychotherapy developed by Beck et al.,13 has proven efficacious in a series of clinical trials for major depression. Several cognitive approaches have been tested in dysthymia treatment.1416 Most of the studies had small samples and heterogeneous populations, used varying outcome measures, and sometimes employed a single therapist.
Interpersonal therapy (IPT), like CBT, is a manualized, time-limited psychotherapy that has had its efficacy tested in controlled clinical trials for major depression and other diagnoses.17,18 In IPT, the therapist helps the patient recognize the links between depressed mood and interpersonal experiences. The therapy is focused on one or more of four interpersonal problems areas: grief, role dispute, role transition, or interpersonal deficits.8 Some authors found positive results when using interpersonal approaches for dysthymic patients.1922 Researchers at Cornell University Medical College developed a manual that adapts IPT to dysthymic disorder (IPT-D).8,9 IPT has been tested in some trials,23,24 and large trials are under way, including one by John C. Markowitz, M.D. (J.C.M.) and colleagues. Steiner et al.25 compared IPT, sertraline, and IPT plus sertraline in 707 dysthymic patients in the community. Sertraline with or without IPT appeared to have greater efficacy than IPT alone and combined treatment, and combined treatment was no better than sertraline. But IPT was associated with lower follow-up health care and social service costs, making it cost-effective and the combined treatment group the best overall.25
The prevalence of dysthymic disorder in developing countries such as Brazil is not well established. Psychotherapies adapted for testing in empirical studies, such as IPT, have not been widely disseminated in Portuguese. Our study aimed to evaluate the applicability of IPT with Brazilian patients of lower socioeconomic background. Such data might help in planning a larger clinical trial to test the effectiveness of IPT with patients with dysthymic disorder from developed settings.
| METHODS |
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Patients who met eligibility criteria and signed the informed consent were randomized to either the experimental (IPT+moclobemide) or control (moclobemide+routine care) groups. Randomization was stratified by gender and early or late onset.
The study used flexible doses of medication. Moclobemide was administered at 150 mg bid during the first week and at 300 mg bid thereafter. Psychiatrists were encouraged to follow the dosing schedule but were free to adjust dosage for each patient. Patients received medication for 8 months (acute plus maintenance phase). This scheme was used for patients in both the experimental and the control groups, and all patients received the same number of medical consultations. During clinical consultations, patients in the control group received unstructured psychoeducational orientation as well as clinical assessments. Psychiatrists were oriented to avoid psychotherapeutic interventions. The four psychiatrists responsible for the clinical management of patients in both groups attended a basic communicational, psychotherapeutically oriented intervention course run by the main investigator (M.F.M.) and were supervised throughout the study.
Patients in the experimental group received IPT adapted to dysthymic disorder (IPT-D). A senior psychiatrist (M.F.M.) with psychotherapy experience provided IPT-D. IPT training was acquired by reading published IPT material, by attending an IPT course at the American Psychiatric Association Annual Meeting, and by contacts with an IPT therapist (J.C.M.). Patients received 16 weekly sessions during the acute phase and 6 monthly booster sessions during maintenance phase.
Baseline status and outcome were assessed by using a number of measures: The Global Assessment of functioning Scale (GAF);27,28 the last part (general activities) of the Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire (QOLE);29 the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, 17-item version (Ham-D);30,31 and the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS).32 Trained interviewers completed all assessments at baseline and at 12, 24, and 48 weeks. They were blind to treatment assignment, and subjects were oriented not to tell them which group they were in.
Categorical variables were compared by type of treatment, using Fisher's exact test. Mean scores on the Ham-D, MADRS, GAF, and QOLE were compared by using an analysis of variance model (ANOVA) for two factors, treatment (medication alone [with clinical follow-up] and IPT+medication) and observation times (baseline and 12, 24, and 48 weeks). Tukey's method was used to indicate at which points in time statistically significant differences in mean scores were observed.
The clinical trial followed ethical requirements for medical research in Brazil. The hospitals' Ethical Committees approved it, and patients signed an informed consent form. Treatment was free of charge, and patients who dropped out of the study continued to receive regular clinical treatment.
| RESULTS |
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Dropouts differed from subjects who completed the study. They had lower education and more job inactivity, and they tended to be younger or older (Table 2). They did not differ in mean depression severity at baseline, as measured by the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (dropouts, 24.6; completers, 25.9; P=0.88).
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ANOVAs showed statistically significant associations between time and mean scores on Ham-D, MADRS, GAF, and QOLE. For both treatment groups, mean scores decreased with time, particularly between baseline and 12-week assessments. Tukey's method with global 95% confidence coefficient confirmed that for all scales, improvement was due to the difference between baseline and 12-week assessments. For QOLE, the 12-week assessment also differed from the 24-week and 48-week assessments. ANOVA did not show statistically significant differences in mean scores of Ham-D, MADRS, GAF, and QOLE between the experimental and control groups (for all scores, P>0.30). However, there was a trend for patients in the experimental group to continue to improve after 12 weeks of follow-up (Table 3 and Figure 1).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Patients in the IPT+medication group developed a good therapeutic alliance, and fewer dropped out than in the control group (6/16 and 11/19, respectively). After initially seeming skeptical, patients became involved with the IPT propositions, accepting the therapeutic optimism and seeking success experiences. The trend toward continuous improvement in the experimental group makes sense considering that medication shows its benefits early and psychotherapy usually takes longer to work. Klerman et al.33 found that it took months to measure the new social skills in IPT patients as opposed to medication patients. Perhaps some patients initially profited from the moclobemide and then were able to use those gains to work better in psychotherapy.
The present study was a pilot study; the results point to the need for larger trials with enough statistical power to detect modest effects when comparing IPT+medication with medication alone in the treatment of dysthymia. Results also showed that IPT conducted in Portuguese can be applicable to Brazilian dysthymic patients of lower socioeconomic status.
The high likelihood of a chronic course for depression underscores the need to identify treatments that are more efficient. Lima and Moncrieff,34 in a systematic review of 15 selected clinical trials, found a similar efficacy for the TCAs, SSRIs, MAOIs, and others (sulpiride, amineptine, and ritanserin) for treatment of dysthymic disorder. The average dose in the studies reviewed was 200 mg per day of imipramine or equivalent. TCA dropout tended to be related to adverse reactions to medication. On the basis of available evidence, antidepressant medication should be considered the treatment of choice for dysthymic patients. However, the combination treatment (pharmacology and psychotherapy) deserves further study. A SPECT study35 showed that IPT promotes cerebral blood flow changes different from those seen for venlafaxine in patients with major depression. The efficacy of psychotherapies for dysthymic disorder, both as adjunctive treatment and as monotherapy, must be evaluated.
Dysthymic disorder remains a treatment challenge for the psychiatrist. Besides the great pain that dysthymic disorder provokes in sufferers and their families, it also has a huge social and economic impact. Therefore, it cannot be seen as a soft diagnosis.
| Acknowledgments |
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This trial was partially funded by Fundaçãao de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo, Grants 97/1511-4 and 97/04734-4.
| References |
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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S. Pampallona, P. Bollini, G. Tibaldi, B. Kupelnick, and C. Munizza Combined Pharmacotherapy and Psychological Treatment for Depression: A Systematic Review Arch Gen Psychiatry, July 1, 2004; 61(7): 714 - 719. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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