Predicting clinical outcome to specialist multimodal inpatient treatment in patients with treatment resistant depression

•Aimed to predict response in tertiary care patients with resistant depression.•Depressive episodes and age at onset positively associated with response.•Degree of resistance negatively associated with response.•Prediction of individual treatment outcome had poor accuracy.•The addition of genetic ri...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of affective disorders 2021-08, Vol.291, p.188-197
Hauptverfasser: Taylor, Rachael W, Coleman, Jonathan R I, Lawrence, Andrew J, Strawbridge, Rebecca, Zahn, Roland, Cleare, Anthony J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Aimed to predict response in tertiary care patients with resistant depression.•Depressive episodes and age at onset positively associated with response.•Degree of resistance negatively associated with response.•Prediction of individual treatment outcome had poor accuracy.•The addition of genetic risk characteristics did not improve prediction. Treatment resistant depression (TRD) poses a significant clinical challenge, despite a range of efficacious specialist treatments. Accurately predicting response a priori may help to alleviate the burden of TRD. This study sought to determine whether outcome prediction can be achieved in a specialist inpatient setting. Patients at the Affective Disorders Unit of the Bethlam Royal Hospital, with current depression and established TRD were included (N = 174). Patients were treated with an individualised combination of pharmacotherapy and specialist psychological therapies. Predictors included clinical and sociodemographic characteristics, and polygenic risk scores for depression and related traits. Logistic regression models examined associations with outcome, and predictive potential was assessed using elastic net regularised logistic regressions with 10-fold nested cross-validation. 47% of patients responded (50% reduction in HAMD-21 score at discharge). Age at onset and number of depressive episodes were positively associated with response, while degree of resistance was negatively associated. All elastic net models had poor performance (AUC
ISSN:0165-0327
1573-2517
DOI:10.1016/j.jad.2021.04.074