Abstract

BackgroundRecently, the efficacy of dietary improvement as a therapeutic intervention for moderate to severe depression was evaluated in a randomised controlled trial. The SMILES trial demonstrated a significant improvement in Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale scores favouring the dietary support group compared with a control group over 12 weeks. We used data collected within the trial to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of this novel intervention.MethodsIn this prospective economic evaluation, sixty-seven adults meeting DSM-IV criteria for a major depressive episode and reporting poor dietary quality were randomised to either seven sessions with a dietitian for dietary support or to an intensity matched social support (befriending) control condition. The primary outcome was Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) as measured by the AQoL-8D, completed at baseline and 12 week follow-up (endpoint) assessment. Costs were evaluated from health sector and societal perspectives. The time required for intervention delivery was costed using hourly wage rates applied to the time in counselling sessions. Food and travel costs were also included in the societal perspective. Data on medications, medical services, workplace absenteeism and presenteesim (paid and unpaid) were collected from study participants using a resource-use questionnaire. Standard Australian unit costs for 2013/2014 were applied. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) were calculated as the difference in average costs between groups divided by the difference in average QALYs. Confidence intervals were calculated using a non-parametric bootstrap procedure.ResultsCompared with the social support condition, average total health sector costs were $856 lower (95% CI -1247 to − 160) and average societal costs were $2591 lower (95% CI -3591 to − 198) for those receiving dietary support. These differences were driven by lower costs arising from fewer allied and other health professional visits and lower costs of unpaid productivity. Significant differences in mean QALYs were not found between groups. However, 68 and 69% of bootstrap iterations showed the dietary support intervention was dominant (additional QALYs at less cost) from the health sector and societal perspectives.ConclusionsThis novel dietary support intervention was found to be likely cost-effective as an adjunctive treatment for depression from both health sector and societal perspectives.Trial registrationAustralia and New Zealand Clinical Trials Register (ANZCTR): ACTRN12612000251820. Registered on 29 February 2012.

Highlights

  • The efficacy of dietary improvement as a therapeutic intervention for moderate to severe depression was evaluated in a randomised controlled trial

  • Mean baseline costs were greater for the social support group, only the societal costs were significantly different between groups

  • The participants in the dietary support group attended significantly more sessions and had a significantly greater number of contact hours with a dietitian than the participants had with a ‘befriender’

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Summary

Introduction

The efficacy of dietary improvement as a therapeutic intervention for moderate to severe depression was evaluated in a randomised controlled trial. Observational studies have revealed a relationship between diet quality and the risk of depression [3] Until recently, this relationship had not been evaluated in the context of a randomised clinical trial (RCT) to allow causality to be elucidated. This led to the creation of the Supporting the Modification of lifestyle In Lowered Emotional States (SMILES) trial, the first RCT to investigate the efficacy of a dietary intervention as an adjunct to treatment of major depressive episodes [4]. The primary results from the SMILES trial demonstrated significant improvement in Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) score for the dietary support intervention group compared to the social support control group [6]. A significantly larger proportion of participants in the dietary support group achieved remission versus the control condition, based on MADRS scores

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