Abstract

ObjectivesAtypical features are common among depressed primary care patients, but clinical trials testing the efficacy of psychopharmacological and/or psychotherapeutic treatment are lacking. This paper examines the efficacy of sertraline and cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) among depressed patients with atypical features.MethodsAnalyses involve a double-blind comparison of sertraline versus placebo (N=47) and a single-blind comparison between CBT versus a guided self-help group (GSG) (N=48), with primary efficacy endpoints being the Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (IDSC) and Hamilton Depression Scale (HAMD-17).ResultsIn intent-to-treat (ITT) analyses, the decrease on the IDSC scale (and HAMD-17) was greater after CBT compared to GSG: p=0.01 (HAMD-17: p=0.01). The difference between SSRI versus placebo was not significant: p=0.22 (HAMD-17: p=0.36). At endpoint, the CBT versus GSG difference in mean change from baseline IDSc scores was 7.69 points (HAMD-17: 4.97 points), the sertraline versus placebo difference was 3.07 points (HAMD-17: 0.59 points).ConclusionsThe data provide a preliminary suggestion that the mix of patients with minor or mild major depression with atypical features may not be best treated with an SSRI, but that these conditions might be amenable to CBT. Although SSRI were not superior to placebo, it would be premature to rule out SSRI as efficacious in atypical depression.

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