Abstract

BackgroundDepression is common in diabetes and associated with hyperglycemia, diabetes related complications and mortality. No single intervention has been identified that consistently leads to simultaneous improvement of depression and glycemic control. Our aim is to analyze the efficacy of a diabetes-specific cognitive behavioral group therapy (CBT) compared to sertraline (SER) in adults with depression and poorly controlled diabetes.Methods/DesignThis study is a multi-center parallel arm randomized controlled trial currently in its data analysis phase. We included 251 patients in 70 secondary care centers across Germany. Key inclusion criteria were: type 1 or 2 diabetes, major depression (diagnosed with the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV, SCID) and hemoglobin A1C >7.5% despite current insulin therapy. During the initial phase, patients received either 50–200 mg/d sertraline or 10 CBT sessions aiming at the remission of depression and enhanced adherence to diabetes treatment and coping with diabetes. Both groups received diabetes treatment as usual. After 12 weeks of this initial open-label therapy, only the treatment-responders (50% depression symptoms reduction, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, 17-item version [HAMD]) were included in the subsequent one year study phase and represented the primary analysis population. CBT-responders received no further treatment, while SER-responders obtained a continuous, flexible-dose SER regimen as relapse prevention. Adherence to treatment was analyzed using therapeutic drug monitoring (measurement of sertraline and N-desmethylsertraline concentrations in blood serum) and by counting the numbers of CBT sessions received. Outcome assessments were conducted by trained psychologists blinded to group assignment. Group differences in HbA1c (primary outcome) and depression (HAMD, secondary outcome) between 1-year follow-up and baseline will be analyzed by ANCOVA controlling for baseline values. As primary hypothesis we expect that CBT leads to significantly greater improvement of glycemic control in the one year follow-up in treatment responders of the short term phase.DiscussionThe DAD study is the first randomized controlled trial comparing antidepressants to a psychological treatment in diabetes patients with depression.The study is investigator initiated and was supported by the ‘Förderprogramm Klinische Studien (Clinical Trials)’ and the ‘Competence Network for Diabetes mellitus’ funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (FKZ 01KG0505).Trial registrationCurrent controlled trials ISRCTN89333241.

Highlights

  • Depression is common in diabetes and associated with hyperglycemia, diabetes related complications and mortality

  • The comorbidity of depression and diabetes is associated with adverse diabetes outcomes, especially higher hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) levels [6], micro- and macrovascular complications [7], mortality [8,9], greater diabetes-related symptom burden [10], increased functional impairment, and poorer adherence to diet, exercise, and diabetes self-management [11]

  • All insulin-treated outpatients with diagnosed type 1 or type 2 diabetes registered in the respective diabetological trial centers within the age range of 21 to 69 years and with an HbA1c value >7.5% received a letter by their diabetologist with a patient information leaflet about the trial

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Summary

Introduction

Depression is common in diabetes and associated with hyperglycemia, diabetes related complications and mortality. People with diabetes are at twice the risk of developing depression compared with control groups without diabetes. The comorbidity of depression and diabetes is associated with adverse diabetes outcomes, especially higher hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) levels [6], micro- and macrovascular complications [7], mortality [8,9], greater diabetes-related symptom burden [10], increased functional impairment, and poorer adherence to diet, exercise, and diabetes self-management [11]. Coexisting depression in people with diabetes is associated with poorer mental and physical quality of life [12] and markedly increased health care costs [13,14]

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