Depressed patients excluded from antidepressant efficacy trials due to comorbidity or suicidality had more chronic illness, previous episodes, and psychosocial impairment than trial-eligible patients.
Observational (n=599)
Are there differences in clinical, demographic, and psychosocial characteristics between depressed patients who would qualify for an antidepressant efficacy trial and those who would not?
Patients excluded from antidepressant efficacy trials due to comorbidity or suicidality have more severe and chronic illness, suggesting caution when generalizing trial results to real-world clinical populations.
OBJECTIVE: In recent years the generalizability of antidepressant efficacy trials has been questioned. Central to the question of generalizability is whether there are differences in clinical, demographic, and psychosocial characteristics between patients who would qualify for an antidepressant efficacy trial and those who would not qualify. METHOD: The authors compared three groups: 123 depressed patients who would qualify for an antidepressant efficacy trial, 289 whose symptom severity was too mild to qualify for an antidepressant efficacy trial, and 187 who would be excluded because they were suicidal or had a comorbid anxiety or substance use disorder. RESULTS: Compared with patients who would qualify for an antidepressant efficacy trial, patients who would be excluded because of comorbidity or suicidality were a more chronically ill group with more previous episodes, greater psychosocial impairment, and more personality pathology. CONCLUSIONS: These findings support further caution in generalizing the results from antidepressant efficacy trials to clinical populations.
Zimmerman et al. (Fri,) conducted a observational in Depression (n=599). Trial eligibility criteria vs. Trial exclusion criteria (mild symptoms or suicidality/comorbidity) was evaluated on Differences in clinical, demographic, and psychosocial characteristics. Depressed patients excluded from antidepressant efficacy trials due to comorbidity or suicidality had more chronic illness, previous episodes, and psychosocial impairment than trial-eligible patients.
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