Persistent fatigue, insomnia, and anhedonia may independently predict cardiac events in patients with coronary heart disease, explaining the failure of previous depression treatment trials.
Does treating persistent symptoms of depression (insomnia, fatigue, anhedonia) improve cardiac event-free survival in patients with coronary heart disease?
Addressing persistent symptoms of depression such as insomnia, fatigue, and anhedonia may be key to improving cardiovascular outcomes in patients with coronary heart disease.
Major depressive disorder is a well-established risk factor for cardiac events in patients with coronary heart disease, but clinical trials have produced little evidence that treating depression reliably improves cardiac event-free survival in these patients. In this review, we offer evidence that certain symptoms that commonly remain after otherwise successful treatment of depression-insomnia, fatigue, and anhedonia-independently predict cardiac events. This may help to explain the failure of previous depression treatment trials to improve cardiac event-free survival even when other symptoms of depression improve. We thus propose that adverse cardiovascular effects that have long been attributed to syndromal depression may be instead caused by persistent fatigue, insomnia, and anhedonia, regardless of whether other symptoms of depression are present. We also identify interventions for these symptoms and call for more research to evaluate their effectiveness in depressed patients with coronary heart disease.
“Treating Depression to Improve Survival in Coronary Heart Disease: What Have We Learned? Audio Commentary by Dr. Valentin Fuster, Emeritus Editor in Chief.”
Carney et al. (Mon,) conducted a review in Coronary heart disease and major depressive disorder. Persistent fatigue, insomnia, and anhedonia was evaluated on Cardiac events. Persistent fatigue, insomnia, and anhedonia may independently predict cardiac events in patients with coronary heart disease, explaining the failure of previous depression treatment trials.
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