Detalles del proyecto
Description
ECT is highly effective and patients that receive this modality often
present with severe forms of major depression. Early relapse is perhaps
the most critical clinical problem in the use of ECT. In unipolar
patients, the current standard is to use continuation monotherapy with
a heterocyclic (HCA) or other antidepressant for relapse prevention
following ECT. This practice is largely based on three studies conducted
in England in the 1960's. Besides methodological flaws, the relevance of
this work to present practice is questionable. ECT was frequently a
'first-choice' treatment and standards for adequate pharmacotherapy have
changed considerably. Resistance to adequate trials of antidepressants
is now the primary indication for ECT and the same class of
antidepressant medication that patients failed during the acute episode
is commonly used as continuation therapy following ECT. The efficacy of
this practice has never been substantiated. In an earlier naturalistic
study, we found that the relapse rate was twice as high in patients who
had failed one or more adequate preECT HCA trials, compared to patients
who came to ECT without any adequate medication trials. Adequacy of
postECT pharmacotherapy was only marginally related to relapse. In
related research, we have also suggested that medication resistance is
a strong predictor of ECT short-term outcome. Using the R10 mechanism,
we propose to complete a multi-center study that re-evaluates
continuation pharmacotherapy in ECT responders. The study is conducted
at the New York State Psychiatric Institute, University of Iowa, and
Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic. A parallel group, random
assignment, double-blind design is used to test the relative efficacies
of placebo, nortriptyline, and combination nortriptyline-lithium
carbonate treatments in preventing relapse following ECT response in
primary unipolar patients. It was hypothesized at the outset that
nortriptyline alone was of limited benefit for many patients and less
effective than its combination with lithium. The interim data document
remarkably high relapse rates both with placebo and nortriptyline, and
substantial efficacy for the combination treatment. In addition, a larger
sample is prospectively evaluated regarding clinical features and
treatment history, with standardization of ECT administration across
sites. The hypothesis is tested that medication resistance is a potent
predictor of ECT efficacy, and, when considered, is responsible for the
apparent association of better ECT response in depressed patients with
psychosis. This study should have important implications for when ECT is
considered during the treatment of the acute depressive episode and, most
critically, in establishing an efficacious pharmacological strategy for
relapse prevention.
Estado | Finalizado |
---|---|
Fecha de inicio/Fecha fin | 4/1/97 → 3/31/01 |
Financiación
- National Institute of Mental Health
Keywords
- Farmacología (médica)
- Psiquiatría y salud mental
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