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Journal Article

Citation

Gaspar FW, Zaidel CS, Dewa CS. Psychiatr. Serv. 2019; 70(4): 262-270.

Affiliation

MDGuidelines at ReedGroup, Ltd., Westminster, Colorado (Gaspar, Zaidel); Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of California, Davis (Dewa).

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, American Psychiatric Association)

DOI

10.1176/appi.ps.201800275

PMID

30630402

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:: Rates and determinants of pharmacological and psychotherapy use were assessed after a major depressive disorder diagnosis.

METHODS:: In a retrospective claims study that included 2007-2016 records from the IBM MarketScan research databases, use of pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy was tracked in a population of 24,579 patients with a diagnosis of major depressive disorder. Univariate and multiple variable analyses were used to identify determinants of antidepressant adherence (proportion of days covered ≥.8) and intensive psychotherapy at the beginning of treatment (at least four psychotherapy visits in the first 4 weeks after initiating psychotherapy).

RESULTS:: In the 12 months following a diagnosis of major depressive disorder, most individuals received pharmacotherapy or psychotherapy (94.7%), and unimodal therapy was more common (58.5%) than bimodal therapy (36.2%). When antidepressants were initiated (N=13,524), 41.7% and 32.0% of patients were adherent in the acute and continuation phases, respectively. Initial antidepressant dosages were outside guideline recommendations for 34.5% of patients prescribed these medications. When psychotherapy was initiated, the median number of visits in the year after a patient's diagnosis was seven. Most patients (54.7%) did not continue to receive either antidepressant or psychotherapy treatment after month 5 following their diagnosis. A shorter time from diagnosis to treatment and a lower percentage of treatment costs paid by the patient were associated with increased antidepressant adherence and intensive psychotherapy use.

CONCLUSIONS:: Findings indicate that treatment guideline recommendations are not followed for a large proportion of patients with major depressive disorder and that improvement is needed in multiple areas to enhance effective treatment.


Language: en

Keywords

Antidepressants; Depression; Psychotherapy; adherence; guidelines

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