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Journal Article

Citation

Pompili M, Dell'Osso BM, Rosso G, Amore M, Bellomo A, Mautone A, Pilotto E, Ramacciotti S, Scardigli MI, Ascione G, Cipelli R, Sansone C, Simoni L, Adami M, Delmonte D. Compr. Psychiatry 2023; 127: e152430.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.comppsych.2023.152430

PMID

37837942

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) with suicidal ideation, intent, or behavior is a psychiatric emergency with controversial care management. Our study describes the comprehensive treatment pathways of this population in Italian routine clinical practice.

METHODS: ARIANNA [NCT04463108] is an observational prospective and retrospective cohort study involving both primary data collection and secondary data extract. A total of 137 adult MDD patients with suicidality were enrolled from 24 Italian care sites and followed for 90 days. Other than the description of treatment patterns, the impact of treatment on depressive symptoms and suicidality, the burden on the patient's and caregiver's quality of life, healthcare resource utilization and costs were described.

RESULTS: Of the 133 eligible patients, 68.4% were female, and the median age was 47. Approximately half of the study population had a current severe major depressive episode. Treatment strategies at the time of active suicidal ideation with intent definition/confirmation (t0) were heterogeneous, increasing in complexity during observation. According to the MADRS, patients with remission at t0+1 day were 2.6%, with the mean total score decreasing from 37.2 at t0 to 32.3. LIMITATIONS: The study sites were not randomly selected.

CONCLUSIONS: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first cohort study that prospectively describes the characteristics of patients with MDD and suicide risk in Italy, and how they are treated in clinical practice. The study confirms this is a difficult-to-treat population. In addition, a lack of rapid, effective treatment for reducing depressive symptoms and suicidality is observed.


Language: en

Keywords

Suicidality; Major depressive disorder; Administrative claims data; Healthcare resource utilization; Real-world evidence; Treatment pattern

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