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Depression proves treatable if different drugs are tried
By Marilynn Marchione, Associated Press
The final stage of a landmark federal study on treating depression
suggests that two-thirds of sufferers eventually can be helped
if they are patient enough to keep trying medications until
they find one that works.
Thirteen percent of the 123 study participants who did not
get better on the first three drugs they tried were helped
by a fourth, researchers found.
But there is a downside to so many attempts: The more tries
people made, the more likely it was that they later would
relapse and slide back into depression.
"It's a sobering message when you get down to requiring
three or four steps,'' said the chief researcher, John Rush
of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in
Dallas. ``It says that follow-up is critical'' to make sure
that people stay on the drugs, he said.
Results were published today in the American Journal of Psychiatry.
About 15 million Americans each year suffer depression, the
nation's top mental health problem. Drugs to treat the disorder
have had only limited testing until now. The government launched
the six-year, $35 million study to test a variety of these
medications in ``real world'' settings -- people seeking help
at community clinics and doctors' offices.
The project started out with 3,671 adults diagnosed with
major depression. Half of them had a family history of it,
and more than half had suffered multiple bouts of it themselves.
All were started on Celexa, one of a widely used class of
drugs called SSRIs. Nearly 37 percent had their depression
go into remission after this first try. The rest switched
to another antidepressant or continued with Celexa and added
a second treatment. This second step helped 31 percent of
that group.
The third and fourth attempts brought success rates of 14
percent and 13 percent, respectively. When all results from
these various groups of participants were looked at collectively,
67 percent of the total group had been helped by one or more
drugs.
However, 40 percent of those who achieved remission on their
first drug relapsed within a year. That rose to 55 percent
of those who took two tries to succeed and 65 percent and
70 percent of those requiring three and four tries, respectively.
Source: The Mercury News
November 1, 2006
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