Authors
Maurizio Fava, A John Rush, Jonathan E Alpert, GK Balasubramani, Stephen R Wisniewski, Cheryl N Carmin, Melanie M Biggs, Sidney Zisook, Andrew Leuchter, Robert Howland, Diane Warden, Madhukar H Trivedi
Publication date
2008/3
Journal
American Journal of Psychiatry
Volume
165
Issue
3
Pages
342-351
Publisher
American Psychiatric Association
Description
Objective
About half of outpatients with major depressive disorder also have clinically meaningful levels of anxiety. The authors conducted a secondary data analysis to compare antidepressant treatment outcomes for patients with anxious and nonanxious major depression in Levels 1 and 2 of the STAR*D study.
Method
A total of 2,876 adult outpatients with major depressive disorder, enrolled from 18 primary and 23 psychiatric care sites, received citalopram in Level 1 of STAR*D. In Level 2, a total of 1,292 patients who did not remit with or tolerate citalopram were randomly assigned either to switch to sustained-release bupropion (N=239), sertraline (N=238), or extended-release venlafaxine (N=250) or to continue taking citalopram and receive augmentation with sustained-release bupropion (N=279) or buspirone (N=286). Treatment could last up to 14 weeks in each level. Patients were …
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