Title: Depression and Myocardial Infarction: Findings of the SADHART Group
1Depression and Myocardial Infarction Findings
of the SADHART Group
- June 23, 2004
- Tracy Ann Rydel, MD
2Influence of Depression and Effect of Treatment
with Sertraline on Quality of Life after
Hospitalization for Acute Coronary Syndrome
- American Journal of Cardiology.
- Dec 2003. 92 1271-1276.
3The SADHART Group
- SADHART Sertraline Antidepressant Heart Attack
Randomized Trial - Trial conducted in 40 outpatient cardiology
centers and psychiatry clinics in U.S., Canada,
Australia, and Europe - Study financially supported by Pfizer
4Relevance of SADHART
- Depression as a risk factor for mortality
post-MI1 - Older antidepressants potentially cardiotoxic
and/or proarrythmic - SSRIs not previously established as safe or
beneficial post-MI
5The Groundwork
- Initial study entitled Sertraline Treatment of
Major Depression in Patients with Acute MI or
Unstable Angina. - Presented in JAMA, August 2002. 288 (6)
701-710. - Established safety of SSRIs in patients with
recent MI or unstable angina
6METHODS The Subjects
- 369 patients
- 74 post-acute MI 26 unstable angina
- 100 with current episode of MDD, based on DSM-IV
criteria with Beck Depression Inventory Score gt
10 - 2 groups 1. Intent-to-Treat (Total)
- 2. Recurrent Depression
7METHODS The 2 Subgroups
8METHODS Why 2 groups?
- Intent-to-treat vs. Recurrent Depression
subgroup - Definition
- Determined a priori
- Overlap of symptomatology between MDD and
physical illness - Most post-MI depression considered similar to an
adjustment disorder - Recurrent depression is associated with
persistent depression in the year following MI
9METHODS The Subjects
- Exclusion criteria
- Cardiovascular
- -uncontrolled HTN
- -cardiac surgery candidates (next 6 months)
- -MI or UA less than 3 months post-CABG
- -bradycardia (resting HR lt 40)
- Other medical
- -persistent clinically significant laboratory
abnormalities - -significant renal or hepatic disease or other
noncardiac disease
10METHODS The Subjects (cont.)
- Exclusion criteria (cont.)
- Psychiatric
- -alcohol or substance abuse in past 6 mo
- -psychotic symptoms, h/o psychosis, bipolar
d/o, organic brain syndrome, dementia - -significant suicide risk
11METHODS The Treatment
- Patients randomized to receive 24 weeks of
double-blind Rx Sertraline or placebo - Patients in Sertraline group received 50 mg daily
for first 6 weeks titration to 200 mg permitted - Compliance checked using pill counts
12METHODS Outcome Measures
- 2 Effect-on-Depression measures
- HAM-D
- (Hamilton Rating
- Scale for Depression)
- CGI-I score
- (Clinical Global Impression, Improvement Scale)
- 2 Quality of Life measures
- Q-LES-Q
- (Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction
Scale) - SF-36
- (Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 36)
13RESULTS The Statistics
- 2 patient groups analyzed
- 2 outcome domains investigated
- 2 scales within each domain evaluated
- Mixed-model repeated measures analysis of
covariance utilized to assess changes in scores
over the treatment period
14RESULTS Depression Measures
- The HAM-D scale
- Significantly greater improvement seen with
Sertraline in the Recurrent Depression subgroup
(p0.002) as compared to placebo - No significant difference demonstrated in the
total randomized group
- The CGI score
- Sertraline had significant effect in both the
Recurrent Depression subgroup (plt0.001) AND in
the total randomized group (plt0.01) as compared
to placebo
15RESULTS Quality of Life Measures
- Q-LES-Q
- Significant effect of Sertraline relative to
placebo shown in Recurrent Depression subgroup
(p0.037)
- SF-36
- Sertraline showed clinically significant
improvement over placebo in the Mental Component
of the SF-36 in the Recurrent Depression subgroup
(p0.010)
16Efficacy in Post-ACS Depression
- Week 24
- Responder
- Rates for
- Sertraline vs.
- Placebo
- The CGI-I
- p lt 0.01 p lt 0.003
17Improvement in SF-36 scores
- Significant
- difference
- shown in
- mental
- component
- of recurrent
- group
- (p0.010)
18SF-36 subscale scores Sertraline vs. placebo in
the recurrent group
- p lt 0.05 p lt 0.001 p lt 0.10
19DISCUSSION Indications for Clinical Practice
- Results of study especially relevant for
Recurrent Depression subgroup - Findings to be considered exploratory given
small sample size - Depression as strongest predictor of baseline
quality-of-life impairment following acute
coronary syndrome5
20DISCUSSION Limitations of the Current Study
- Conclusions cannot be generalized to all
patients - Exclusion of pts with renal or hepatic
dysfunction - Exclusion of pts with psychiatric comorbidities
- Exclusion of pts with alcohol or substance abuse
in past 6 months
21DISCUSSION Limitations of the Current Study
(cont.)
- Sertraline as only SSRI tested
- Drug not administered until 1 month post-MI
- No discussion of absence of significant effects
on physical functioning (SF-36) - Non-pharmacologic measures not explored4
22DISCUSSION Areas for Further Investigation
- Repeat trial with larger cohort similar to
Recurrent Depression subgroup needed - Study examining differences in long-term post-MI
mortality between SSRI and placebo - Depression or MI which came first? Or, how are
these factors interrelated?
23THANK YOU!
- Dr. David Thom
- Julie Haugen
24REFERENCES
- 1 Bush DE, et al. Even minimal symptoms of
depression increase mortality risk after acute
myocardial infarction. American Journal of
Cardiology. 2001. 88 337-41. - 2 Glassman AH, et al. Sertraline Treatment of
Major Depression in Patients with Acute MI or
Unstable Angina JAMA, August 2002. 288 (6)
701-10. - 3 Glassman AH, et al. Influence of Depression
and Effect of Treatment with Sertraline on
Quality of Life after Hospitalization for Acute
Coronary Syndrome. American Journal of
Cardiology.Dec 2003. 92 1271-6. - 4 Lavie CJ and Milani RV. Cardiac
rehabilitation and depression. Letter in
American Journal of Cardiology. 2004. 93 1080. - 5 Rumsfeld JS, et al. Predictors of quality of
life following acute coronary syndromes.
American Journal of Cardiology. 2001. 88 781-4.
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