Title: DEPRESSION IN LATER LIFE: IS IT TIME FOR PREVENTION?
1DEPRESSION IN LATER LIFEIS IT TIME FOR
PREVENTION?
- Charles F. Reynolds ?,M.D.
- Intervention Research Center for
- Late-Life Mood Disorders
- Department of Psychiatry
- University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
- Support National Institute of Mental Health ,
Forest Laboratories, GlaxosmithKlinc
2THE RROSPECT STUDY
Cornell University of Pennsylvania University of
Pittsburgh
- Prevention of Suicide In Primary
- Care Elderly Collaborative Trial
3Late-life Depression Causes and Effects
Suicide
Anxiolytie Dependence, Alcoholism
Disease Disability Psychosocial Stressors Genetics
Cognitive Impairment
Disability
Depression
Medical Symptoms
Health Care Utilization
Mortality
4A PUBLIC HEALTH RATIONALE FOR PREVENTIVE
TREATMENT OF DEPRESSION IN OLD AGE
- Depression in old age
- - is common
- - has serious health consequences
- - contributes to global burden of illness
related - disability
- - is a risk factor for suicide
- - is a relapsing, recurrent, and chronic
illness
5FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO RELAPSING CHRONIC
ILLNESS COURSE IN LATE LIFE DEPRESSION
- Psychosocial factors
- - Role transitions, bereavement, increasing
- dependency, interpersonal conflicts
- Progressive depletion of psychosocial
resources - Chronic sleep disturbances
- Risk factors for cerebrovascular disease
- Neurodegenerative disorders
- Limited access to adequate treatment
6Prevalence of Late-life Depression by
Health/Independence Status
Percent
Major Depression Depressive Symptoms
Data represent a composite of multiple status
7Goals Of Treatment
Mortality and health care costs Depressive
symptoms Relapse and recurrence
Quality of life Medical health status
NIH consensus Conference on Diagnosis and
Treatment of Depression In Late Life. JAMA.
19922681018
8PROSPECT GOAL
- To test the effectiveness of an intervention in
preventing and reducing - Suicidal ideation and behavior
- Hopelessness
- Depressive symptomatology
- in a representative sample of older patients in
primary care.
9BACKGROUND
- The elderly have the highest suicide rates in US.
- Old white males are at the greatest risk.
- Late life suicide victims typically see their
primary care physicians in the month prior to
death. - The majority of older suicide victims have had
their first depressive episode in late life. - Although effective treatments exit, depression is
often not detected or treated by the primary care
physician.
10PROSPECTS INTERVENTIONGUIDELINE MANAGEMENT
Physician Education
Patient Family Psycho-Education
Identification of Diagnosis
DEPRESSION SPECIALIST
TREATMENT ALGORITHM
11FEATURES OF TREATMENT ALGORITHM
- The algorithm is based on AHCPR Practice
Guideline for the Treatment of Depression in
Primary Care. - The algorithm is modified for treatment of the
elderly at the primary care office. - Guidelines use psychopharmacological (SSRI),
psychosocial, and other interventions based on
individual needs. - Psychiatric consultation is offered in complex
cases. - The guidelines encompass Acute, continuation, and
Maintenance Treatment. - The paths address a wide range of syndromes
ranging from mild to very severe depression.
12SUBJECT SELECTION
- GOALS 1.Obtain a sample representative of
practice population - 2.Over-sample patients with
depression and the very old - DESIGN Use a stratified , two stage random
sampling strategy
Total Practice
Age 60-74
Age 75
Identify age-eligible, Community dwelling patients
50 of Age 60-74
100 of Age 75
Screen by telephone with CES-D
CES-D lt 11
CES-D gt 11
Results of screen
Interview in person with SCID
10
100
13PRIMARY CARE PRACTIVESSELECTION
- Primary care practices selected in pairs, similar
on - location (urban vs. suburban)
- Degree of academic affiliation
- Ethnic an racial composition of patients
- RANDOMIZATION
- Within pairs, practices randomly assigned to
- low level intervention (enhanced care)
- high level intervention (guideline
management)
Philadelphia
New York
Pittsburgh
14LONGITUDINAL DESIGNPATIENT ASSESSMENTS
0
24
4
8
12
16
20
months
Baseline
Telephone
Telephone
Follow-up
Follow-up
Telephone
Telephone
15Summary of PROSPECT Data on Sampling and
Screening 4/1/02
- 81,185 patient appointments
-
- -- 16,704 sampled for CESD screening
- 54.2 were eligible and completed
screening - 27.6 refused screening
- 7.5 were ineligible
- Of 9,136 CESDs completed, 1,107(11.4) screened
positive. - Patients who screened positive plus a 5 sample
of screened negative patients were invited to
participate in the study. - In addition to the sampled patients, 68 patients
who were not sampled were invited to participate
in the study.
16Summary of PROSPECT Data on Assessments 4/1/02
- 1,276 sampled and referred patients have
completed baseline assessment. - By using a high cut off score on the
CESD(gt20),PROSPECT was able to optimize its
specificity(.925). - 428(33.5) met SCID/DSM-IV criteria for major
depression - 256(20.1) had treatable minor depression
17PROSPECT Enrollment Data
- Total enrollment 1276 subjects, including 874
white and 347 black - 889 women and 365 men
- Of 1313 patients who signed consent, 329(25.1)
terminated from all participation in the
study(including 28 prior to completing the
baseline interview). - Mortality 49 PROSPECT subjects have died, 1 by
suicide (gun shot) and 48 by natural causes - Psychiatric hospitalization 11
- Refusal of further participation 133
- Treatment discontinuation due to supervening
medical problems or dementia 332
18PROSPECT Hypothesis Testing
- HYPOTHESIS
- Compared to usual care, PROSPECT intervention is
associated at four months follow-up with a
greater reduction in depression, defined by 50
reduction in HDRS scores(response) and by
absolute change in HDRS scores. - TESTING
- Mixed effect logistic regression and binary
models for - binary and continuous outcomes
- Radon effects corresponded to the primary care
practice
19PROSPECT 4-Month Outcomes
- Overall, and at each site , the response rate was
greater in intervention versus usual care
practices(41.1 versus 27.4) in unadjusted
(plt.028) and adjusted (plt.024) analyses. - Factors that were also significantly associated
with response included baseline diagnosis (MDD
versus minor), gender, and study site. - The PROSPECT intervention was associated with a
significantly greater decrease in HDRS
scores(-7.3 vs 3.7) in both unadjusted (plt.001)
and adjusted (plt.001) analyses.
20PROSPECT
- Total Depression Remission Rate
- (202/331 61.03)
- Caucasian
- (161/238 67.65)
- African American
- (33/73 45,21)
21Remission Rates in Depressed Primary Care
Elderly PROSPECT Intervention Practices
- 94/126(74.6) subjects who entered treatment
remitted - 22/126 dropped out ¹
¹ Reasons for attrition death(n1)
Relocation(n2) medical problem(n1)
severe psychiatric complications(n4)
treatment refusal(n12) other(n2)
(Reynolds et al., unpublished
PROSPECT data, June 2001)
22Depression Remission Rates in Primary Care
ElderlyPROSPECT Usual Care Practices
- 23/86 (27) intention to treat
- 23/58 (40) completer
- (Reynolds et al., unpublished PROSPECT data, June
2001)
23Remission Rate in Elderly Depressed
PatientsPrimary Care Versus Mental Health Sector
- Primary care 94/126(74.6) 1
- Specialty Mental Health 101/129(78) 2
-
63/116(54) 3 -
- 1 PROSPECT (MH59381)
- 2 Maintenance Therapies in Late-Life
Depression(MH43832) - 3 Nortriptyline vs Paroxetine(MH52247)
24PROSPECTPercent with Suicide Ideation(Hamilton
Item)Among Depressed Patients(N135)
HDRS Suicide Item
25PROSPECTPercent with Suicide Ideation(SSIgt0)Amon
g Depressed Patients(N133)
SSIgt0
26PROSPECT Significance
- PROSPECT seeks to test the effectiveness of its
intervention in older primary care patients whose
clinical and demographic characteristics suggest
high risk for suicide.
27Response, Remission, Recovery, Relapse,Recurrence
Chronicity
Recovery
Remission
Relapse
Recurrence
Response
Normalcy
Incomplete recovery
progression
to disorder
Symptoms
Severlty
Syndrome
Chronicity
Treatment phases
Acute
Continuation
Maintenance
Time
Kupfer,1991
28Risk of Recurrence
- Angst,1990 75
- Ernst Angst,1992 80-90
- Kessler, 1994 80-90
- Prien,1984 80
- Lee Murray, 1988 95
- Frank Kupfer,1990 80
29Survival Analysis Recurrence Rates of Major
Depressive Episodes
Cumulative Proportion With No Recurrence
Weeks in Maintenance
Reynolds et al., JAMA 1999 281(1)39-45.
30Social Adjustment Scale
Median change
group
Planned contrast, F (1.46)7.15, r0.18, p0.01
Lenze, Dew et al., American Journal of
Psychiatry,2002
31Survival Analysis Recurrence Rates of Major
Depression Episode
Cumulative Proportion With No Recurrence
Weeks in Maintenance
Reynolds et al., JAMA 1999 281(1)39-45
32Survival Analysis Recurrence Rates of Major
Depression Episode
Cumulative Proportion With No Recurrence
Weeks in Maintenance
Reynolds et al., JAMA 1999 281(1)39-45
33Survival Analysis Time to Relapse/Recurrence on
Paroxetine/Nortriptyline Continuation
Pharmacotherapy
Cumulative Proportion With No Recurrence
Months in continuation Treatment
Bump.Mulart et al., Depression and Anxiety
1338-44,2001
34Time to Recurrence of Major Depressive Episodes
in MTLD-? Preliminary Data
Survival Distribution Function
Weeks from Randomization
35Mean Time to Recurrence of Major
DepressiveEpisodes in MTLD-? Preliminary Data
Paroxetine (n52) 77 weeks
Placebo (n43) 43 weeks
36Maintenance Therapies in Late Life
DepressionOptimizing and Maintaining Cognitive
Functioning
Elderly Depressed Subjects
Elderly Non-Depressed
N200
N50
Treatment with CIT
Cognitive Assignment
8 Weeks With Venlat if HRSDlt30
12 weeks With Ven if HRSDgt10
T1 Post-depression treatment
ResponseHRSD 17lt10
CitDONN70-80
CitPBON70-80
T2 3 Months
T3 12 months
Treatment up to 2 years
T4 24 months
37POSSIBLE APPROACHES TO PRIMARY PREVENTION OF
DEPRESSION IN OLD AGE
38APPROACHES TO PRIMARY PREVENTION --RATIONALE
- Certain groups of elderly persons are at high
risk for developing new onset or recurrent
depression - - Bereavement
- - Care giving
- - Chronic insomnia
- - Medically ill
- ? Especially myocardial infarction,
stroke, high cerebrovascular risk burden, macular
degeneration, osteoarthritis, cancer - - Early dementia
- - Early signs of depression
39HOPE Risk Reduction With ACE Inhibition
16
20
25
31
32
Plt.0001 ?P.002 The HOPE Study Investigation. N
Engl J Med. 2000342145-153
40What is practiced?Geriatric depression is
linked to
- increased utilization of health care services
- More frequent use of multiple medications
- Longer hospital stays
- Increased demands on nursing home time
- Under treatment in primary care
41TYPES OF APPROACHES TO PRIMARY PREVENTION-OPPORTUN
ITIESFOR PREVENTION
- Pharmacotherapy or cognitive behavioral therapy
of chronic insomnia - Problem solving therapy or CBT for patients with
chronic medical disorders and disability - Social rhythm therapy for recently bereaved
elderly - Information, affective self-management, stress
management, and education in health sleep
practices for Alzheimer care givers
42What is known?
- Geriatric depression responds well to treatment.
- There is a relatively low rate of treatment
resistance to adequate treatment. - Maintenance therapies work to prevent recurrence.
- There is much treatment response variability.