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South African Journal of Psychiatry

versão On-line ISSN 2078-6786
versão impressa ISSN 1608-9685

S. Afr. j. psyc. vol.20 no.3 Pretoria Jul./Set. 2014

http://dx.doi.org/10.7196/SAJP.530 

ARTICLE
DOI:10.7196/SAJP.530

 

Comparative efficacy and acceptability of seven augmentation agents for treatment-resistant depression: A multiple-treatments meta-analysis

 

 

X WangI; S HuangI; H B QiII

IMMed; Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, The First Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, Chongqing, China
IIPhD; Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, The First Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, Chongqing, China

Correspondence

 

 


ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Treatment-resistant depression (TRD) is a therapeutic challenge for clinicians. Augmentation pharmacotherapy is effective for TRD, but it is still unclear which augmentation agent is most efficacious.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the effects of seven augmentation agents on TRD.
METHODS:We did a multiple-treatments meta-analysis, accounting for both direct and indirect comparisons. PubMed, the Center for Clinical and Translational Research, Web of Science, Embase, CBM-disc, the Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure and relevant websites (up to August 2013) were searched for randomised controlled trials (RCTs) about augmentation agents. The following terms were used: 'potentiation, 'augmentation', and 'adjunct' paired with 'depression' and 'resistant depression'. No language limitation was imposed.
RESULTS: We systematically reviewed 12 RCTs (1 936 participants), which included seven augmentation agents: lithium, tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), atypical antipsychotics (AAPs), antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), buspirone, cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) and tri-iodothyronine (T3). The results revealed that T3 was more efficacious than lithium, TCAs, AAPs, AEDs, buspirone and CBT with odds ratios (ORs) of 1.58, 1.56, 1.51, 1.47, 1.77 and 1.25, respectively. ORs favoured CBT compared with lithium, TCAs, AAPs, AEDs and buspirone. Buspirone was the least efficacious of all the other augmentation agents tested. AAPs were significantly more acceptable than lithium, and CBT more than buspirone. T3 was slightly more acceptable than lithium, and CBT more than AAPs.
CONCLUSION: T3 as an augmentation agent should be a clinician's first consideration instead of lithium in acute treatment for TRD. CBT might be a good augmentation agent in some communities. Buspirone should be a final option as an augmentation agent. Further research is needed, such as a well-designed, large-scale controlled trial, to support and draw definite conclusions.


 

 

It is forecast that depression will be second only to heart disease as a cause of global disability by 2020.[1] In the past 20 years, available drugs for the treatment of depression have proliferated, many of which are structurally related and share similar putative mechanisms of action.[2] New-generation antidepressant drugs, including serotonin selective reuptake inhibitors and serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors, have gained wide acceptance, primarily because of their relative safety.[3] However, even with effective pharmacotherapeutic strategies, ~40% of depressed patients show only partial or non-response to the usual recommended dose of antidepressants, and may be described as treatment-resistant depression (TRD) patients.[4]

Sustained remission is the ultimate goal of any antidepressant treatment. For those patients who do not reach remission after the first adequate antidepressant trial, several so-called second-step strategies have been proposed, such as: (i) augmentation therapy, (ii) increasing antidepressant dose, (iii) switching to a different class of antidepressant, (iv) combining two antidepressants.[5] Augmentation pharmacotherapy refers to the addition of drugs that are not standard antidepressants in order to enhance the antidepressive effect of a classic antidepressant drug.[6] These strategies are commonly used by clinicians caring for depressed patients.[7] Two augmentation methods have been studied, namely augmentation treatment at the onset of treatment, or following the failed use of antidepressant monotherapy. The latter approach is used by most of the augmentation studies.[8]

Hitherto, many potential agents have been tested for their augmentation effects in clinical trials on TRD.[9] The objective of this review is to integrate the efficacy data of seven kinds of augmentation therapies by multiple-treatments meta-analysis, and provide a clinically useful summary that can be used to guide treatment decisions.

 

Method

Study selection

A comprehensive literature search on randomised controlled trials (RCTs) involving antidepressant augmentation for TRD was first conducted through the major scientific and medical databases, including international databases (PubMed, the Center for Clinical and Translational Research, Web of Science, Embase, EAGLE, National Technical Information Service), two Chinese databases (CBM-disc, Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure), and relevant websites (Current Controlled Trials, Clinical Trials, International Clinical Trials Registry) up until August 2013. The following terms were used: 'potentiation, 'augmentation, and 'adjunct' paired with 'depression' and 'resistant depression, There was no language and year of publication limitation. To avoid omitting relevant trials, conference summaries and articles identified from reference lists of previous reviews were checked.

We included RCTs involving antidepressant augmentation for TRD in acute-phase treatment. TRD was defined as the failure of at least one adequate trial of one major class of antidepressant.[10] We excluded the following studies: those that included patients who had not previously completed an adequate trial of an antidepressant (e.g. because of side-effects); those that compared an antidepressant with placebo; those that included women with post-partum depression;[11] and single case reports, dissertations and meeting abstracts. Bipolar depression was not focused on in this review.

Data extraction

Two reviewers within the reviewing team independently screened all candidate studies and extracted data. Any disagreements were resolved by discussion within the research team. For data that could not be directly abstracted, the corresponding author was e-mailed or other studies citing the candidate study were obtained. Data retrieved from the candidate studies included the first author, publication year, country, study design, participant characteristics and outcomes (odds of response and drop-out). Response was defined as an absolute Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) score or Montgomery-Asberg Depression Scale score reduced by at least 50% from baseline score, or improvement on the Clinical Global Impression scale by the end of treatment. If all three rating scales were used to evaluate the outcome, we selected the HDRS results. At the end of augmentation treatment, odds of response was the primary outcome, and drop-out was a secondary outcome.

Statistical analysis

The dichotomous primary outcome was chosen mainly for clinical reasons. In order to make the interpretation of results easier for clinicians,[12] response rates instead of a continuous symptom score were used for efficacy analysis. If baseline scores, standard deviations (SDs) and endpoint means were provided instead of dichotomous efficacy outcomes, we estimated the number of patients responding with a validated imputation method.[13] To carry out a clinically sound analysis, we used a worst-case scenario analysis of drop-out patients, assuming that all those patients did not respond to treatment.[2]

First, we did a meta-analysis of augmentation agents that had direct comparison with a random-effect model, using RevMan 5.0 (The Nordic Cochrane Centre, The Cochrane Collaboration, Copenhagen) software. For each analysis, we assessed heterogeneity using the X2-based Q-test and I2 index.[14] Second, we performed a multiple-treatment meta-analysis using an arm-based, random-effects model within an empirical Bayes framework.[15] The model allowed for estimating effect sizes for all possible pair-wise comparisons of augmentation agents. We also computed the probability that each antidepressant drug was the most efficacious regimen, the second best, the third best, and so on.[16] The ranking of the competing drugs was assessed with the median of the posterior distribution for the rank of each drug. We did the analysis using WinBUGS (Imperial College and MRC, UK) and R version 2.15.0 (R Development Core Team, Austria).

Finally, we looked at comparative efficacy among the augmentation agents. We expressed this using lithium as reference one, because it has been consistently treated as the reference augmentation agent among the different pair-wise comparisons.

 

Results

Initial electronic searches (including checking of references of studies) obtained 1 905 potentially relevant studies, of which 12 were pooled analyses (Fig. 1).[17-28] All 12 of these studies had obtained ethical approval. Altogether, the 12 studies included 1 936 patients and seven kinds of augmentation agents, namely lithium, tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), atypical antipsychotics (AAPs), antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), buspirone cCgnitive behaviour therapy (CBT) and tri-iodothyronine (T3). The AAPs in this review included quetiapine, ziprasidone and risperidone. The AEDs included lamotrigine, carbamazepine and sodium valproate. Fig. 2 shows the network of eligible comparisons for the multiple-treatments meta-analysis.

 

 

 

 

Direct comparisons between pairs of augmentations (Table 1) showed that efficacy non-significantly favoured: lithium over AEDs; TCAs over lithium; AAPs over buspirone; AEDs over AAPs and buspirone; T3 over lithium, AAPs and buspirone; and CBT over AAPs and buspirone. These results arose from seven independent analyses without adjustment for multiple testing (i.e. approximately two confidence intervals (CIs) would be expected to exclude one by chance alone). For drop-outs, AAPs, AEDs and T3 were better tolerated than lithium, and CBT was better tolerated than AAPs and buspirone. The heterogeneity was moderate for response and drop-out.

 

 

Table 2 summarises the results of the multiple-treatments meta-analysis on response (21 simultaneous comparisons). Lithium was non-significantly less effective than all other augmentation agents except buspirone. Buspirone was non-significantly inferior to all other six augmentation agents. CBT was non-significantly superior to all other augmentations except T3. T3 was non-significantly more effective than all other augmentation agents. In terms of acceptability, lithium was less well tolerated than AAPs, AEDs and T3 (Table 3). Analysis indicated no statistical incoherence in any comparisons of direct to indirect evidence for response rate and drop-out rate.

 

 

Fig. 3 shows the distribution ofprobabilities of each augmentation agent being ranked at each of the possible seven positions (ranked number data shown in Table 4). T3 was the most effective augmentation agent, and buspirone was the worst among the seven augmentation agents. The cumulative probabilities of being the most efficacious augmentation agent were: T3 (42.0%), TCAs (28.7%), CBT (11.9%), AEDs (9.6%), AAPs (4.1%), buspirone (2.9%), lithium (1.0%).

 

 

Discussion

The results of this review might help clinicians to choose appropriate augmentation agents for acute treatment of TRD. In terms of response, T3 and CBT were more effective than other augmentation agents. Lithium was lecs effective than the others except buspirone, and buspirone was less effective than all the other augmentation agents. In terms of acceptability, T3 and CBT were comparable to other augmentation strategies. The results indicated that T3 and CBT might le favourable options when prescribing an acute treatment for TRD, whereas lithium and bupirone might not. As for TCAs, AAPs and AEDs, further RCTs comparing two or more augmentation agents need to be conducted to assess their relative efficacy and acceptability as augmentation agents.

We retrieved almost all the relevant RCTs on augmentation agents. The missed literature that were not indexed by international databases were likely to be of low quality, and consequently would not significantly affect the results of this review.[29]

T3 has been the second-most investigated augmentation strategy after lithium. One study has suggested that T3 and lithium might be equipotent as augmenters. [30] Another demonstrated T3 to be an efficient augmenter, effective in nearly 60% of TRD patients, making it a valuable choice in acute-phase treatment of TRD.[28] Owing to its efficacy and acceptability, T3 has been recommended as an alternative augmentation agent.[31] Results of these three studies were consistent with our results, which were that T3 might be a more effective and acceptable augmentation agent than lithium, TCAs, AAPs, AEDs, buspirone and CBT.

CBT is a type of psychotherapy for the treatment of adults and adolescents with depression.[32] CBT augmentation therapy has been found to be effective for TRD treatment,[33] and our results indicated that CBT could be a good option. However, it might not be possible to implement CBT augmentation practically owing to lack of CBT-trained clinicians in many communities. It should be considered that the approach might need two separate clinicians: one to provide the psychotherapy and the other to prescribe and monitor the medication treatment. Here, good cooperation between clinicians would be a prerequisite for optimal success.

Lithium is one of the best-studied augmentation therapies in the acute-phase treatment of depressed patients who do not respond to antidepressants.[34] However, owing to a lack of RCTs that directly compared lithium to other augmentation agents under similar conditions, whether lithium is better than other augmentation agents or not is largely unknown. Research indicated that there had been no dramatic difference between lithium augmentation and any other augmentation strategies.[35] In this study, we found that lithium was non-significantly inferior to other augmentation agents.

Buspirone is an anxiolytic psychoactive drug of the azapirone chemical class and is primarily used to treat generalised anxiety disorder. Although some studies have shown buspirone to be an effective augmentation agent for clinical depression, our results showed that buspirone might not be as effective when compared with other augmentation agents. Moreover, buspirone has many side-effects, which include nervousness, occasional dizziness, restlessness and headache.[36]

Several factors might contribute to treatment failure, including misdiagnosed or undiagnosed medical conditions. Therefore, clinicians should first review whether the original diagnosis of depression is correct when patients do not respond or only partially respond to an antidepressant. Also, comorbid disorders, such as substance dependence or substance abuse, might affect treatment response. In addition, poor compliance and adverse effects might be additional obstacles to successful treatment. Therefore, clinicians should take these into consideration before prescribing augmentation therapy.

Most trials included in our meta-analysis did not report adequate information about blinded outcome assessment. This might result in subject bias and undermine the validity of our findings. Nonetheless, in terms of design and conduct, all the studies included in this analysis were very similar. Moreover, inadequate information about quality assessment could be a factor of reporting in the text rather than real shortcomings in study design, as has been commonly found in other systematic reviews.[37]

 

Conclusion

T3, as an augmentation agent, might be clinicians' first consideration instead of lithium in the acute treatment of TRD. CBT might be a good augmentation agent in some communities. Buspirone might be the last option to be considered as an augmentation agent. Because of the limitations of the studies included in this meta-analysis, our conclusions require further research, such as well-designed, large controlled trials.

Acknowledgments. We thank Dr NR Pelliri for his assistance in editing and proofreading the manuscript.

 

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Correspondence:
H B Qi
keke_Ou@163.com

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