joumal of AFFECTIVE DISORDERS Journal of Affective Disorders 30 (1994) 163-173
Response patterns of depressed outpatients with and without melancholia: a double-blind, placebo-controlled of fluoxetine versus placebo John H. Heiligenstein Psychopharmtrcology
DilGion,
*, Gary D. Tollefson,
Douglas
Lilly Research Laboratories, Eli Lilly and Company. Indianapolis, IN 4628.5. USA
(Received I July 1993: revision received
10 September
1993; accepted
trial
E. Faries
Lilly Corporate Center 2128.
23 September
1993)
Abstract Fluoxetine (20 mg/day) and placebo were compared in 89 outpatient men and women with major depression with (n = 52) or without (n = 37) DSM-III-R melancholia in an g-week double-blind study to determine predictors of treatment response. Fluoxetine was statistically superior to placebo both within the melancholic subtype and in the total patient group (all measures). Response rate and mean decrease in 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale total score approached statistical significance in favor of fluoxetine-treated melancholic patients compared
with fluoxetinc-treated non-melancholic patients. There were no statistically significant differences between fluoxctine-treated and placebo-treated non-melancholic patients. Results support DSM-III-R melancholia as a predictor of antidepressant response. Kry words: Melancholia;
Depression;
Reduced rapid eye movement latency; Response predictor: Fluoxetinc
1. Introduction In an effort to more effectively select treatment interventions for depressed patients, clinical researchers have sought to distinguish subtypes of depression that would be predictive of a pharmacologic treatment response. To date, this objective has not been fulfilled. While a variety of putative symptom clusters have been proposed, none reliably describes a depressive subtype pref-
* Corresponding 2025.
author.
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Science
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erentially responsive to biological treatments (Zimmerman and Spitzer, 1989; Zimmerman et al., 1989). The criteria for melancholia are one such example. If a valid predictor, patients meeting criteria for melancholia should be more likely to respond to biological treatment than patients not meeting such criteria. Operational criteria for subtyping depression became available with the Third Edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III) (APA, 1985). Although operational definitions for melancholia had previously been published, they seldom had been validated externally (Zimmerman et al., 1986).
B.V. All rights reserved
placebo-controlled
lzcw patients
with
published.
In
ticnts
with
ct
4 patients with
cholia,
Kickcls and
their
rcxponxc
zolarn 44X
ct al.
wiLh
with cl
ill.
(If
that
melancholic
inc
or
xtivc
scrtratinu treatment
whcrca4 patient\ licnfs
the u’as than
across-group. predict
the
had
greator
tlon-melancholic in
the
melancholic
for
%inimcrrn;in
10X7)
hasi\
ot
both
two
definitions.
hecionia
mactc. with
DSM-III,
the
nine
on
the
thcsc
(0
percentage
1~
Howuvcr,
att
ttot
ot- placcl~o. Spityct-
) of patients
age (50’; c.ritcria
for
tar
to
and
no
\pcctiic
di;i.gnosis
10 1x.
the
with
ticnts
without
lidlCd.
rcsponsc DSM-III-K
tiOWc\CJ’.
ai
it IC;IS hypotttc
0C clepressod incrcac.
p;ttictrt\
%inini~rniari ii higher
that tiith
~‘t
pet-cc’nt.
niclancholia
1twos v,ho met IXM-III criteria ~1.0 date . ;I slud\ ciemot~~traling ticnts
hat.
do inclecd tncc’t DSM-III-K
depression
antidcpt-cssant
along
wherea\
trcquit,cd
changes.
uould
rnclancholia
1tic
wcrc requirctl
ct-itcria
MCI’C necc‘ssary
B;NJ~I
IIOII. 01
six symptoms
Marc
patients 01
and
I summark\
the prcscncc
of the remaining
I’ivc
DSM-III
tnclancholia
hympton-hascd ‘I‘able
chacritcri;t.
(it
treclefincd
0U rcactkity
lack
and
three
In
01. these
edition
fcaturcs.
al. ( I WC)) habc confirmed
rates
2nd
the
4izcc1 Iha!
l’lac‘cl,o-trc~itccl
to active treatment
In ;I I WC) publication.
with-
did
rc\kxI
~yniptom-hasccii
symptoms
rc-
paticttts.
analysis
on
lcmt
found
non-mclan~hc,li~
the
critc-
of antidcthus.
:lJld
validity
AI’A.
Subscc~~iently.
prcdictivc
nol
r-csponxc.
propos,cd
(DSM-III-II:
ot
amitript~l-
respon5c
patients.
same-trcatnicnt
I-esponse
with
than
greater
;tt]d
the
DSM-111
employing
wcrc
trcatmcnt
Icngud
with
dept-csxion.
‘I‘hcy
\tudics
in DSM-III-K,
;I study
tre~i1mcnt
that
mclancholi~i
prcssant
in
01 alprk
In
rm1jor
rate
patient\ difl’cr
doxcpiti
treated
response
mclan-
not
melancholia.
patients
2 01
trcatccl with
with~. . (II _. =: !(#I
DSM-III
~~ 30)
that
that
did
compared
with
I‘cM. lx-
DSM-III
plactzbo.
DSM-III
( IWO)
ria for
25 cornpat-cd
tound
to dniitriptylinc.
paticnth
out
with
(1085)
auggcstccl
Ixcn
to dt-au del’in-
7 patients
melancholia
;IX compared
too
reported
to tlcsipramine among
without
Keimherr
they
154 outpatients
with
had
mclanchc~lia
rcapondetl In
rlcprexscd hacc
01‘ desipramine
( IW5)
although
no responders
placclx~.
al.
DSM-III
tivc conclusions
in
melancholia
a comparison
Stewart
placebo.
studica
DSM-II1
among
(il)‘,
;I prelcrc~ttttal deprcsscd
melancholia
rnelancholin :I
ha5 diffct~enliaI
that1
).
not
vcrsu\ been J’CS[XIJlSC
pi 1x1.~ pub 11)
placebo, with non-melancholic patients having a higher rate of placebo response, has been reported (Peselow et al., 1992). The authors examined the effects of antidepressant and placebo treatment in outpatients with and without melancholic depression using DSM-III criteria. They concluded that the presence of melancholic symptoms was associated with differential response favoring active medication over placebo. However, there was little difference in response to antidepressant treatment between patients with and without melancholia. In the present S-week, multicenter, doublehl;nA Clllil”
c-+..A., JLuuy,
1.70 ,T.-+TC.P.PA WL L”LLltJcl’LU
tha LLIL
off;r..o,..., cLlLLacy
nf “I
fl..nvo ‘I”“r.L-
tine and placebo in outpatients characterized as having DMS-III-R melancholic or non-melancholic depression using a DSM-III-R melancholia checklist at time of entry into the study. We also evaluated efficacy in such patients stratified by the presence or absence of a reduced rapid eye movement latency (RREML), since patients had been so stratified at the time of random assignment to double-blind therapy (Heiligenstein et al., in review). We hypothesized that depressed patients with melancholia would exhibit a superior response to pharmacotherapy relative to placebo in contrast to depressed patients without melancholia.
2. Patients
and Methods
Patients were recruited at six tertiary care centers. Patients included males and females, 18-65 years of age, who met DSM-III-R (APA, 1987) criteria for major depression with the exception that patients must have satisfied these criteria for a minimum of 1 month. Patients were non-psychotic unipolar depressed (either single or recurrent) or bipolar type II depressed (the latter determined by Research Diagnostic Criteria [Spitzer et al., 19771). Patients were required to have a minimum score of 15 on the first 17 items of the 2%item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD,,; Hamilton, 1960). If the patient had a history of recurrent depression, a minimum inter-
val of 10 weeks of euthymia was required between the most recent depressive episodes. Patients were excluded if they were pregnant or lactating, had a serious comorbid medical illness, were considered a serious suicide risk by the screening clinician, or had not responded in the past to three or more antidepressants at a therapeutic dose (200 mg imipramine equivalents) for at least 3 weeks. Additional exclusion criteria were the presence of another axis I disorder within the past year: antisocial personality disorder and/or a history of 3 or more suicide attempts or gestures Aomt ,,f ,.-,,h,hl indepenu~r~l VI an ~~uvavlc conc’urrent K2jjor depressive disorder, melancholic type; fluoxetinc within 12 weeks of screening; conditions or medications that could possibly influence the polysomnographic determination of a RREML with the exception of chloral hydrate: and/or other relative contraindications to fluoxetine.
3. Study design The study was divided into two study periods: a 2-week (14- to IS-day), single-blind, placebo lead-in to eliminate placebo responders and an S-week, double-blind study period. Patients who did not respond to placebo had sleep-staging polysomnography (PSG) for two consecutive nights. Patients were stratified into two groups based upon the mean value of the two PSG ^1,._.:A?.,J rL_.. -,.-&:-.._?I 6,. __: _____ A:-,.” p,luv,uru ,tX”,Ulllg:s, LIIey c”IILIIIlle” L” _^^& ,,,ce:L c,,teria as placebo non-responders at Visit 4 and their Visit 3 urine drug screen was negative. Initially, patients were stratified as having RREML or a non-reduced rapid eye movement latency (N-RREML) based on polysomnographic findings. Within each stratum, patients were randomly assigned to double-blind therapy with fluoxetine 20 mg daily or placebo. An adaptive feature was included in the design which was intended to minimize patient exposure to ineffective or intolerable therapy. This was accomplished by using responses of patients early in the study to increase the probability that patients enrolling later in the study would be randomly assigned to the more effective treatment.
Efficacy was assessed by the HfiMD ,, (Hamilton. lYhO), the Montgomery-Azberg Rating Scale (MADRSI (Montgomery and Asberg. lY7YI. Clinical Global Impressions (CGI )-severity and improvement (Guy, 1976). and Patient Global Impressions (PGI) (Guy, 1976). The HAMD,-, MADRS, and CGI-severity were collected at each visit during the study. CGI-improvement and PGI were collected beginning at Visit 2. ‘The investigator-rated HAMD,, served as the primary efficacy instrument. Open-ended questions by the interviewer at each visit, rather than a standardized form, were used to elicit adverse events. Adverse events analyzed were those that first occurred or worsened following randomization (treatment-emergent adverse events). The US Food and Drug Administration’s COSTART thesaurus ( 1985) was used to ensure uniformity of language in this trial. Four variables, response rates, remission rates. change from baseline in HAMD,? total scores. and weekly change in HAMD ,, total scores, wcrc included in the efficacy analyses. The protocol specified that the primary analysis would bc based upon response rates. A patient whose endpoint HAMD,, total (score) decreased by an amount 2 50% from baseline was defined as a responder to therapy. A patient whose endpoint HAMD,7 total (score) was I 6 at endpoint was defined as a remitter. Response and remission rate analysts included all patients who completed at least .q weeks after randomization. The HAMD,, change analyses included all patients with at least one postbaseline measurement and used a last-visitcarried-forward approach. The weekly HAMD ,: change analysis at each visit included all patients with scores at the visit. In order to assess the efficacy of tluoxetinc compared with placebo, treatment differcnccs in and mean rates, remission rates, response change were analyzed within each HAMD,, group. To test the hypothesis that the presence of DSM-III-R melancholia predicted antidepressant treatment response, data were assessed to detcrmine whether fluoxetine(placebo-) treated patients with melancholia responded in the same manner as fluoxetine(placebo-) treated patients without melancholia. Response rates. remission
rates. and mean HAMD,, change were compared across groups for each treatment. To check the robustness of the results. these analyses (cxcept the weekly analysis) were repeated using the CGI and PGI. The weekly analysis of HAMD,. change was performed to assess the timing of any differences in response between tluoxetine and placebo. Similar analyses have been completed with the MADRS (Heiligenstein et al., in press). Because of the adaptive randomization scheme (Wci and Durham, 1978) Bayesian statistical methodology was used to analyze the data (Press, IYXY). Pl was defined as the true probability 01. response (remission) on placebo and P2 as the true probability of response (remission) on fluoxetine. Bayesian posterior probabilities (Bayes-/‘I. the probability that Pl is greater than P3 given the observed data, were calculated. Bayes-P val< 0.05 or > 0.Y5 were considered statisticalLlCS ly significant. For example, a Bayes-P value ot < 0.05 is strong evidence that fluoxetine has a highct- true response (remission) rate than placebo. while a Bayes-P > 0.95 is strong cvidence that placebo has a higher true response (remission) rate than fluoxetine. A similar analysis was used for change in HAMD,? total scores. Noninformative prior distributions (Press, IYXY) were used in all calculations in order to avoid influencing the posterior distribution for OI against either trcatmcnt.
4. Results One hundred sixty-four outpatients with major depression wcrc enrolled in the single-blind placebo lead-in. A total of 8Y patients were randomly assigned to double-blind therapy. Seventyfive patients were excluded for the following rcasons prior to randomization: 9, placebo response: Y. organic sleep disturbance; 33, entry criteria not met; 3, positive urine drug screen; 13, patient 2, lost to follow-up; decision: 2. noncompliance; ) adverse events; 1, lack of efficacy; and I, enI. tered after the cut-off date. Fifty-two (58.4% 1 patients met DSM-III-R criteria for melancholia and 37 (41.6%) did not. Of the 51 melancholic patients with at least one follow-up visit, 7.1 (45.1%) were assigned to tluoxetine and 2X
J. H. Heiligenstein et al. /Journal Table 2 Demographic
and baseline
of Affectbe
167
Lhsorders 30 (1994) 163-I 73
characteristics
Group/Treatment
n
Age, years mean + SD
% female
% RREML
HAMD ,, total score mean + SD
Depression with melancholia Fluoxetine Placebo
24 28
44.4 * 10.1 39.2? 9.2
54.2 75.0
50.0 53.6
21.6 k 3.2 22.6 f 3.0
Depression without melancholia Fluoxetine 22 Placebo 15
38.4 * 11.2 39.2 f 11.1
12.1 86.7
50.0 46.7
20.3 f 3.5 19.7 * 3.1
Total group Fluoxetine Placebo
41.6 k 10.9 39.2 k 9.8
63.0 79.1
50.0 51.2
21.1 i 3.4 21.6 ? 3.3
HAMD,,
46 43
= 17-item Hamilton
Depression
Rating
Scale. SD = standard
rates and reasons
Reason discontinued
Completed Completed
protocol 3 weeks
Discontinued for: Adverse event Lack of efficacy Other ’
for early discontinuation
Depression
with melancholia
Fluoxetine (n = 24)
Placebo (n = 28)
RREML
= reduced
rapid eye
movement latency.
completed study. In the nonmelancholic group, 14 of 22 (63.6%) fluoxetine-treated and 11 of 15 (73.3%) placebo-treated patients completed the study. Seven of 46 (15.2%) fluoxetine-treated patients and 7 of 43 (16.3%) placebo-treated patients discontinued the study because of an adverse event or lack of efficacy. None of the treatment differences in completion or discontinuation rates were statistically significant. Twenty-one (91.3%) of 24 fluoxetine-treated and 27 of 28 (96.4%) placebo-treated patients in the group with melancholia and 20 of 22 (90.9%) fluoxetine-treated and 15 of 15 (100%) placebotreated patients in the group without melancholia completed at least 3 weeks of treatment and were
(54.9%) to placebo. Of the 37 patients who did not meet criteria for melancholia, 22 (59.5%) were assigned to fluoxetine and 15 (40.5%) were assigned to placebo. Demographic and baseline clinical characteristics of each group of patients are shown in Table 2. Fluoxetine-treated patients had a statistically significantly (Bayes-P = 0.028) higher mean age than their placebo counterparts in the melancholic group. However, this difference (44.4 years to 39.2 years) was not considered clinically significant. Completion rates and reasons for early discontinuation are presented in Table 3. In the melancholic group, 18 of 24 (75%) fluoxetine-treated and 22 of 28 (78.6%) placebo-treated patients
Table 3 Completion
deviation;
‘I Depression Bayes-P
’
Fluoxetine (n = 22) n (%‘)
without
melancholia Placebo (n = 15)
Bayes-P
n (%)
n (%c)
18 (75.0) 21 (91.3)
22 (78.6) 27 (96.4)
0.622 0.867
14 (63.6) 20 (90.9)
11 (73.3) 15 (100)
0.715 0.806
0 (0.0) 2 (8.3) 4 (16.7)
0 (0.0) 5 (17.9) 1 (3.6)
_ 0.821 0.066
2 (9.1) 3 (13.6) 3 (13.6)
0 (0.0) 2 (13.3) 2 (13.3)
0.194 0.522 0.522
’
n (%)
“ All randomly assigned patients included. ’ Bayes-P = Bayesian posterior probabilities. A value > 0.950 or < 0.050 is considered statistically significant. ’ Other category includes lost to follow-up (depression without melancholia: fluoxetine, 2; placebo, l), patient decision (depression with melancholia: fluoxetine, 2; placebo, 0; depression without melancholia: fluoxetine, 1; placebo, l), and protocol requirement (depression with melancholia: fluoxetine, 2; placebo, 1)
eligible for response and remission rate analysts. Table 4 summarizes those rates for fluoxetinc and placebo across subgroups and in the groups combined. Fluoxetine produced a statistically significantly higher response rate in patients with melancholia than placebo (Bayes-P -==0.002): however, there was no significant difference among the patients without melancholia. Ten 01 21 (47.6?) fluoxetinc-treated melancholic patients achieved remission, in contrast to only 3 01. 27 ( 1 I. IV) placebo-treated melancholic patients (Bayes-P = 0.003). When the melancholic and non-melancholic groups wcrc combined, fluoxctine again proved statistically significantly more effective than placebo in achieving a I-esponse (Baycs-P = 0.032) and was also statistically superior to placebo (39.0% vs. 2 1.4c/; ) in achieving a remission (Bayes-P = 0.042). Fig. I shows the baseline-to-endpoint mean change in HAMD ,? scores for patients by group
Tabltl -1 HAMD,-.
responw
and remission rate analysts
Groupjtrcatment
II 2 -3
Response ”
Week3
Depression
II
Kcmiwon
(Y )
”
II (‘;)
with melancholia
Fluoxrtine
71
Placebo
17
I5 (71.4)
’
Bayes-f’
Depression
IO (37.(l)
x (2c).6)
i(l1.l)
0.00’
O.O(l3
without melancholia
Fluoxetinc
20
PlacetX,
Ii
(1 lilJ.il)
IO (50.0) 0 (60.1))
Baye\-f’
(1.711
(> I-IO (1) II :III
Ih (31).(1)
l’ota1group Fluoxetinc
41
2s (hl.ll)
Placebo
32
I7 (50.5)
Uuye\-f’
‘) (21.4
0.037
I I.1142
Across groups Fluoxetine
l&yes-f
j’
0.0?3
O.l.%l
PlGXll~~
BaycG
”
0.(1.30
(1.(117
I’ ~50’; week\
decrease
in HAMD,,
total
with ;i minimum
01 1
of therapy.
” FiAMD,:
total
1 h at endpoint
with ;I minimum
ot 7 \seekr
of therap’. ’ &yes-P
=
Bayesian posterior
or < 0.050is considered ” Bayes-P =
Bayesian posterior
across gwup within treatment. conaidel-cd \tatktically
prohabilitie\.
statistically
probabilities A value
significant.
(l.Wl
A \;ilue
significant. comparing
:, 0.‘)50 or
rates
,: 0.050 IS
I II -14
’
Patients With Melancholia
LJ Placebo
Patients Without Melancholia
** Total Patient Sample
and for the groups combined. Fluoxctine was statistically significantly superior to placebo in the group with melancholia (Bayes-P = 0.001) and in the total group (Bayes-P = 0.008). There was no difference between fluoxetinc and placebo in the group without melancholia. Although not necessarily appropriate when using adaptive randomination. an analysis of variance on HAMD,-, changes was pcrformcd as a secondary analysis and a statistically significant interaction betwcan treatment and melancholia status was obscn/ed. Fig. 2 illustrates the mean HAMD,, change by week for the melancholic group, the nonmelancholic group, and the total group, rcspcctively. Separation between fluoxetine-treated and placebo-treated patients with melancholia began as early as Week I (Bayes-P = 0.063). reached statistical significance as early as Week 2 (BayesI’ = O.OSO), and was statistically significant with adjustment for multiplicity at Weeks 5. 7. and 8 (Hommell, lY88). In the total sample with adjustmcnt for multiplicity, fluoxetinc demonstrated statistically significant differences from placch~j beginning at Week I and continuing throughout the study. ‘l‘herc were no statistically significant differences between fluoxetinc and placebo in the group of patients without melancholia. In comparing results in fluoxetinc-treated patients (with and without melancholia) across groups (Table 41, fluoxetine-treated patients with
J. H. HcGligensiein et al. / Jourrral of Affktil,e
melancholia had numerically greater response and remission rates as well as a greater mean decrease in HAMD,, scores than fluoxetine-treated patients without melancholia. These differences approached statistical significance for response rates (Bayes-P = 0.085) and mean decrease in HAMD,, scores (Bayes-P = 0.051). For placebotreated patients, response and remission rates as well as decrease in HAMD,, scores were statistically significantly greater (Bayes-P = 0.030, 0.017, and 0.042, respectively) in the group without melancholia than in the group with melancholia. CGI-severity change, CGI-improvement response rates, and PGI-improvement response rates are summarized in Table 5. Statistically significant differences for fluoxetine-treated compared with placebo-treated patients in the group with melancholia were seen for CGI-improvement response rates (Bayes-P = 0.0021, CGIseverity baseline-to-endpoint change (Bayes-1’ = 0.007), and PGI-improvement response rates (Bayes-P = 0.003). There was no statistically significant difference between fluoxetine and placebo on any of these efficacy measures in patients without melancholia. When comparing fluoxetine-treated patients across groups (with and without melancholia), fluoxetine was statistically significantly more effective in patients with melancholia than in patients without melancholia based on change in
Disordm
164
30 (I YY4/ It% 17-3
CGI-severity (Bayes-P = 0.045). A trend toward greater efficacy for fluoxetine in the patients with melancholia compared with the patients without melancholia was found based on CGI-improvement response (Bayes-P = 0.085 ). In contrast to fluoxetine, placebo was statistically significantly more effective in the group without melancholia than in the group with melancholia based on change in CGI-severity and endpoint CGI-improvement rates (Bayes-I’ = 0.021 and 0.030, respectively). A trend toward significance was found in PGI-improvement rcsponse rates (Bayes-P = 0.05 1). In addition to the above analyses, an analysis of the HAMD,, was completed for patients in each of the following subgroups: patients with melancholia with a reduced rapid eye movement latency (RREML), patients with melancholia without a RREML (N-RREML), patients without melancholia with RREML, and patients without melancholia without a RREML. The results of these analyses are presented in Table 6. As can be seen, fluoxetine-treated patients with melancholia and RREML had statistically significantly greater response and remission rates than placebo-treated patients (Bayes-P = 0.008 and 0.032, respectively) and had a statistically significant greater baseline-to-endpoint reduction in the HAMD,, (Bayes-P = 0.002). Fluoxetine-treated patients with melancholia but without RREML
Table 5
Clinical global improvement (CGI) and patient global improvement Group/treatment
Depression Fluoxetine Placebo Bayes-P
,1
II 1 3 Weeks
CGI-severity
(PGI) analyses mean + SD
Baseline
Change
CGI-improvement response h
PGI-improvement response ‘
”
with melancholia 23 28
21 27
4.04 * 0.37 4.18 + 0.48
-1.70+ 1.36 -0.75 * 1.27 0.007
IS (71.4) 8 (29.6) 0.002
1s (71.4) 9 (33.3) 0.00s
22 1s
20 15
3.82 + 0.66 4.00 + 0.65
- 1.09 k 0.92 -1.67k 1.54 0.918
10 (50.0) 9 (60.0) 0.714
IO (50.0) 9 (60.0) 0.714
’
Depression without melancholia Fluoxetine Placebo Bayes-P “ h ’ ’
’
Change in CGI-severity score from baseline to endpoint. CGI-improvement endpoint score I 2 with at least 3 weeks of treatment. PGI-improvement endpoint score 5 2 with at least 3 weeks of treatment. Bayes-P = Bayesian posterior probabilities. A value > 0.950 or < 0.050 is considered
statistically
significant.
had ;I statistically significantly greater remission rate (Bayes-f-’ = 0.025) and a trend toward ;t significantly grater rcsponsc rate (Baycs-I’ = 0.060) and greater baseline-to-endpoint change (Baycs-f’ = 0.093) compared with placebo. There were no statistically significant differences in fluoxetinetreated and placebo-treated patients in either the categorical or the continuous efficacy mcasurcs in the RREML and N-RREML. groups without melancholia. Treatment-emergent adverse events were XI;Ilyzed by group. In the group of patients with melancholia. significantly
somnolence more
often
occurred
statistically
in the fluoxetine-tre;ltect (20.85) than in the placebo-treated patients (3.6“;) whereas headache (lh.7r)i vs. Y9.35 ). clyspepsia (4.2”; vs. 21.4c: ). nausea (0.0% vs. 14.3’~; ). and palpitation (O.O’/i vs. 14.3% ) occurred statistically significantly more often in the placrbotreated than in the fluoxetine-treated patients. In
N-RREMI. Depression with melancholia Fluoxctirw
PlacL!tx) Hay<\-/’ ’ Depression Fluoxctint,
Placeh~~ Bayed’
without melancholia
the patients without melancholia, only diarrhea showed it statistically significant differcncc (22.7%. tluoxetine-treateclit~d patients: O.Wi. placcbo-treated paticnta). None 01’ the patients in this study attempted suicide. The suicidality item l’rom the HAM11 (Item 3) ~calc was analyzed to compare the treatments with respect to their ef’fcct on suicidality. The ~IIC;III change in HAMD Item 3 for tluoxctine and placebo is shown in Table 7. Fluoxctinetreated patients demonstrated ;I statistically bignil’icant grater reduction in HAMD Item 3 scorch than placebo-treated patients in the melancholic group and in the total group. Two patients cxpc rienccd cmcrgcnt suicidal ideation (an increase in baseline HAMD Item 3 from 0 or I to a KOI‘C ot 3 or 4 at any time during double-blind therapy). Both of thcsc patients had been randomly ahsignal to placebo (one with melancholia and one without melancholia).
J.H. Hriligenstrin et al. /Journal
of Affectire
,
1
0’ Baseline Placebo Fluoxetine
20 24
1
I 2
I 3
28 23
27 22
27 21
I 4 Week 27 20
I
I 5
6
I 7
I 6
23 20
22 20
22 19
22 19
(b) Patients Without Melancholia 25
171
5. Comment
(a) Patients With Melancholia 25
Disorders 30 (1994) 163-l 73
,
I
“:I , , , , , , , ,I Baseline
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
6
15 17
10 14
11 14
11 14
In this study, 58.4% of depressed outpatients met DSM-III-R criteria for melancholia. This compares favorably with the rate reported by Zimmerman et al. (1989). In patients with melancholia, treatment with fluoxetine 20 mg per day statistically significantly outperformed placebo. Fluoxetine-treated patients with melancholia had statistically significantly greater reduction in HAMD,, scores than patients with melancholia treated with placebo. Among patients with melancholia completing 3 or more weeks after random assignment, fluoxetine-treated patients had statistically significant greater response rates (71.4% vs. 29.6%) and remission rates (47.6% vs. 11.1%) than placebo-treated patients. These findings support the hypothesis that patients with melancholia are more likely to derive substantial benefit from pharmacologic treatment than from placebo. As expected, placebo treatment in patients with melancholia met with minimal success. Separation between fluoxetine-treated and placebo-treated patients with melancholia began as early as Week 1 and achieved statistical significance at Weeks 2, 4, 5, 7 and 8 (see Fig. 2a). In
Week Placebo Fluoxetine
15 22
15 22
15 22
15 20
14 19
Table 7 Suicidality
(c) Total Patient Sample 25
, 0
Placebo
n
Flumetine
analysis
Group/treatment
Depression
n
HAMD
Item 3
Baseline
Change
- 0.65 *0.x3
with melancholia
Fluoxetine
23
0.78 + 0.80
Placebo
28
0.75 * 0.65
Bayes-P ” 5-
E i
Ui
Baseline Placebo Fluoxetine
43 46
,
,
1
2
3
43 45
42 44
42 41
I
I
4 Week 41 39
I
I
I’
5
6
7
6
30 37
32 34
33 33
33 32
I
Fig. 2. Mean HAMD,, change by week for depressed patients with melancholia (A) and without melancholia (B) and for the total patient sample (0. Asterisks denote a statistically significant treatment difference (* = Bayes-P < 0.05; * * = Bayes-P < 0.01).
0.00 + 0.94 O.OOh
Depression without melancholia Fluoxetine 22 1.14_to.77 Placebo 15 0.73_+0.70 Bayes-P ”
- 0.64 * 0.79 - 0.40 i 0.74 0.182
Total group Fluoxetine Placebo Bayes-P ”
- 0.64 +0.x0 -0.14~0.8Y 0.003
45 43
0.96 f 0.80 0.74 + 0.66
HAMD Item 3 = suicide item of the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale. a Bayes-P = Bayesian posterior probabilities. A value > 0.950 or < 0.050 is considered statistically significant.
the total
patient
;I atalistically bcginninp mcnt.
group.
significant the
first
In contrast,
cholia.
there
fcrcncc4
fluoxctinr
clcmonstrated
separation
I‘r-om placcb~~
week
after
were
or mean
in HAMD,,
change
lack of difference
without
In comparing ticnth
with
rates
of
the
This
in
that
the
tients
with
melancholia
of biologic
depression
to sclcctivc
serotonin
paticnta
I-ia for
;I RREML
melancholia.
htantial
overlap
ratorq
markers.
t’ound
that
RREMI, fluoxctine with
based
a purer
form
response
inhibitors.
only
3)
01 5
I (3 l.tYi ) also had ;I 76 of 44 t5CI. 1’; 1 pa-
only
met DSM-III-R
also
‘This
suggests
with
both
followctl
without
crite-
;t lack of sub-
and
these clinical
were those most likely
melancholia
sugoutpa-
a robust
Nonetheless.
response.
outpatients depressed
labo-
subgroup
analysts mclancholin and ;I to have :I positive next
1~)’ patients
a RREML..
In this study, tluoxetinc overall was both saf’e rffcctivc. There wcrc few patient discontinuations lxx~use of’ lack of efficacy or an adverse event. ‘l‘hc study corroborated that tluoxetine was associated with ;I statistically significantly greater reduction in suicidality (based on HAM11 Item 3) than placebo. Only two patients, both assigned to and
placebr) by random allocation. cxpcrienced 8 trcatliient-associated emergence ol’ substantial \uicid;tl idcation. There were no suicide attempts
placeho-
pharmacother~tpy. While requiring further \alidation, this observation should bc helpful to both health care providers and health care utilization i-c\icMs agcncics to cnsurc that melancholic dcprcssion is aggressively diagnosed and succce l’ully treated. The data by no means counter \omatic
treatments
for
non-melancholic
paticrits.
Rather. f’~)r both practicing clinicians and IXhcarchers alike. they suggest that ;I greater hetcrogcneity of factors may bc invol\~cd. The data t’urthcr suggest that placebo rcsponsc can bc I~Cduccd when targeting ;I clinical subtype of nl:tjo~dcprcssion characterized with melancholia. I:uturn studies in response prediction and placcbtrrcsponsc profiling iiru awaited.
tluoxctinc-truate~l
melancholia
between
patients
on
or the
In summar>. the most important finding in lhis study was that the presence of melancholia prcdictcd a more favorable treatment response to
Furthermore.
may exhibit and/or
with
C‘onverscly,
with
depression
of
that
subtyped
RREML..
tients
in am-
study
DSM-III-R
in
bs
first the
uptake
i\ 01’ interest
rcsultk antide-
response.
population
ap-
scores
as ;I mean4
of
efficacy
in pa-
a superior
placebo-treated
gests
It
in
rcsponsc
[Thcsc
is the
supportive
treatment
with
of fluox~tinc
in HAMD,-
melancholic
diffcrencc
compared
to t’luoxetine
melancholia
patients
This
placebo
melancholia.
can predict
response].
antidepressant
ba~elinc.
significance.
DSM-III-R
bulatory
remission.
by ;I greater
response
dccreasc
practitioners
subtyping
from
without
pressant
diiand
melancholia.
statistical
support which
significant
response.
the efficacy
and
and mean
proached
in
was driven
a laser
and/or
melan-
fluoxctine-trcatcd
patients
the patients
assipn-
without
no statistically
bctwccn
placeho-lrentcd
effect
random
among patients
in cithcr the fluoxctine-treated treated patients.
6. References
Reimherr. F.W.. Chouinard. G., Cohn, C.K., Cole, J.O., Itil, T.M.. Lapierre, Y.D.. Masco. H.L. and Mendels, J. (19YO) Antidepressant efficacy of sertraline: a double-blind, placebo- and amitriptyline-controlled. multicenter comparison study in outpatients with major depression. .I. Clin. Psychiatry 51 (Suppl. B). 1X-27. Rickels. K., Feighner, J.D. and Smith. W.T. (1985) Alprazolam, amitriptylinc. doxepin and placebo in the treatment of depression. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 41. 134-141. Spitzer, R.L.. Endicott. J. and Robins, E. (1977) Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC) for a Selected Group of Functional Disorders, 3rd Edn. Biometrics Research. New York, NY. Stewart, J.W., McGrath. P.J., Liebowitz, M.R., Harrison. W.M.. Quitkin, F.M. and Rabkin. J.G. (10x5) Treatment outcome validation of DSM-III depressive subtypes. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 42, 113X-l 153.
US Food and Drug Administration (IYXS). COSTART Coding Symbols for Thesaurus of Adverse Reaction Terms. 2nd Edn. Rockville. Md, Food and Drug Administration. Wei, L.J. and Durham. S. (1978) The randomized play-thrwinner rule in medical trials. J. Am. Stat. .As\oc. 73. 840-X43. Zimmerman, M.. C‘oryell. W.. Pfohl. B. and Stangl. D. (IOH6) The validity of four definitions of endogenous depression. II. Clinical. demographic, familial, and psychosocial corrclates. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 43, 234-244. Zimmerman. M. and Spitrer. R.L. (1YXY) Mclanchtrlia: from DSM-III to DSM-III-R. Am. J. Psychiatry 1%. X-78. Zimmerman, M.. Black. D.W. and Coryell, W. (IYXY) Diagnostic criteria for melancholia: the comparative validity of DSM-III and DSM-III-R. Arch. Gcn. Psychiatry 4(x X)136X.