Monday, March 3, 2008

Depressed Teens More Likely To Get Better With Switch To Combination Therapy

More than half of teenagers with the most debilitating forms of depression that do not respond to treatment with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) show improvement after switching to a different medication combined with cognitive behavioral therapy, researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center and their colleagues in a multicenter study have found.

Dr. Graham Emslie, professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at UT Southwestern and chief of child and adolescent psychiatry at Children's Medical Center Dallas, was a principal investigator in the study appearing in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Adolescents with treatment-resistant depression have unique needs, for which standard treatments do not always work. "If an adolescent hasn't responded to an initial treatment, go ahead and switch treatments," said Dr. Emslie. "Our results should encourage clinicians to not let an adolescent stay on the same medication and still suffer."

The 334 study participants suffered from depression on average for about two years. The teenagers involved exhibited moderate to severe major depressive disorder, many with suicidal ideation. Historically, these types of patients have the worst treatment outcomes.

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