1.The Effect of Initial Duloxetine Dosing Strategy on Nausea in Korean Patients with Major Depressive Disorder.
Min Soo LEE ; Yong Min AHN ; Seockhoon CHUNG ; Richard WALTON ; Joel RASKIN ; Mun Sung KIM
Psychiatry Investigation 2012;9(4):391-399
OBJECTIVE: To assess the relative severity of nausea in patients from Korea with major depressive disorder (MDD) who were treated with duloxetine at low (30 mg) or high (60 mg) doses, with or without food, for the first week of an 8 week treatment. METHODS: Adult patients (n=249), with MDD and a 17-item Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HAMD17) score of > or =15, received open-label once daily duloxetine. At Week 0, patients were randomized to 4 groups: 30 mg with food (n=63), 60 mg with food (n=59), 30 mg without food (n=64), and 60 mg without food (n=63). At Week 1, all patients switched to duloxetine 60 mg for 7 weeks. The primary outcome measure was item 112 (nausea) of the Association for Methodology and Documentation in Psychiatry adverse event scale. Effectiveness was assessed by change in HAMD17 total score. RESULTS: Overall, 94.4% (235/249) of patients completed Week 1 and 55.0% (137/249) of patients completed the study. For Week 1, nausea was significantly less severe for patients who received 30 mg compared with 60 mg duloxetine (p=0.003), regardless of food intake. In all groups, nausea severity was highest at Week 1 and declined throughout the study. HAMD17 score was reduced in all groups and the most common adverse event reported was nausea (145/249; 58.2%). CONCLUSION: To minimize nausea, Korean patients with MDD who require duloxetine treatment could be given 30 mg once daily, regardless of food, for the first week followed by 60 mg once daily for the course of therapy.
Adult
;
Depression
;
Depressive Disorder, Major
;
Eating
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Nausea
;
Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
;
Thiophenes
;
Duloxetine Hydrochloride
2.The frequency and severity of symptoms of major depression in Chinese patients with chronic, medically unexplained, painful physical symptoms who present to a general neurology clinic
Jianping Jia ; Wei Qu ; Weiping Wu ; Liyong Wu ; Lingqiu Meng ; Dong Zhou ; Zhen Hong ; Joel Raskin ; Susanna Holt ; Richard Walton ; Shenghu Wu
Neurology Asia 2011;16(4):329-341
This cross-sectional, non-interventional, observational study evaluated depression in patients in China
who presented to a general neurologist with chronic, medically unexplained, painful physical symptoms.
Of the 402 patients enrolled, 197 patients (49.0%) met the criteria for a current major depressive episode
(MDE+ group), as assessed using module A of the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview, and
205 patients (51.0%) did not (MDE- group). The mean pain severity visual analogue scale (VAS) score
was signifi cantly higher in the MDE+ group than the MDE- group (65.3 vs 55.6 mm; p<0.001). The
mean depression severity score, as assessed using the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9),
was 8.4 units (95% CI: 7.3 to 9.5) higher in the MDE+ group than the MDE- group (mean PHQ-9
total score: 14.8 vs 6.4). Anxiety and perceived health state were signifi cantly worse, on average, in the
MDE+ group (mean Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale anxiety subscale score 10.7 vs 5.9 units;
mean EuroQoL-5 Dimensions VAS score 56.4 vs 67.7 mm; each p<0.001). Only 14.2% of patients
had received treatment for depression during the past 3 months. These results suggest depression was
common and may have been under-treated in this group of Chinese patients with chronic, medically
unexplained painful physical symptoms.
3.Association between Painful Physical Symptoms and Clinical Outcomes in Korean Patients with Major Depressive Disorder: A Three-Month Observational Study.
Min Soo LEE ; Sun Young YUM ; Jin Pyo HONG ; Se Chang YOON ; Jai Sung NOH ; Kwang Hun LEE ; Jung Ki KIM ; Sang Yeol LEE ; Pritibha SINGH ; Tamas TREUER ; Victoria REED ; Joel RASKIN
Psychiatry Investigation 2009;6(4):255-263
OBJECTIVE: This paper aims to examine the association between painful physical symptoms (PPS) and major depressive disorder (MDD) in a naturalistic clinical practice setting within a Korean population. METHODS: Patients with acute MDD that joined a multicountry, observational, three-month study in six Asian countries and regions were classified as PPS+ (mean score > or =2) and PPS- (mean score <2) using the modified Somatic Symptom Inventory. In this analysis, we report the results from the Korean subset, where depression severity was assessed using the Clinical Global Impression of Severity (CGI-S) scale and 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD(17)). Pain severity was measured using a visual analogue scale (VAS), while the EuroQoL (EQ-5D) assessed patient well-being. RESULTS: Of 198 patients, 45.96% (91/198) of patients were classified as PPS+, of which 78.02% (71/91) were women. PPS+ patients had significantly more severe depression at baseline {CGI-S score, mean [standard deviation (SD)], PPS+: 5.09 [0.79]; PPS-: 4.63 [0.76]; p<0.001; HAMD(17) total score, mean [SD], PPS+: 24.34 [5.24]; PPS-: 20.76 [5.12]; p<0.001} and poorer quality of life [EQ-5D overall health state, mean (SD), PPS+: 39.37 (20.52); PPS-: 51.27 [20.78]; p<0.001] than PPS- patients. Both groups improved significantly (p<0.001) in depression and pain severity outcomes, as well as quality of life by endpoint, but no significant within-group baseline-to-endpoint change wase observed. CONCLUSION: The frequency of PPS was common in Korean patients with MDD, and was associated with more severe depression, poorer quality of life, and a trend towards poorer clinical outcome.
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Depression
;
Depressive Disorder
;
Depressive Disorder, Major
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Quality of Life
4.Association between Painful Physical Symptoms and Clinical Outcomes in Korean Patients with Major Depressive Disorder: A Three-Month Observational Study.
Min Soo LEE ; Sun Young YUM ; Jin Pyo HONG ; Se Chang YOON ; Jai Sung NOH ; Kwang Hun LEE ; Jung Ki KIM ; Sang Yeol LEE ; Pritibha SINGH ; Tamas TREUER ; Victoria REED ; Joel RASKIN
Psychiatry Investigation 2009;6(4):255-263
OBJECTIVE: This paper aims to examine the association between painful physical symptoms (PPS) and major depressive disorder (MDD) in a naturalistic clinical practice setting within a Korean population. METHODS: Patients with acute MDD that joined a multicountry, observational, three-month study in six Asian countries and regions were classified as PPS+ (mean score > or =2) and PPS- (mean score <2) using the modified Somatic Symptom Inventory. In this analysis, we report the results from the Korean subset, where depression severity was assessed using the Clinical Global Impression of Severity (CGI-S) scale and 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD(17)). Pain severity was measured using a visual analogue scale (VAS), while the EuroQoL (EQ-5D) assessed patient well-being. RESULTS: Of 198 patients, 45.96% (91/198) of patients were classified as PPS+, of which 78.02% (71/91) were women. PPS+ patients had significantly more severe depression at baseline {CGI-S score, mean [standard deviation (SD)], PPS+: 5.09 [0.79]; PPS-: 4.63 [0.76]; p<0.001; HAMD(17) total score, mean [SD], PPS+: 24.34 [5.24]; PPS-: 20.76 [5.12]; p<0.001} and poorer quality of life [EQ-5D overall health state, mean (SD), PPS+: 39.37 (20.52); PPS-: 51.27 [20.78]; p<0.001] than PPS- patients. Both groups improved significantly (p<0.001) in depression and pain severity outcomes, as well as quality of life by endpoint, but no significant within-group baseline-to-endpoint change wase observed. CONCLUSION: The frequency of PPS was common in Korean patients with MDD, and was associated with more severe depression, poorer quality of life, and a trend towards poorer clinical outcome.
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Depression
;
Depressive Disorder
;
Depressive Disorder, Major
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Quality of Life
5.Association between painful physical symptoms and clinical outcomes in Chinese patients with major depressive disorder: a three-month observational study.
Hui-chun LI ; Ming-yuan ZHANG ; Gang WANG ; Hong-geng ZHANG ; Hong-yan ZHANG ; Ying LIU ; Ming LI ; Cong-pei ZHANG ; Ji-sheng TANG ; Wen-yuan WU ; Pritibha SINGH ; Renee Elizabeth GRANGER ; Joel RASKIN ; Qiu-qing ANG
Chinese Medical Journal 2010;123(15):2063-2069
BACKGROUNDPainful physical symptoms (PPS) may present as a component of major depressive disorder (MDD). Their effect in Chinese patients has not been investigated. This analysis reports the changes in disease severity, treatment patterns, quality of life and outcomes in a Chinese cohort according to the presence (PPS+) or absence (PPS-) of painful physical symptoms.
METHODSA subgroup of Chinese patients from a large observational 3-month study of patients from Asian countries and regions of China were classified using the modified Somatic Symptom Inventory (SSI) as PPS+ (mean score >or= 2) or PPS- (mean score < 2). Depression severity was assessed with the Clinical Global Impression of Severity (CGI-S) scale and 17-item Hamilton depression rating scale (HAMD(17)). Pain severity was measured using a visual analogue scale (VAS), while the EuroQoL (EQ-5D) assessed patient well-being. Antidepressants were compared with regard to their efficacy.
RESULTSOf the 299 Chinese patients enrolled in the study, 105 were classified as PPS+ (73/105, 70% women). At baseline, PPS+ patients reported greater pain severity (VAS, mean (SD): 49.56 (26.49) vs. 16.60 (20.99) for PPS-, P < 0.01), were more depressed (HAMD(17), mean (SD): 25.32 (5.47) vs. 23.33 (5.24) for PPS-, P = 0.002) and had poorer quality of life (EQ-5D Health State, mean (SD): 38.48 (22.38) vs. 49.57 (18.54) for PPS-, P < 0.001). PPS+ patients showed less overall improvement in depressive symptom severity (HAMD(17), change from baseline (95%CI): -17.38 (-18.65, -16.12) vs. -19.20 (-20.05, -18.35) for PPS-, P = 0.032; CGI-S, change from baseline (95%CI): -2.85 (-3.11, -2.58) vs. -3.20 (-3.38, -3.02) for PPS-, P = 0.044).
CONCLUSIONSPPS were less frequent than expected compared with previous studies of Asian populations. PPS+ were associated with greater MDD severity and less improvement than PPS- when antidepressants were given.
Adult ; Antidepressive Agents ; therapeutic use ; Asian Continental Ancestry Group ; Depressive Disorder, Major ; drug therapy ; pathology ; physiopathology ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Pain ; drug therapy ; pathology ; physiopathology ; Quality of Life ; Severity of Illness Index