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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2007 Aug;101(1-3):57-63.
doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2006.10.023. Epub 2006 Dec 6.

Clinical factors associated with relapse in primary care patients with chronic or recurrent depression

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Clinical factors associated with relapse in primary care patients with chronic or recurrent depression

Shamin Gopinath et al. J Affect Disord. 2007 Aug.

Abstract

Background: Because in most patients depression is a relapsing/remitting disorder, finding clinical factors associated with risk of relapse is important. The majority of patients with depression are treated in primary care settings, but few previous studies have examined predictors of relapse in primary care patients with recurrent or chronic depression.

Methods: Data from a cohort of 386 primary care patients in a clinical trial were analyzed for clinical and demographic predictors of relapse over a one-year post-study observational period. Patients were selected for a high risk of relapse, based on a history of either 3 previous depressive episodes or dysthymia, and enrolled in a randomized trial of relapse prevention.

Results: Factors found to be associated with significantly higher risk of relapse included poorer medication adherence in the 30 days prior to the trial, lower self-efficacy to manage depression, and higher scores on the Child Trauma Questionnaire.

Limitations: Use of a sample of limited diversity taken from a clinical trial, and use of retrospective information from patients with potential for recall bias.

Conclusions: The findings of this report suggest specific risk factors to be targeted in depression relapse prevention interventions. It is encouraging that two of the factors associated with increased risk of relapse, self-efficacy and medication adherence have been seen to improve with the intervention utilized in the primary care trial from which the studied cohort was drawn.

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