Article
Efficacy and Tolerability of Combination Treatments for Major Depression: Antidepressants plus Second-Generation Antipsychotics vs. Esketamine vs. Lithium
Fecha
2021Registro en:
Vázquez, Gustavo H., et al. “Efficacy and Tolerability of Combination Treatments for Major Depression: Antidepressants plus Second-Generation Antipsychotics vs. Esketamine vs. Lithium.” Journal of Psychopharmacology, vol. 35, no. 8, Aug. 2021, pp. 890–900, doi:10.1177/02698811211013579.
Autor
Vázquez, Gustavo
Bahji, Anees
Undurraga, Juan
Tondo, Leonardo
Baldessarini, Ross
Institución
Resumen
Abstract
Background: Successful treatment of major depressive disorder (MDD) can be challenging, and failures ("treatment-resistant depression" [TRD])
are frequent. Steps to address TRD include increasing antidepressant dose, combining antidepressants, adding adjunctive agents, or using
nonpharmacological treatments. Their relative efficacy and tolerability remain inadequately tested. In particular, the value and safety of increasingly
employed second-generation antipsychotics (SGAs) and new esketamine, compared to lithium as antidepressant adjuncts remain unclear.
Methods: We reviewed randomized, placebo-controlled trials and used random-effects meta-analysis to compare odds ratio (OR) versus placebo, as
well as numbers-needed-to-treat (NNT) and to-harm (NNH), for adding SGAs, esketamine, or lithium to antidepressants for major depressive episodes.
Results: Analyses involved 49 drug-placebo pairs. By NNT, SGAs were more effective than placebo (NNT=11 [CI: 9–15]); esketamine (7 [5–10]) and
lithium (5 [4–10]) were even more effective. Individually, aripiprazole, olanzapine+fluoxetine, risperidone, and ziprasidone all were more effective
(all NNT<10) than quetiapine (NNT=13), brexpiprazole (16), or cariprazine (16), with overlapping NNT CIs. Risk of adverse effects, as NNH for most-
frequently reported effects, among SGAs versus placebo was 5 [4–6] overall, and highest with quetiapine (NNH=3), lowest with brexpiprazole (19), 5 (4–6) for esketamine, and 9 (5–106) with lithium. The risk/benefit ratio (NNH/NNT) was 1.80 (1.25–10.60) for lithium and much less favorable for esketamine (0.71 [0.60–0.80]) or SGAs (0.45 [0.17–0.77]).
Conclusions: Several modern antipsychotics and esketamine appeared to be useful adjuncts to antidepressants for acute major depressive episodes,
but lithium was somewhat more effective and better tolerated.
Limitations: Most trials of adding lithium involved older, mainly tricyclic, antidepressants, and the dosing of adjunctive treatments were not optimized.