Antidepressants for the treatment of people with co-occurring depression and alcohol dependence

Apr 25, 2018The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Antidepressants for treating people with both depression and alcohol dependence

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Abstract

Antidepressants may increase the number of participants abstinent from alcohol during treatment by 71% compared to placebo.

  • Low-quality evidence suggested that antidepressants reduced the severity of depression at the end of trials, but this was not significant after excluding high-bias studies.
  • Very low-quality evidence indicated that antidepressants could increase treatment response, though this also became non-significant after removing high-bias studies.
  • Moderate-quality evidence found that antidepressants increased abstinence rates and reduced the number of drinks per drinking day during treatment.
  • There was no significant difference in the rate of abstinent days between those taking antidepressants and those on placebo.
  • Low-quality evidence showed no differences in dropout rates or adverse events between antidepressants and placebo.

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Full Text

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