Antidepressants for people with epilepsy and depression

Apr 16, 2021The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Antidepressant use in people with epilepsy and depression

AI simplified

Abstract

Among 626 participants with epilepsy and depression, rates of improvement in depressive symptoms with antidepressants varied from 24% to 97%.

  • More than 50% improvement in depressive symptoms was observed in RCTs ranging from 43% to 82%, while NRSIs showed a range from 24% to 97%.
  • Low-certainty evidence suggests that venlafaxine may improve depressive symptoms more than no treatment, but results are based on a small sample size of 64 participants over 8 to 16 weeks.
  • Seizure frequency data indicated no increased risk of seizures associated with antidepressants compared to control treatments or baseline.
  • Antidepressants did not appear to enhance quality of life compared to control treatments, based on two studies that measured this outcome.
  • Adverse events associated with antidepressants included nausea, dizziness, and sexual dysfunction, but did not show a higher severity or number compared to controls.

AI simplified

what lands in your inbox each week:

  • πŸ“š7 fresh studies
  • πŸ“plain-language summaries
  • βœ…direct links to original studies
  • πŸ…top journal indicators
  • πŸ“…weekly delivery
  • πŸ§˜β€β™‚οΈalways free