Duloxetine in the Long-Term Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder

Dec 9, 2003The Journal of clinical psychiatry

Duloxetine for long-term treatment of major depression

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Abstract

A total of 1279 patients provided postbaseline data on the long-term (1 year) safety and efficacy of duloxetine.

  • Significant improvements were observed in depression severity and overall patient improvement scores at all assessment times (p < 0.001).
  • The estimated probability of improvement in severity scores was 40.4% at week 1 and increased to 81.8% by week 52.
  • The rate of treatment-emergent adverse events reported by more than 10% of patients included nausea, insomnia, and headache.
  • Discontinuation due to adverse events occurred in 17.0% of patients, with nausea and somnolence being the most common reasons.
  • Mean changes in vital signs and laboratory values were not clinically significant over the study duration.

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