Psychological therapies for treatment-resistant depression in adults

No SJR dataMay 16, 2018The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Psychological treatments for adults with depression that doesn't respond to usual care

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Abstract

A random-effects meta-analysis of five trials (n = 575) showed that psychotherapy added to usual care improved self-reported depressive symptoms by an average of 4.07 points on the Beck Depression Inventory scale over the short term.

  • Psychotherapy combined with usual care is associated with significant improvement in depressive symptoms compared to usual care alone.
  • Moderate-quality evidence indicates that psychotherapy may enhance remission rates (RR 1.92) in adults with treatment-resistant depression.
  • No significant difference in dropout rates was observed between the psychotherapy and usual care groups, suggesting similar acceptability.
  • Low-quality evidence suggests that cognitive-behavioral therapy may lead to lower depression scores over medium and long terms.
  • Serious adverse events were reported only in the usual care group, occurring in 4.2% of participants.

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