The use of antidepressants for patients with dementia accompanied by depressive symptoms is widespread, but their clinical efficacy is uncertain. Many of the individual trials of antidepressants have been too small to provide precise estimates of the moderate benefits that might realistically be expected. Combining the information from all appropriate trials may provide a better estimate of the likely effects of treatment.Objectives To determine whether antidepressants are clinically effective and acceptable for the treatment of patients with depression and also dementia.Search methods The CDCIG Specialized Register was last searched on 27 April 2005. This register contains records from major health care databases and many ongoing trials databases and is updated regularly.Medical information departments of pharmaceutical companies were asked to search their databases for any relevant clinical trials. Where necessary authors of trials were approached with requests for additional information.Selection criteria All relevant unconfounded, double-blind, randomized trials comparing any antidepressant drug with placebo, for patients diagnosed as having dementia and depression, according to established criteria.Data collection and analysis Two reviewers extracted data independently and settled any differences by agreement.Main results There were seven included studies with a total of 1140 subjects of which 769 met inclusion criteria. Four included studies reported sufficiently detailed results to enter into meta-analyses, with a total of 137 subjects. Two of these studies investigated the properties of drugs not commonly used in this population with only two studies (Petracca 2001 and Lyketsos 2003) using the more common selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Lyketsos 2003 produced two significant differences in favour of treatment in the Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia (CSDD) at 12 weeks and in the psychiatrists' global rating. However, the CSDD was not used in any of the other studies and no statistical differences were found with the other measures used in the meta-analysis. The meta-analysis of the number of patients suffering at least one adverse event, one event of the nervous system, one event of the gastrointestinal system and one event of dry mouth at 6 to 12 weeks showed a significant difference in favour of placebo. There were no other significant results.Authors' conclusions Available evidence offers weak support to the contention that antidepressants are effective for patients with depression and dementia.However, only four studies are included in the meta-analysis relating to efficacy, and sample sizes are small.Moreover, only two included studies investigated the properties of the more commonly used SSRIs and no studies investigated the properties of newer classes of antidepressants (e.g. selective noradrenergic reuptake inhibitors). This review draws attention to the paucity of research and evidence in this area.
Objective: We suggest that the identification of depression in the medically ill (DMI) might be improved by focussing on cognitive features. Method: We recruited 302 patients to complete our provisional cognitive‐based measure. Subsets also completed one of two comparator screening measures, either the Hospital and Anxiety Depression Scale (HADS) or the Beck Depression Inventory for Primary Care (BDI‐PC). One hundred and sixty patients were then assessed by a psychiatrist who estimated whether they were `clinically depressed' and who also administered a standardized interview for depression (the CIDI). Results: Analyses identified items discriminating clinically depressed and non‐depressed individuals, allowing development of brief (10‐item) and extended (18‐item) measures. The two new measures were compared with the HADS and the BDI‐PC in discriminating depressed and non‐depressed medically ill patients. Conclusion: A cognitive construct‐based approach to assessing depression in the medically ill appears strongly supported. We provide brief (DMI‐10) and extended (DMI‐18) measures that appear to have utility as screening instruments. Consideration of the discriminating items may also assist clinical decision making.
The term 'transcultural psychiatry' has encompassed changing notions of race, culture and psychiatry and, as a result, it is a difficult concept to define. For a long time psychiatrists and social scientists have been commenting on how the psyches and psychiatric illnesses differ in non-White populations. However, transcultural psychiatry was not created as a distinct discipline until after World War II. This article will attempt to tell the story of transcultural psychiatry, charting its genesis in the aftermath of World War II, and then go on to describe how it has taken different forms in response to developments within psychiatry and wider sociocultural changes.
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