Kate L Harkness, Trisha Chakrabarty, Sakina J Rizvi, Raegan Mazurka, Lena Quilty, Rudolf Uher, Roumen V Milev, Benicio N Frey, Sagar V Parikh, Jane A Foster, Susan Rotzinger, Sidney H Kennedy, Raymond W Lam
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The purpose of the current study is to examine the differential associations of emotional, physical, and sexual maltreatment to ADM outcome and to examine the unique role of anhedonia in driving poor response in patients with specific maltreatment histories.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>In a multicentre clinical trial of major depression, 164 individuals were assessed for childhood emotional, physical, and sexual maltreatment with a contextual interview with independent, standardized ratings. All individuals received 8 weeks of escitalopram, with nonresponders subsequently also receiving augmentation with aripiprazole, with outcomes measured with depression rating scales and an anhedonia scale.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Greater severity of emotional maltreatment perpetrated by the mother was a significant and direct predictor of lower odds of week 16 remission (odds ratio [OR] = 1.68, <i>P</i> = 0.02). In contrast, the relations of paternal-perpetrated emotional maltreatment and physical maltreatment to week 16 remission were indirect, mediated through greater severity of anhedonia at week 8.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>We identify emotional maltreatment as a specific early exposure that places patients at the greatest risk for nonremission following pharmacological treatment. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
目的:儿童虐待是抗抑郁药物(ADM)不良反应风险的一个有效环境标志物。然而,儿童虐待是一个异质性的结构,包括不同的暴露,具有不同的神经生物学和心理学相关。本研究的目的是研究情感、身体和性虐待与ADM结果的不同关联,并研究快感缺乏症在特定虐待史患者中导致不良反应的独特作用。方法:在一项多中心重度抑郁症临床试验中,164名个体通过独立、标准化评分的情境访谈,评估其童年时期的情绪、身体和性虐待。所有患者均接受8周艾司西酞普兰治疗,无应答者随后也接受阿立哌唑强化治疗,结果用抑郁评定量表和快感缺乏症量表测量。结果:母亲情绪虐待的严重程度是第16周缓解几率较低的显著直接预测因子(比值比[OR] = 1.68, P = 0.02)。相反,父亲施加的情感虐待和身体虐待与第16周缓解的关系是间接的,通过第8周更严重的快感缺乏来调节。结论:我们确定情绪虐待是一种特殊的早期暴露,使患者在药物治疗后出现不缓解的风险最大。此外,我们认为快感缺乏是一个关键的症状领域驱动不缓解的患者有特殊的虐待史。
The Differential Relation of Emotional, Physical, and Sexual Abuse Histories to Antidepressant Treatment Remission and Persistence of Anhedonia in Major Depression: A CAN-BIND-1 Report.
Objective: Childhood maltreatment is a potent enviromarker of risk for poor response to antidepressant medication (ADM). However, childhood maltreatment is a heterogeneous construct that includes distinct exposures that have distinct neurobiological and psychological correlates. The purpose of the current study is to examine the differential associations of emotional, physical, and sexual maltreatment to ADM outcome and to examine the unique role of anhedonia in driving poor response in patients with specific maltreatment histories.
Methods: In a multicentre clinical trial of major depression, 164 individuals were assessed for childhood emotional, physical, and sexual maltreatment with a contextual interview with independent, standardized ratings. All individuals received 8 weeks of escitalopram, with nonresponders subsequently also receiving augmentation with aripiprazole, with outcomes measured with depression rating scales and an anhedonia scale.
Results: Greater severity of emotional maltreatment perpetrated by the mother was a significant and direct predictor of lower odds of week 16 remission (odds ratio [OR] = 1.68, P = 0.02). In contrast, the relations of paternal-perpetrated emotional maltreatment and physical maltreatment to week 16 remission were indirect, mediated through greater severity of anhedonia at week 8.
Conclusions: We identify emotional maltreatment as a specific early exposure that places patients at the greatest risk for nonremission following pharmacological treatment. Further, we suggest that anhedonia is a key symptom domain driving nonremission in patients with particular maltreatment histories.
期刊介绍:
Established in 1956, The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry (The CJP) has been keeping psychiatrists up-to-date on the latest research for nearly 60 years. The CJP provides a forum for psychiatry and mental health professionals to share their findings with researchers and clinicians. The CJP includes peer-reviewed scientific articles analyzing ongoing developments in Canadian and international psychiatry.