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Duloxetine in acute major depression: review of comparisons to placebo and standard antidepressants using dissimilar methods

✍ Scribed by Paolo Girardi; Maurizio Pompili; Marco Innamorati; Michele Mancini; Gianluca Serafini; Lorenzo Mazzarini; Antonio Del Casale; Roberto Tatarelli; Ross J. Baldessarini


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
185 KB
Volume
24
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6222

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Background

Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of duloxetine (DLX), an inhibitor of both norepinephrine and serotonin transporters (SNRI), have tested its efficacy in acute major depressive disorder (MDD) versus placebo (PBO) or standard serotonin‐reuptake inhibitors (SRIs) and require review, comparing analytical methods.

Method

Computerized searching to identify reports of RCTs of DLX in adult, acute MDD patients permitted meta‐analytic pooling to estimate overall response and remission rates, to compare mixed‐model, repeated measures (MMRM) versus last‐observations‐carried‐forward (LOCF) analytical methods, and to assess relations of DLX dose to efficacy and adverse outcomes.

Results

We identified 17 RCTs involving 22 comparisons (DLX versus PBO [n = 17) and DLX versus an SRI [n = 16]), based on MMRM and LOCF methods that allowed estimates of response (≥50% improvement of depression scores) or remission (final depression score ≤7). There was a large overall DLX/PBO contrast (LOCF, RR = 1.42 [CI: 1.31–1.53], p < 0.0001, with a success rate of 65% [11/17]), and somewhat larger effects with MMRM in both response (MMRM: RR = 1.48 [95%CI: 1.31–1.66] versus LOCF: RR = 1.41 [CI: 1.28–1.56]; NNT 4.8 versus 6.5) and remission (MMRM: RR = 1.61 [CI: 1.41–1.85] versus LOCF: RR = 1.44 [CI: 1.27–1.63]; NNT = 5.9 versus 8.9). Based on LOCF methods, dropout rates were similar with DLX and PBO (RR = 1.04 [CI: 0.94–1.15]); DLX response was dose‐dependent (r = +0.72, p = 0.001), and RCT‐dropout rates were inversely related to DLX dose, but possibly artifactually.

Limitations

RCTs involving DLX are limited, with few direct comparisons to standard antidepressants.

Conclusions

DLX has good evidence of efficacy in acute, adult MDD, especially at doses of 80–120 mg/day, but remains inadequately tested against standard alternatives. MMRM analyses yielded slightly superior FLX/PBO contrasts than older LOCF methods. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.