Yongdong Ouyang, PhD

Assistant Professor, Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center

Duration of Adjunctive Antidepressant Maintenance in Bipolar I Depression.


Journal article


L. Yatham, S. Arumugham, M. Kesavan, K. Ramachandran, Nithyananda S Murthy, G. Saraf, Yongdong Ouyang, D. Bond, A. Schaffer, A. Ravindran, N. Ravindran, B. Frey, A. Daigneault, S. Beaulieu, R. Lam, Nithin Kondapuram, M. S. Reddy, R. Bhandary, Mysore V Ashok, Kyooseob Ha, Y. Ahn, R. Milev, H. Wong, Y. Reddy
New England Journal of Medicine, 2023

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APA   Click to copy
Yatham, L., Arumugham, S., Kesavan, M., Ramachandran, K., Murthy, N. S., Saraf, G., … Reddy, Y. (2023). Duration of Adjunctive Antidepressant Maintenance in Bipolar I Depression. New England Journal of Medicine.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Yatham, L., S. Arumugham, M. Kesavan, K. Ramachandran, Nithyananda S Murthy, G. Saraf, Yongdong Ouyang, et al. “Duration of Adjunctive Antidepressant Maintenance in Bipolar I Depression.” New England Journal of Medicine (2023).


MLA   Click to copy
Yatham, L., et al. “Duration of Adjunctive Antidepressant Maintenance in Bipolar I Depression.” New England Journal of Medicine, 2023.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{l2023a,
  title = {Duration of Adjunctive Antidepressant Maintenance in Bipolar I Depression.},
  year = {2023},
  journal = {New England Journal of Medicine},
  author = {Yatham, L. and Arumugham, S. and Kesavan, M. and Ramachandran, K. and Murthy, Nithyananda S and Saraf, G. and Ouyang, Yongdong and Bond, D. and Schaffer, A. and Ravindran, A. and Ravindran, N. and Frey, B. and Daigneault, A. and Beaulieu, S. and Lam, R. and Kondapuram, Nithin and Reddy, M. S. and Bhandary, R. and Ashok, Mysore V and Ha, Kyooseob and Ahn, Y. and Milev, R. and Wong, H. and Reddy, Y.}
}

Abstract

BACKGROUND Antidepressants are used to treat acute depression in patients with bipolar I disorder, but their effect as maintenance treatment after the remission of depression has not been well studied.

METHODS We conducted a multisite, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of maintenance of treatment with adjunctive escitalopram or bupropion XL as compared with discontinuation of antidepressant therapy in patients with bipolar I disorder who had recently had remission of a depressive episode. Patients were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to continue treatment with antidepressants for 52 weeks after remission or to switch to placebo at 8 weeks. The primary outcome, assessed in a time-to-event analysis, was any mood episode, as defined by scores on scales measuring symptoms of hypomania or mania, depression, suicidality, and mood-episode severity; additional treatment or hospitalization for mood symptoms; or attempted or completed suicide. Key secondary outcomes included the time to an episode of mania or hypomania or depression.

RESULTS Of 209 patients with bipolar I disorder who participated in an open-label treatment phase, 150 who had remission of depression were enrolled in the double-blind phase in addition to 27 patients who were enrolled directly. A total of 90 patients were assigned to continue treatment with the prescribed antidepressant for 52 weeks (52-week group) and 87 were assigned to switch to placebo at 8 weeks (8-week group). The trial was stopped before full recruitment was reached owing to slow recruitment and funding limitations. At 52 weeks, 28 of the patients in the 52-week group (31%) and 40 in the 8-week group (46%) had a primary-outcome event. The hazard ratio for time to any mood episode in the 52-week group relative to the 8-week group was 0.68 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.43 to 1.10; P = 0.12 by log-rank test). A total of 11 patients in the 52-week group (12%) as compared with 5 patients in the 8-week group (6%) had mania or hypomania (hazard ratio, 2.28; 95% CI, 0.86 to 6.08), and 15 patients (17%) as compared with 35 patients (40%) had recurrence of depression (hazard ratio, 0.43; 95% CI, 0.25 to 0.75). The incidence of adverse events was similar in the two groups.

CONCLUSIONS In a trial involving patients with bipolar I disorder and a recently remitted depressive episode, adjunctive treatment with escitalopram or bupropion XL that continued for 52 weeks did not show a significant benefit as compared with treatment for 8 weeks in preventing relapse of any mood episode. The trial was stopped early owing to slow recruitment and funding limitations. (Funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00958633.).