The efficacy of antidepressant treatment of major depression remains a matter of controversy. A review of acute treatment studies suggests that for relatively more severe episodes of major depression, antidepressants are superior to treatment in the "placebo group;" however, there are numerous methodological confounds in the available literature. (Some recent, preliminary evidence suggests that antidepressants may also be of benefit in some less severely depressed populations).There is moderately strong evidence that, compared with placebo, maintenance antidepressant treatment reduces six-month relapse rates in major depression; however, it is less clear that antidepressants prevent actual recurrence of depression in the longer term. There is evidence of both over-use and under-use of antidepressant treatment, and there appears to be a "mismatch" between diagnosis and optimal treatment of depression in some clinical settings. Better designed studies are needed to resolve these uncertainties and to investigate such putative conditions as "oppositional tolerance" to long-term antidepressant treatment. The author advocates a conservative approach to antidepressant treatment, as well as a substantially extended "tapering" period when antidepressants are discontinued.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3398684 | PMC |
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