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Time to recovery of an inception cohort with hitherto untreated unipolar major depressive episodes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Toshiaki A. Furukawa*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Nagoya City University Medical School
Toshinori Kitamura
Affiliation:
National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, Japan
Kiyohisa Takahashi
Affiliation:
National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, Japan
*
Professor Toshi Furukawa, Department of Psychiatry, Nagoya City University Medical School, Mizuho-cho, Mizuho-ku, Nagoya 467–8601, Japan. Tel.: +81 52 853 8271; fax: +81 52 852 0837; e-mail: furukawa@med.nagoya-cu.ac.jp
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Extract

Background

Generalisability of existing studies on the naturalistic history of major depression is undermined by overrepresentation of in-patients and tertiary care academic centres, inclusion of patients already on treatment and/or incomplete follow-up.

Aims

To report the time to recovery of an inception cohort of unipolar major depressive episodes.

Method

A multi-centre prospective follow-up study of patients with a mood disorder, who had been selected to be representative of the untreated first-visit patients at 23 psychiatric settings from all over Japan.

Results

The median time to recovery of the index episode after treatment commencement was 3 months (95% CI 2.5–3.6): 26% of the cohort reached asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic status by I month, 63% by 3 months, 85% by 12 months and 88% by 24 months.

Conclusions

Our estimate of the episode length was 25–50% shorter than estimates reported in the literature.

Information

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © 2000 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 
Figure 0

Table 1 Clinical characteristics of the cohort (n=90)

Figure 1

Fig. 1 Cumulative probability of remaining in the index episode after treatment commencement for the 90 probands with DSM-IV major depressive disorder not superimposed on dysthymia. Patients who recovered within a few days after treatment commencement were regarded as attaining recovery at 0 month.

Figure 2

Fig. 2 Cumulative probability of remaining in the index episode since its onset for the 90 probands with DSM-IV major depressive disorder not superimposed on dysthymia.

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