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"What to Expect When Switching to a Second Antidepressant Medication..."

  • Jan 2, 2021
  • 2 min read

"What to Expect When Switching to a Second Antidepressant Medication Following an Ineffective Initial SSRI: A Report From the Randomized Clinical STAR*D Study

A John Rush, Charles South, Manish K Jha, Shailesh Bobby Jain, Madhukar H Trivedi

Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 2020 August 11, 81 (5)


OBJECTIVE: An antidepressant medication switch often follows a failed initial trial with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). When, for whom, and how often second-step response and remission occur are unclear, as is preferred second-step trial duration. As more treatments are approved for use following 2 failed "adequate" trials, researchers and clinicians require an evidence-based definition of "adequate." METHODS: Following citalopram in the randomized Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) clinical trial (which ran July 2001-September 2006), participants with score ≥ 11 on the 16-item Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology-Self-Rated (QIDS-SR₁₆) were randomized to bupropion sustained release, sertraline, or venlafaxine extended release (up to 14 weeks). The QIDS-SR₁₆ defined response, remission, and no clinically meaningful benefit based on the modified intent-to-treat sample. RESULTS: About 80% of 438 participants completed ≥ 6 weeks of treatment with the switch medication. All treatments had comparable outcomes. Overall, 21% (91/438) remitted, 9% (40/438) responded without remission, and 58% (255/438) had no meaningful benefit. Half of the responses and two-thirds of remissions occurred after 6 weeks of treatment. Overall, 33% of responses (43/131) occurred after ≥ 9 weeks of treatment. No baseline features differentiated early from later responders or remitters. No early triage point was found, but those with at least 20% reduction from baseline in QIDS-SR₁₆ score around week 2 were 6 times more likely to respond or remit than those without this reduction. CONCLUSIONS: Following nonefficacy with an initial SSRI, only about 20% remit and more than half achieve no meaningful benefit with a second-step switch to another monoaminergic antidepressant. A 12-week trial duration seems necessary to capture as many second-step switch responders as possible."


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1 Comment


Ronald Lybarger
Ronald Lybarger
Feb 04

I found the article useful for understanding that switching to a second antidepressant can be a careful process with real changes in how your body feels and reacts, and it made me reflect on how big medical choices take time and thought. I remember late nights when I tried to Online assignment help while also feeling tired and overwhelmed, and that mix of focus and stress felt heavy. Knowing what to expect with changes, whether in health or study routines, can help calm your mind and make tasks feel more manageable.

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