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Mind the Gap: Gaps in Antidepressant Treatment, Treatment Adjustments, and Outcomes among Patients in Routine HIV Care in a Multisite U.S. Clinical Cohort

BACKGROUND: Depression affects 20–30% of HIV-infected patients and is associated with worse HIV outcomes. Although effective depression treatment is available, depression is largely untreated or undertreated in this population. METHODS: We quantified gaps in antidepressant treatment, treatment adjus...

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Autores principales: Cholera, Rushina, Pence, Brian W., Bengtson, Angela M., Crane, Heidi M., Christopoulos, Katerina, Cole, Steven R., Fredericksen, Rob, Gaynes, Bradley N., Heine, Amy, Mathews, W. Christopher, Mimiaga, Matthew J., Moore, Richard, Napravnik, Sonia, O’Clerigh, Conall, Safren, Steven, Mugavero, Michael J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5268441/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28125593
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166435
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author Cholera, Rushina
Pence, Brian W.
Bengtson, Angela M.
Crane, Heidi M.
Christopoulos, Katerina
Cole, Steven R.
Fredericksen, Rob
Gaynes, Bradley N.
Heine, Amy
Mathews, W. Christopher
Mimiaga, Matthew J.
Moore, Richard
Napravnik, Sonia
O’Clerigh, Conall
Safren, Steven
Mugavero, Michael J.
author_facet Cholera, Rushina
Pence, Brian W.
Bengtson, Angela M.
Crane, Heidi M.
Christopoulos, Katerina
Cole, Steven R.
Fredericksen, Rob
Gaynes, Bradley N.
Heine, Amy
Mathews, W. Christopher
Mimiaga, Matthew J.
Moore, Richard
Napravnik, Sonia
O’Clerigh, Conall
Safren, Steven
Mugavero, Michael J.
author_sort Cholera, Rushina
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Depression affects 20–30% of HIV-infected patients and is associated with worse HIV outcomes. Although effective depression treatment is available, depression is largely untreated or undertreated in this population. METHODS: We quantified gaps in antidepressant treatment, treatment adjustments, and outcomes among US patients in routine HIV care in the nationally distributed CNICS observational clinical cohort. This cohort combines detailed clinical data with regular, self-reported depressive severity assessments (Patient Health Questionnaire-9, PHQ-9). We considered whether participants with likely depression received antidepressants, whether participants on antidepressants with persistently high depressive symptoms received timely dose adjustments, and whether participants achieved depression remission. We considered a cross-sectional analysis (6,219 participants in care in 2011–2012) and a prospective analysis (2,936 participants newly initiating CNICS care when PHQ-9 screening was active). RESULTS: The cross-sectional sample was 87% male, 53% Caucasian, 25% African American, and 18% Hispanic; the prospective sample was similar. In both samples, 39–44% had likely depression, with 44–60% of those receiving antidepressants. Of participants receiving antidepressants, 20–26% experienced persistently high depressive symptoms; only a small minority of those received antidepressant dose adjustments. Overall, 35–40% of participants on antidepressants achieved full depression remission. Remission among participants with persistently high depressive symptoms was rare regardless of dose adjustments. CONCLUSIONS: In this large, diverse cohort of US patients engaged in routine HIV care, we observed large gaps in antidepressant treatment, timely dose adjustment to address persistently high depressive symptoms, and antidepressant treatment outcomes. These results highlight the importance of more effective pharmacologic depression treatment models for HIV-infected patients.
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spelling pubmed-52684412017-02-06 Mind the Gap: Gaps in Antidepressant Treatment, Treatment Adjustments, and Outcomes among Patients in Routine HIV Care in a Multisite U.S. Clinical Cohort Cholera, Rushina Pence, Brian W. Bengtson, Angela M. Crane, Heidi M. Christopoulos, Katerina Cole, Steven R. Fredericksen, Rob Gaynes, Bradley N. Heine, Amy Mathews, W. Christopher Mimiaga, Matthew J. Moore, Richard Napravnik, Sonia O’Clerigh, Conall Safren, Steven Mugavero, Michael J. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Depression affects 20–30% of HIV-infected patients and is associated with worse HIV outcomes. Although effective depression treatment is available, depression is largely untreated or undertreated in this population. METHODS: We quantified gaps in antidepressant treatment, treatment adjustments, and outcomes among US patients in routine HIV care in the nationally distributed CNICS observational clinical cohort. This cohort combines detailed clinical data with regular, self-reported depressive severity assessments (Patient Health Questionnaire-9, PHQ-9). We considered whether participants with likely depression received antidepressants, whether participants on antidepressants with persistently high depressive symptoms received timely dose adjustments, and whether participants achieved depression remission. We considered a cross-sectional analysis (6,219 participants in care in 2011–2012) and a prospective analysis (2,936 participants newly initiating CNICS care when PHQ-9 screening was active). RESULTS: The cross-sectional sample was 87% male, 53% Caucasian, 25% African American, and 18% Hispanic; the prospective sample was similar. In both samples, 39–44% had likely depression, with 44–60% of those receiving antidepressants. Of participants receiving antidepressants, 20–26% experienced persistently high depressive symptoms; only a small minority of those received antidepressant dose adjustments. Overall, 35–40% of participants on antidepressants achieved full depression remission. Remission among participants with persistently high depressive symptoms was rare regardless of dose adjustments. CONCLUSIONS: In this large, diverse cohort of US patients engaged in routine HIV care, we observed large gaps in antidepressant treatment, timely dose adjustment to address persistently high depressive symptoms, and antidepressant treatment outcomes. These results highlight the importance of more effective pharmacologic depression treatment models for HIV-infected patients. Public Library of Science 2017-01-26 /pmc/articles/PMC5268441/ /pubmed/28125593 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166435 Text en © 2017 Cholera et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cholera, Rushina
Pence, Brian W.
Bengtson, Angela M.
Crane, Heidi M.
Christopoulos, Katerina
Cole, Steven R.
Fredericksen, Rob
Gaynes, Bradley N.
Heine, Amy
Mathews, W. Christopher
Mimiaga, Matthew J.
Moore, Richard
Napravnik, Sonia
O’Clerigh, Conall
Safren, Steven
Mugavero, Michael J.
Mind the Gap: Gaps in Antidepressant Treatment, Treatment Adjustments, and Outcomes among Patients in Routine HIV Care in a Multisite U.S. Clinical Cohort
title Mind the Gap: Gaps in Antidepressant Treatment, Treatment Adjustments, and Outcomes among Patients in Routine HIV Care in a Multisite U.S. Clinical Cohort
title_full Mind the Gap: Gaps in Antidepressant Treatment, Treatment Adjustments, and Outcomes among Patients in Routine HIV Care in a Multisite U.S. Clinical Cohort
title_fullStr Mind the Gap: Gaps in Antidepressant Treatment, Treatment Adjustments, and Outcomes among Patients in Routine HIV Care in a Multisite U.S. Clinical Cohort
title_full_unstemmed Mind the Gap: Gaps in Antidepressant Treatment, Treatment Adjustments, and Outcomes among Patients in Routine HIV Care in a Multisite U.S. Clinical Cohort
title_short Mind the Gap: Gaps in Antidepressant Treatment, Treatment Adjustments, and Outcomes among Patients in Routine HIV Care in a Multisite U.S. Clinical Cohort
title_sort mind the gap: gaps in antidepressant treatment, treatment adjustments, and outcomes among patients in routine hiv care in a multisite u.s. clinical cohort
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5268441/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28125593
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166435
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