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Description
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) convened an interdisciplinary Working Group of experts in cardiology, psychology, psychiatry, clinical trial methodology and biostatistics to develop recommendations concerning the assessment and treatment of depression in patients with coronary heart disease (CHD). The charge to the Working Group was to review (1) the diagnosis and measurement of depression and evaluate the applicability of depression instruments in CHD patients; (2) the efficacy of interventions for treating depression in CHD patients; and (3) to recommend research needed to reduce morbidity and mortality associated with depression in this population.
Working Group Report
The purpose of this document is two-fold. The first is to summarize the discussion and to disseminate the recommendations of the August 10-11 2004 NHLBI Working Group on Assessment and Treatment of Depression in Coronary Heart Disease Patients. The second purpose is to invite comments from the clinical and research communities interested in the role of depression in cardiovascular diseases on the measurement issues and on recommendations for future research so that updated recommendations can be published in the scientific literature. Comments should be sent to NHLBI_DepressCVD@mail.nih.gov, and will be accepted through June 30, 2005.
The Working Group recognizes that the quality of final recommendations will depend on full consideration of the comments received during the public comment period. The published document will describe the rationale for each recommendation and discuss strengths and weaknesses of alternative assessment methods, treatment approaches, and research designs.
This Working Group was originally convened to address the assessment and treatment of depression in patients with coronary heart disease (CHD). However, given that recent studies have demonstrated the importance of depression as a risk factor not only for coronary disease but for other cardiovascular diseases (i.e., stroke incidence and outcomes), the Working Group also considered, albeit to a more limited extent, research on cardiovascular diseases other than CHD. The term cardiovascular disease (CVD) in this document is used when a broader application is intended, while coronary heart disease (CHD) is used when data or recommendations are limited to CHD patients.
Assessment Panel: Karina Davidson (Working Group Co-Chair), Thomas Bigger,, James Coyne, Nancy Frasure-Smith, Kenneth Freedland, Ronald Kessler, Helena Kraemer, Ranga Krishnan, Nina Rieckmann and Jerry Suls.
Treatment Panel: David Kupfer (Working Group Co-Chair), Robert Califf, Robert Carney, Ellen Frank, Erika Froelicher, Alexander Glassman, Wayne Katon, Helena Kraemer, François Lespérance, and David Sheps.
Background
Depression confers an increased risk of cardiac events in CVD patients and is known to increase patient care costs and lower quality of life. Depressive symptoms even at low levels of severity increase risk for the incidence and recurrence of acute coronary syndromes (ACS) as well as all-cause mortality in patients with known heart disease. Moreover, prospective epidemiologic studies have shown that depression confers a gradient of risk, independent of other known prognostic markers in this population. This observational evidence base has been established despite the use of more than 25 different depression assessment instruments. The use of diverse measures of depression in observational studies makes quantitative systematic reviews more difficult and leads to limitations of conclusions when evaluating published studies. Nonetheless, the preponderance of evidence supports a strong relationship between depression and coronary heart disease (CHD) morbidity and mortality.
Greater standardization of nomenclature and of diagnosis and assessment of depression would contribute significantly to scientific progress, as the term ?depression? is not used consistently across studies. The design of observational and treatment studies in this field will be facilitated by consistent standards for assessment and diagnosis. Moreover, the efficacy of different treatment studies can be compared more easily if the measures of depression used are identical or similar, or if their relationship to one another is well understood.
Since 15 to 20% of heart disease patients meet criteria for major depression and many more suffer from milder forms of depression, identifying better treatments for depression in this population could lead to improved medical, financial and psychosocial outcomes for a substantial segment of the U.S. population. While cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), interpersonal therapy (IPT) and other behavioral therapies, either alone or in combination with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), have been shown to be effective in treating depression, their efficacy in altering the course of CVD has not been demonstrated. In the ENRICHD1 and SADHART2 trials, secondary analyses showed a possible mortality benefit for patients treated with SSRIs. In ENRICHD, secondary analysis found that those patients in the treatment arm whose depression remitted had reduced mortality and reinfarction rates.3 These hypotheses require evaluation in a randomized trial.
Since launching the ENRICHD and SADHART trials in the 1990?s, new approaches to treating depression have been developed for patients with a variety of medical conditions, including those with diabetes, patients presenting at a primary care clinic, and those with chronic pain. Evaluation of the treatments developed in these clinical trials and subsequent research on depression treatments in the medically ill suggests the need for a careful review of currently available depression treatments. It is especially important to identify effective treatments for depressed CVD patients, given the chronic, recurring nature of the symptoms and the frequent co-occurrence of depression with CVD and other medical illnesses.