Patient questionnaire for depression
helpful.
by Boschert, Sherry
PHOENIX--Clinicians in 17 diverse outpatient psychiatric practices
across the United States reported that having patients complete a
simple, short questionnaire about depression at each visit was helpful
in 93% of visits and led to treatment changes in 40% of patient
contacts.
The nine-item depression scale of the Patient Health Questionnaire
(PHQ-9) was completed by every new and returning adult patient over a
1-year period for screening, diagnosis, and monitoring of depression.
Previous studies have suggested that the questionnaire is useful in
primary care practices, but this is the first study among psychiatrists.
The PHQ-9 is a self-administered version of the Primary Care
Evaluation of Mental Disorders, and contains the nine items listed in
the DSM-IV for depression symptoms and severity, Dr. David J. Katzelnick
said at a poster presentation at a meeting of the New Clinical Drug
Evaluation Unit sponsored by the National Institute of Mental Health.
"Obviously, all psychiatrists know those items. How helpful
could this be?" he asked. "It made a huge difference," he
added.
In 3% of visits, psychiatrists picked up suicidality "that
they didn't realize was there beforehand," which prompted them
to further assess suicide risk, reported Dr. Katzelnick of Healthcare
Technology Systems Inc., Madison, Wis., and his associates.
The PHQ-9 confirmed the appropriateness of treatment in 60% of
visits. During the other 40% of visits, the most common changes were an
adjustment in antidepressant dose in 45%, the addition of another
antidepressant in 26%, a start or increase in psychotherapy in 16%, a
change in antidepressants in 13%, or the start of antidepressant therapy
in 10%. Psychiatrists reassessed the diagnosis in 1% and referred
patients in 1% of visits. (More than one change could take place per
visit.)
Additional data from 16 of the psychiatric practices a year after
the study ended showed that 15 were still using the PHQ-9 for screening,
diagnosis, and monitoring of patients, said Farifteh F. Duffy, Ph.D.,
lead author of the poster. "They're doing an amazing job of
spreading this to other practices" by sharing the PHQ-9 with
colleagues in ob.gyn. and primary care, added Dr. Duffy of the American
Psychiatric Institute for Research and Education, Arlington, Va.
The proportions of patients who achieved remission of depression
during the 1-year study fell in between results seen in two separate
trials of more rigorous stepwise algorithms for diagnosing and
monitoring depression that are less practical in routine care, she said.
Remission rates were 33% in the Standards for Reporting of Diagnostic
Accuracy (STARD) study, 15% in the PHQ-9 study, and 11% in the Texas
Medication Algorithm Project (TMAP). Response rates were significantly
lower in the PHQ-9 study (33%), compared with the STARD study (47%).
More research is needed to show that incorporating the PHQ-9 into
routine practice improves patient outcomes.
The study was funded by the American Psychiatric Foundation through
unrestricted grants from companies that make
antidepressants--AstraZeneca International, Eli Lilly & Co., Forest
Laboratories, Pfizer Inc., Sanofi-Aventis, and Wyeth. The investigators
have no other potential conflicts of interest.
The current study began as a joint effort by the American
Psychiatric Association, the American College of Physicians, and the
American Academy of Family Physicians to standardize care of depression.
"We wanted to come up with a standard way of tracking depression
severity in the same way that hemoglobin [A.sub.1c] does for
diabetes," Dr. Katzelnick said. "There are 10-15 potential
measures that you could use, but unless you have a standard, it
doesn't move the field."
The results have led the Mayo Clinic and the New York City health
department (two of the participants in the study) to begin disseminating
the PHQ-9 throughout their systems, Dr. Katzelnick said.
The investigators have received a grant from the U.S. Department of
Defense to choose and test a tool for routine management of
posttraumatic stress disorder, Dr. Duffy said. Other scales could prove
useful for managing generalized anxiety disorder, alcohol abuse, eating
disorders, or bipolar disorder, Dr. Katzelnick added.
Psychiatrits know the items listed in the DSM for depression.
Still, the PHQ-9 made a 'huge difference'.
BY SHERRY BOSCHERT
San Francisco Bureau
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