Augmentative Pharmacological Strategies in Treatment-Resistant Major Depression: A Comprehensive Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Other Antidepressants and Buspirone
Head-to-Head Studies
3.2. Second Generation Antipsychotics (SGAs)
3.2.1. Aripiprazole
3.2.2. Other SGAs
3.2.3. Head-to-Head Studies
3.2.4. Switch versus Augmentation
3.3. Mood Stabilizers
3.3.1. Lithium
3.3.2. Head-to-Head Studies: Lithium
3.3.3. Lithium Augmentation versus Switching Strategies
3.3.4. Antiepileptic Drugs
3.3.5. Head-To-Head Studies: Antiepileptics
3.4. Ketamine and Es-Ketamine
3.5. Psychostimulants
3.5.1. Flenfluramine
3.5.2. Lisdexamfetamine Dimesylate
3.5.3. Methylphenidate
3.5.4. Modafinil
3.6. Non-Psychopharmacological Agents
3.6.1. Acetylsalicylic Acid (ASA)
3.6.2. Metyrapone
3.6.3. Minocycline
3.6.4. Pindolol
3.6.5. Reserpine
3.6.6. Testosterone
3.6.7. T3/T4
3.7. Other Molecules and Supplements
3.7.1. Anti-Parkinson/Dementia Agents
3.7.2. Naltrexone
3.7.3. S-adenosyl Methionine (SAMe)
3.7.4. Supplements
4. Discussion and Expert Opinion
- –
- use of appropriate TRD definition, more homogeneous populations, as well as rating scales for the evaluation of severity of depression in order to allow pooled analyses and meta-analytical approaches of large samples of patients [129];
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- more clarity in defining whether certain symptoms are part of depression or the result of comorbid psychiatric conditions [137];
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- larger samples are required to obtain more reliable data;
- –
- combined treatments might be associated with potential dangerous side effects, so future studies should quantify the risk/benefit ratio of different augmentation strategies;
- –
- pharmacokinetic interactions should be monitored in the long-term, measuring drug plasma levels regularly.
- –
- Furthermore, the directions of future research regarding augmentation agents for TRD treatment could be the following:
- –
- understanding the biological nature of treatment response, thus increasing biological insights into the pathophysiology of TRD;
- –
- focus on searching for other molecules with more potent and longer-lasting antidepressant effects than esketamine;
- –
- identification of more robust biomarkers for clinical practice, allowing early interventions and, ultimately, improving remission outcomes.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reference | n | Age (Years) | Design | Augmentation Molecule | Dosage | AD | Duration | Primary Outcome Measures | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RCTs | |||||||||
Altamura et al. [13] | 22 | 18–65 | Single-blind Comparison IV CIT/pcb | Citalopram | 10 mg/d (IV) | Paroxetine, Sertraline or Escitalopram | 5 days | HAM-D, MADRS | ↓ HAM-D: CIT > pcb (p < 0.01) ↓ MADRS: CIT > pcb (p < 0.05) |
Licht and Qvitzau [16] | 253 | Mean (SD): 39 (±12) | Multicenter, double-blind Comparison SER100 + pcb/SER200 + pcb/SER100 + MIA | Mianserin | 30 mg/d | Sertraline | 5 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D: - SER100 = SER100 + MIA (p = 0.85) - Both > SER200 (p < 0.05) |
Kessler et al. [17] | 431 | 18–65 | Multicenter, double-blind Comparison mirtazapine/pcb | Mirtazapine | 30 mg/d | SSRIs or SNRIs | 1 year | BDI-II at week 12 | ↓ BDI-II: mirtazapine = pcb (p = 0.09) |
Altamura et al. [18] | 54 | 18–65 | Head-to-head Single-blind Comparison IV CIT/CLO/pcb | Citalopram/clomipramine | CIT: 10 mg/d CLO: 25 mg/d | SSRIs | 5 days | HAM-D melancholy and anxiety-somatization scores | ↓ HAM-D: - CIT and CLO > pcb (p < 0.01) CIT = CLO on melancholy (p = 0.73) CIT > CLO on anxiety/somatization (p = 0.027) |
Fava et al. [19] | 41 | Mean (SD): 39.6 (±9.9) | Head-to-head Double-blind Comparison FLU/FLU + Li/FLU + DES | Desipramine | FLU: 40–60 mg/d FLU 20 mg/d + Li: 300–600 mg/d FLU 20 mg/d + DES: 25–50 mg/d | Fluoxetine | 4 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D: Whole sample: FLU > FLU + Li/FLU + DES (p = 0.05) Non-responders: FLU/FLU + Li > FLU + DES (p = 0.04) |
Fava et al. [20] | 101 | Mean (SD): 41.6 (±10.6) | Head-to-head Double-blind Comparison FLU/FLU + Li/FLU + DES/pcb | Desipramine | ≈ | Fluoxetine | 4 weeks | HAM-D | FLU = FLU + Li = FLU + DES = pcb (p = 0.20) |
Open studies | |||||||||
Joffe and Schuller [14] | 25 | Range: 22–56 Mean: 40.2 | Open-label | Buspirone | Range: 20–50 mg/d Mean: 31.2 mg/d | Fluoxetine or Fluvoxamine | 3 weeks | CGI | Response rate: 68% Remission rate: 32% |
Taylor and Prather [15] | 11 | Mean (SD): 53 (±10.5) | Open-label | Nefazodone | 50–300 mg/d Mean (SD): 200 (±134.2) mg/d | Various ADs | 9 months | Presence/absence anxiety/depression symptoms CGI | Depression remission (p < 0.005) Anxiety remission (p < 0.0005) |
Navarro et al. [21] | 104 | Mean (SD): 47.9 (±8.4) | Head-to-head Open-label Comparison CIT/Li | Citalopram | CIT: 30 mg/d Li: 600 mg/d | Imipramine | 10 weeks | HAM-D | Remission: CIT > Li (p = 0.034) ↓ HAM-D: CIT > Li (p = 0.005) |
Reference | n | Age Mean (SD), y | Design | Augmentation Molecule | Dosage, mg/d | AD | Duration | Primary Outcome Measures | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RCTs | |||||||||
Berman et al. [32] | 362 | 46.5 (±10.6) | Multicenter, double-blind | Aripiprazole | 2–20 Mean: 11.8 | Escitalopram, fluoxetine, paroxetine, sertraline, or venlafaxine | 6 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: ARI > pcb (p < 0.001) |
Berman et al. [34] | 349 | 45.4 (±10.9) | Multicenter, double-blind | Aripiprazole | 2–20 Mean: 10.7 | ≈ | 6 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: ARI > pcb (p < 0.001) |
Fava et al. [35] | 221 | 45.4 (±10.3) | Multicenter, double-blind Phase I: ARI 2 mg/d/pcb Phase II: ARI 5 mg/d/pcb/ARI 2 mg/d | Aripiprazole | 2 or 5 | SSRIs or SNRIs | 12 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: ARI = pcb (p = 0.06) Response rate: ARI = pcb (p = 0.18) Remission rate: ARI = pcb (p = 0.50) |
Mischoulon et al. [36] * | ≈ | ≈ | ≈ | Aripiprazole | ≈ | ≈ | ≈ | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: ARI 5 mg/d > ARI 2 mg/d (p < 0.0001) |
Dording et al. [37] * | ≈ | ≈ | ≈ | Aripiprazole | ≈ | ≈ | ≈ | KSQ | ↓ KSQ depressive subscale: ARI > pcb (p = 0.03) ↓ KSQ anxiety, somatic, anger-hostility subscales: ARI = pcb (p > 0.05) |
Kamijima et al. “ADMIRE” [39] | 540 | Fixed-ARI: 39.2 (±9.1) Flexi-ARI: 38.1 (±9.6) Pcb: 38.7 (±9.2) | Multicenter, double-blind Comparison fixed-ARI/flexi-ARI/pcb | Aripiprazole | Fixed-ARI: 3 Flexi-ARI: 3–15 (mean: 9.8) | Sertraline, fluvoxamine, paroxetine, milnacipran, duloxetine | 6 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: fixed-ARI = flexi-ARI > pcb (p < 0.01) Response and remission rates: fixed-ARI = flexi-ARI > pcb (p < 0.05) |
Ozaki et al. [40] ** | ≈ | ≈ | Subgroup analysis of ADMIRE according to: sex, age, number of AD trials, MDD diagnosis, number of depressive episodes, duration of current episode, age at first episode, time since first episode, type of SSRI/SNRI, severity at the end of AD treatment | Aripiprazole | ≈ | ≈ | ≈ | MADRS in subgroups; MADRS and HAM-D single items | No interaction effects of treatment and subgroups; ↓ core depressive symptoms (p < 0.05) |
Lenze et al. [38] | 181 | 66 27% of the total sample > 70 | Double-blind | Aripiprazole | 2–15 Mean remitters: 7 Mean non-remitters: 10 | Venlafaxine | 12 weeks | MADRS | Remission rate: ARI > pcb (p = 0.03) |
Marcus et al. [33] | 324 | 44.6 (±11.0) | Multicenter, double-blind | Aripiprazole | Mean: 11 | Escitalopram, fluoxetine, paroxetine, sertraline, or venlafaxine | 6 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: ARI > pcb (p = 0.001) (d = 0.35) Remission rates: ARI > pcb (p = 0.016) Response rates: ARI > pcb (p < 0.001) |
Hobart et al. [44] | 393 | BREX: 43.0 (±12.7) pcb: 42.7 (±12.5) | Double-blind | Brexpiprazole | 2 | SSRIs or SNRIs | 6 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: BREX > pcb (p = 0.007) |
Hobart et al. | 443 | BREX: 43.6 (±11.5) QUE-XR: 44.6 (±11.6) pcb: 41.8 (±11.7) | Head-to-head Multicenter, double-blind Comparison BREX/QUE-XR/pcb | Brexpiprazole Quetiapine | BREX: Range: 2–3 Mean: 2.2 QUE-XR: Range: 150–300Mean: 198.5 | SSRIs or SNRIs | 6 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: BREX > pcb (p = 0.008) QUE-XR = pcb (p = 0.66) |
Thase et al. [41] | 353 | BREX: 44.1 (±11.6) pcb: 45.2 (±11.3) | Multicenter, double-blind | Brexpiprazole | 2 | SSRIs or SNRIs | 6 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: BREX > pcb (p < 0.001) |
Thase et al. [42] | 627 | BREX-1: 45.7 (±11.6) BREX-3: 44.5 (±11.2) pcb: 46.6 (±11.0) | Multicenter, double-blind Comparison BREX-1/BREX-3/pcb | Brexpiprazole | 1 or 3 | SSRIs or SNRIs | 6 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: BREX-3 > pcb (p = 0.008) BREX-1 = pcb (p = 0.07) |
Earley et al. [53] | 435 | 44.2 (±11.6) | Double-blind | Cariprazine | 1.5–4.5 Mean: 2.97 | Various ADs | 8 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: CARI = pcb (p = 0.79) |
Shelton et al. [51] | 28 | 42.0 (±11.0) | 6-week open-label fluoxetine in escalating doses; 8-week, double-blind, RCT: Comparison OLA + pcb/FLU + pcb/FLU + OLA | Olanzapine | Mean (SD) OLA + pcb: 12.5 (±5.3) Mean (SD) FLU + OLA: 13.5 (±4.1) | Fluoxetine | 8 weeks | MADRS, HAM-D | ↓ MADRS: FLU + OLA > OLA + pcb (p = 0.03) and FLU + pcb (p = 0.006) ↓ HAM-D: FLU + OLA > OLA + pcb (p = 0.03) FLU + OLA = FLU + pcb (p = 0.07) |
Mahmoud et al. [47] | 268 | 45.9 (±10.1) | Multicenter, double-blind | Risperidone | 1–2 | Various ADs | 6 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D: RIS > pcb (p < 0.001) Response rates: RIS > pcb (p = 0.004) Remission rates: RIS > pcb (p = 0.004) |
Rapaport et al. [45] | Phase I: 445 Phase II: 348 Phase III: 241 | 46.3 (±12.6) | Phase I: 4–6 weeks open-label CIT monotherapy Phase II: 4–6 weeks open-label RIS augmentation Phase III: 24 weeks double-blind maintenance phase, comparison CIT + RIS/CIT + pcb | Risperidone | Mean (SD): Phase II: 1.1 (±0.6) Phase III: 1.2 (±0.6) | Citalopram | (see Design) | Phases II: MADRS Phase III: time to relapse | ↓ MADRS (p < 0.001) Time to relapse: RIS > pcb (p = 0.05) Relapse rates: RIS < pcb (p = 0.05) |
Alexopoulos et al. [46] *** | Phase I: 108 Phase II: 93 Phase III: 63 | 63.4 (±7.9) | ≈ | Risperidone | Mean (SD): Phase II: 0.7 (±0.3) Phase III: 0.8 (±0.3) | ≈ | ≈ | ≈ | ↓ MADRS (p < 0.001) Time to relapse: RIS > pcb (p = 0.07) |
Open studies | |||||||||
Barbee et al. [22] | 19 | 51.2 (±8.9) | Retrospective chart review | Aripiprazole | 2.5–7.5 | Various ADs | 6 weeks | CGI | (Very) Much improved: 52.6% Mildly improved: 26.3% Unchanged: 15.8% Minimally worse: 5.3% (p < 0.001) |
Berman et al. [26] | 987 | 45.8 (±11.3) | Open-label | Aripiprazole | 2–30 Mean:10.1 | Various ADs | 52 weeks | CGI severity | CGI-S = 1 (not at all ill) or 2 (borderline ill): 69.7% |
Chen et al. [29] | 9 | 38.3 (±12.2) | Open-label | Aripiprazole | Mean: 4.2 | Various ADs | 4 weeks | HAM-D | Response rate: 100% Remission rate 77.8% |
Fabrazzo et al. [27] | 35 | 38.8 (±11.5) | Open-label | Aripiprazole | 5 | SSRIs, then CLO | 24 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.0001) Response rate: 91.4% Remission rate: 34.3% |
Han et al. [23] | 38 | 28.4 (±11.3) | Retrospective MDD with mixed specifier | Aripiprazole | Mean (SD): 4.0 (±0.8) | Various ADs | 8 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS (p < 0.0001) Response rate: 32% Remission rate: 21% |
Hellerstein et al. [25] | 14 | 46.1 (±13.0) | Open-label | Aripiprazole | Mean (SD): 22.5 (±9.9) | Sertraline, fluoxetine, duloxetine, venlafaxine | 12 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.001) Response rate: 50% Remission rate: 28.6% |
Horikoshi et al. [31] | 31 | LD group: 38.8 (±12.8) HD group: 44.2 (±13.9) | Open-label, R Comparison LD-ARI/HD-ARI | Aripiprazole | LD: 3 HD: 12 | Various ADs | 6 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: LD and HD (p < 0.001) Response rate: HD > LD (p = 0.015) |
Jon et al. [30] | 86 | 45.6 (±13.7) | Multicenter, prospective, open-label | Aripiprazole | Max: 15 Mean: 6.9 | SSRIs or SNRIs | 6 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS (p < 0.001) Response rate 52.3% Remission rate 39.8% |
Patkar et al. [24] | 10 | 44.9 (±12.2) | Prospective, open-label | Aripiprazole | 10–30 Mean: 13.2 | Various ADs | 6 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.001) Response rate: 70% Remission rate: 30% |
Yoshimura et al. [28] | 24 | 39.0 (±12.0) | Open-label | Aripiprazole | Mean (SD) PAR group: 8.73 (±3.13) Mean (SD) SER group: 9.23 (±3.11) | Paroxetine or sertraline | 4 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.0001) PAR + ARI = SER + ARI (p = 0.80) |
Fava et al. [43] | 51 | 45.6 (±12.4) | Multicenter, open-label | Brexpiprazole | 2.25 (±0.74) | SSRIs or SNRIs | 6 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS (p < 0.0001) |
Boku et al. [52] | 7 | 53.2 (±24.0) | Open-label | Olanzapine | Mean (SD): 5.0 (±1.9) | Milnacipran | 8 weeks | HAM-D, CGI | ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.01) Response rate: 100% Remission rate: 100% ↓ CGI (p < 0.01) |
Anderson et al. [50] | 18 | 46.3 | Open-label | Quetiapine | Max 300 mg twice Mean (SD): 245.0 (±68.0) | Various ADs | 8 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS (p < 0.001) Response rate: 29% Remission rate: 17% |
Sagud et al. [49] | 14 | 52.8 (±10.4) | Prospective, non-comparative, open-label | Quetiapine | Mean (SD): 315.0 (±109.0) | Various ADs | 20 weeks | HAM-D total score and insomnia/depressive mood/anxiety subscales | ↓ HAM-D total score (p < 0.001) ↓ HAM-D subscales (p < 0.001) |
Papakostas et al. [48] | 13 | 41.9 (±10.1) | Open-label | Ziprasidone | Mean (SD): 82.1 (±48.9) | SSRIs | 6 weeks | HAM-D | Response rate: 61.5% Remission rate: 38.5% |
Bauer et al. [54] | 557 | 18–65 | Head-to-head Open-label, R Comparison add-on QUE-XR/QUE-XR monotherapy/add-on LIT | Quetiapine | Mean (SD): add-on QUE-XR: 242.0 (±54.0) QUE-XR monotherapy: 238.0 (±60.0) add-on LIT: 882.0 (±212.0) | SSRIs or venlafaxine | 6 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: add-on QUE-XR = QUE-XR monotherapy = add-on LIT (p = 0.05) |
Gobbi et al. | 86 | 49.9 (±13.3) | Head-to-head Naturalistic Comparison SGAs (ARI, OLA, RIS, QUE)/another AD | Aripiprazole Olanzapine Risperidone Quetiapine | Mean (SD): ARI 4.4 (±1.3) OLA 8.7 (±1.8) RIS 1.88 (±0.5) QUE 129.0 (±29.0) ADs at various dosages | SSRIs or SNRIs | 3 months | MADRS, HAM-D, QIDS, CGI | ↓ MADRS, HAM-D, QIDS, CGI scores from baseline to endpoint in both SGA and ADs groups (p < 0.001)↓ depressive symptoms MADRS and HAM-D: SGA > ADs (p < 0.05) |
Mohamed et al. | 1137 | 54.4 (±12.2) | Head-to-head, R Comparison add-on ARI/add-on BUP/BUP switching | Aripiprazole | ARI max 10 BUP max 400 | Various ADs | 12 weeks | Remission at QIDS | Add-on ARI > BUP switching (p = 0.02) Add-on ARI = add-on BUP (p = 0.47) Add-on BUP = BUP switching (p = 0.09) |
Reference | n | Age Mean (SD), Years | Design | Dosage (mg/d)/Plasma Levels (mmol/L) | AD | Duration | Primary Outcome Measures | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RCTs | ||||||||
Bauer et al. [60] | 27 | 47.4 (±16.9) | I: open, acute treatment phase II: RC continuation phase | Mean (SD): 980.0 (±295.6)/0.65 (±0.14) | Various ADs | 4 months | Relapse in phase II (HAM-D) | Relapse rate: Li < pcb (p = 0.02) |
Bschor et al. [61] * | 22 | 46.4 (±15.7) | Double-blind Follow-up maintenance phase study | N.A. | Various ADs | 1 year | Recurrence (HAM-D) | Recurrence rate: Li = pcb (p = 0.49) |
Joffe et al. | 50 | 37.4 (±11.2) | Head-to-head Double-blind Comparison Li/T3/pcb | Mean: Li: 935.3/0.68 T3: 37.5 mcg | Desipramine, imipramine | 2 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D: Li > pcb (p = 0.04) T3 > pcb (p = 0.02) Li = T3 (p > 0.05) |
Kok et al. | 32 | 71.9 (±7.8) | Augmentation vs. switch Double-blind comparison VFX/NOR Not remitted patients → Open-label comparison Li augmentation/switch to PHE/switch to TCA/switch to ECT | Mean (SD): Li: 586.0 (±86.0)/0.82 (±0.15) PHE: 53.0 (±8.0) | Venlafaxine, nortriptyline | 12 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: Li (p < 0.001) TCA (p < 0.01) PHE (p > 0.05) ECT (p > 0.05) |
Nierenberg et al. [59] | 35 | 37.2 (±8.3) | Double-blind | N.A./0.61 (range: 0.6–0.9) | Nortriptyline | 6 weeks | HAM-D, CGI | ↓ HAM-D and ↓ CGI: Li = pcb (p > 0.05) |
Stein and Bernadt, [58] | 34 | 47.2 (±19.5) | Double-blind Experimental group: Li 250 3 weeks → 750 6 weeks Controls: pcb 3 weeks → Li 250 3 weeks → Li 750 3 weeks | Dose/mean (SD) Experimental group: 250/0.25 (±0.12) 750/0.78 (±0.35) Controls: 250/0.25 (±0.15) 750/0.65 (±0.21) | TCAs | 9 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: Li 250 = pcb (p = 0.81) Li 750 > Li 250 (p = 0.009) |
Yoshimura et al. | 30 | Li: 39.0 (±8.0) OLA: 42.0 (±7.0) ARI: 40.0 (±10.0) | Head-to-head Comparison Li/OLA/ARI | Mean (SD): Li: 458.0 (±103.0)/N.A. OLA: 7.0 (±5.0) ARI: 9.0 (±6.0) | Paroxetine | 4 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D: Li = OLA = ARI (p < 0.001) Response—remission rates: Li 40–20% OLA 30–10% ARI 40–20% |
Open studies | ||||||||
Bertschy et al. [67] | 13 | 45 | Open-label | Mean (SD): N.A./0.75 (±0.12) | Venlafaxine | 4 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: Li = pcb (p = 0.20) |
Buspavanich et al. [70] | Tot: 167 Geriatric: 22 Non-geriatric: 145 | Tot: 48.3 (±13.9) Geriatric: 71.9 (±5.6) Non-geriatric: 44.8 (±11.0) | Prospective multicenter cohort study Comparison geriatric/non-geriatric patients | Mean (SD): 150.0 (±89.9)/0.68 (±0.2) | Various ADs | 4 weeks | HAM-D | Response rate: geriatric > non-geriatric patients (p = 0.04) |
Dallal et al. [63] | 20 | 27–63 42.0 (±10.3) | Open-label | Range: 150–300/0.5–1.2 | Desipramine | 6 weeks | CGI | ↓ CGI (p < 0.01) |
Dinan [65] | 11 | 37–59 | Open-label | Dose/mean (SD): 400/0.26 (±0.1) or 800/0.6 (±0.1) | Sertraline | 1 week | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.01) Response not related to Li plasma levels |
Doree et al. | 20 | QUE: 52.3 (±8.1) Li: 49.3 (±9.4) | Head-to-head Open-label Comparison QUE/Li | Mean: QUE: 430 (range: 300–700) Li: N.A./0.78 | Various ADs | 8 weeks | HAM-D MADRS | ↓ HAM-D both QUE and Li: p < 0.0001 QUE > Li (p < 0.05) ↓ MADRS: both QUE and Li: p < 0.0001 QUE > Li (p < 0.05) |
Flint and Rifat [69] | 21 | 64–88 75.6 (±7.1) | Prospective, open-label | Mean (SD): N.A./0.67 (±0.17) | Nortriptyline, fluoxetine, phenelzine | 2 weeks | HAM-D, HAD | Response rate: 24% |
Fontaine et al. [64] | 60 | 24–55 FLU+Li: 42.6 (±8.6) DES + Li: 41.0 (±8.8) | Open-label Comparison FLU + Li/DES + Li | Mean (SD): FLU + Li: 570.0 (±120.8)/N.A. DES + Li: 660.0 (±165.3)/N.A. | Fluoxetine, Desipramine | 6 weeks | CGI | ↓ CGI: FLU + Li = DES + Li Response rate FLU + Li: 60% Response rate DES + Li: 56.6% Rapid response (1 week): FLU + Li > DES + Li (N.S.) |
Gervasoni et al. | 10 | N.A. | Head-to-head Observational Comparison Li-s/Li-s + T3 | Li-s: 1320/median: 0.52 (range: 0.38–1.10)T3: 37.5 mcg | Clomipramine | 2 months | MADRS | Remission rates: Li-s = 10% Li-s + T3 = 0 |
Hoencamp et al. [66] | 22 | 43.0 (±13.0) | Open-label | Dose/mean (SD): 600/0.66 (±0.19) | Venlafaxine | 7 weeks | HAM-D MADRS CGI | ↓ HAM-D (p = 0.001) Response rate: 34.8% Remission rate: 8.7% ↓ MADRS (p = 0.005) ↓ CGI (p = 0.001) |
Ivkovic et al. | 88 | LAM: 54.2 (±13.7) Li: 49.3 (±12.3) | Head-to-head Open-label | Mean (SD): LAM: 117.7 (±54.3) Li: 900/N.A. | Various ADs | 8 weeks | HAM-D, CGI | LAM = Li ↓ HAM-D (p = 0.83) ↓ CGI (p = 0.92) Within 2nd week: LAM > Li ↓ HAM-D (p = 0.01) ↓ CGI (p = 0.02) |
Kok et al. [71] | 28 | Li: 73.6 (±7.3) PHE: 72.6 (±7.7) | Head-to-head Open-label, R Comparison Li augmentation/switch to PHE | Mean (SD) Li: 527.0 (±96.0)/0.71 (±0.17) PHE: 46.0 (±9.0) | TCA or venlafaxine | 6 weeks | MADRS remission | ↓ MADRS Li (p < 0.001) PHE (p = 0.85) Remission rates: Li > PHE (p = 0.04) Response rates: Li > PHE (p = 0.03) |
Schindler and Anghelescu | 34 | Li: 50.3 (±13.6) LAM: 45.1 (±13.4) | Head-to-head Open-label, R Comparison Li/LAM | Mean: Li: N.A./0.71 LAM: 152.9 | Various ADs | 8 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D: Li = LAM (p = 0.11) |
Schüle et al. | 46 | 50.78 (±12.27) | Head-to-head Open-label Comparison MIR monotherapy/Li augmentation/CAR augmentation | Mean (SD): Li: 917.0 (±144.1)/0.71 (±0.13) CAR: 370.0 (±67.5)/32.4 (±8.16) | Mirtazapine | 3 weeks | HAM-D | Response rates: MIR: 21.7% Li 53.8% CAR 20.0% Li > MIR (p = 0.05) CAR = MIR (p = 0.91) |
Thase et al. [62] | 20 | 40.4 (±9.9) | Open-label | Responders: N.A./0.56 (±0.22) Non-responders: N.A./0.83 (±0.19) | Imipramine | 6 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.001) Response rate: 65% |
Whyte et al. | Augmentation group: 53 Switch group: 12 | Augmentation group: 76.2 (±5.7) Switch group: 78.8 (±7.2) | Augmentation vs. switch Open-label Comparison Li/NOR/BUP/switch to VFX | Max, median (range): Li: 300 (225–300)/0.5–0.7 NOR: 35 (10–50) BUP: 200 (50–400) VFX: 244 (150–300) | Paroxetine | Median (range), weeks: Li: 7 (1–22.3) NOR: 17 (0.2–28.7) BUP: 5.6 (0.3–30) VFX: 12 (8.7–12) | HAM-D | Response rates: Li: 43% NOR: 31% BUP: 45% VFX: 41.7% |
Zimmer et al. [68] | 13 | 74.1 (±8.2) | Open-label | Range/mean (SD): 300–450/0.65 (±0.20) | Nortriptyline | 3 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.001) |
Reference | n | Age Mean (SD), y | Design | Augmentation Molecule | Dosage | AD | Duration | Primary Outcome Measures | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RCTs | |||||||||
Barbosa et al. [81] | 15 | 30.2 (±8.4) | Double-blind | Lamotrigine | Max: 100 mg/d | Fluoxetine | 6 weeks | HAM-D MADRS CGI | ↓ HAM-D: LAM = pcb (p = 0.21) ↓ MADRS: LAM = pcb (p = 0.46) ↓ CGI: LAM > pcb (p = 0.03) |
Santos et al. [82] | 27 | 38.2 (±8.7) | Double-blind | Lamotrigine | Max: 200 mg/d | Various ADs | 8 weeks | CGI MADRS | ↓ CGI: LAM = pcb (p = 0.45) ↓ MADRS: LAM = pcb (p = 0.45; p-adj = 0.88) Response rates: LAM = pcb (p = 0.60) |
Shapira et al. [86] | 20 | 47.5 (±14.1) | Double-blind | Phenytoin | N.A. | Fluvoxamine, fluoxetine, paroxetine | 4 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D: PHE = pcb (p = 0.30) |
Mowla and Kardeh [89] | 42 | 36.2 | Double-blind | Topiramate | Range: 100–200 mg/d Mean: 173.15 mg/d | Fluoxetine, citalopram, sertraline | 8 weeks | HAM-D CGI | ↓ HAM-D TOP: p < 0.001 ↓ HAM-D and ↓ CGI: TOP > pcb (p < 0.001) |
Fang et al. [91] | 193 | Range: 18–65 | Head-to-head Multicenter, double-blind Comparison RIS/VAL/BUS/TRZ/T3 | Valproate | RIS: 2 mg/d VAL: 600 mg/d BUS: 30 mg/d TRZ: 100 mg/d T3: 80 mg/d | Paroxetine | 8 weeks | Remission at HAM-D | Remission rates: overall 37.3% RIS: 26.7% VAL: 48.7% BUS: 32.6% TRZ: 42.6% T3: 37.5% RIS = VAL = BUS = TRZ = T3 (p = 0.25) |
Open studies | |||||||||
Barbee and Jamhour [83] | 31 | 50.2 (±11.2) | Retrospective | Lamotrigine | Mean: 112.9 mg/d | Various ADs | Mean 41.8 weeks (at least 6 weeks) | CGI | (Very) much improved: 48.4% Mildly improved: 22.6% Unchanged: 29.0% |
Gutierrez et al. [85] | 34 | 48.0 (±7.4) | Retrospective | Lamotrigine | Mean: 113.3 mg/d | Various ADs | 1 year | Medication Visit by MD | ↓ scores in target symptoms: - cognitive impairment, depressed mood, irritability, loss of interest (p < 0.01) energy (p < 0.001) sleep disturbance (p > 0.05) |
Rocha and Hara [84] | 25 | Range: 18–65 | Retrospective | Lamotrigine | Mean (SD): 155.0 (±64.5) mg/d | Various ADs | 4 weeks | CGI | Response rate: 76% |
Karaiskos et al. [87] | 20 | 72.6 (±6.3) | Open-label | Pregabalin | Mean (SD): 106.0 (±78.0) mg/d | Various ADs | 12 weeks | HAM-D HAM-A | ↓ HAM-D: p < 0.01 ↓ HAM-A: p < 0.05 |
Ghabrash et al. [88] 2015 | 14 | Range: 19–59 | Comparison of psychometric scores at T0 (pre-treatment) with scores at: T1 (1 month) T4 (4 months) T7 (7 months) | Valproate | 375–1000 mg/d | Various ADs | 7 months | MADRS CGI | ↓ MADRS: T0 vs. T1 (p < 0.001) T4 (p < 0.001) T7 (p < 0.001) ↓ CGI: T0 vs. T1 (p = 0.03) T4 (p < 0.001) T7 (p < 0.001) |
Fornaro et al. [90] | 24 | 50.7 (±0.2) | Open-label | Zonisamide | 75 mg/d | Duloxetine | 12 weeks | HAM-D | Response rate: 58.3% |
Reference | n | Age Mean (SD), y | Design | Augmentation Molecule | Dosage | AD | Duration | Primary Outcome Measures | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RCTs | |||||||||
Daly et al. [101] * | 297 | 46.3 (±11.1) | Multicenter, double-blind TRD patients → 16 weeks ESK augmentation → R maintenance phase: comparison ESK/pcb | Esketamine | Remitters: 56 mg or 84 mg/2 weeks Responders: 56 mg or 84 mg once weekly | SSRIs or SNRIs | Median among remitters: 17.7 weeks Median among responders: 19.4 weeks | Time to relapse at MADRS | Relapse among remitters: pcb > ESK (p = 0.003) Relapse among responders: pcb > ESK (p < 0.001) |
Fedgchin et al. [99] | 315 | 46.3 (±11.2) | Multicenter, double-blind Comparison ESK56/ESK84/pcb | Esketamine | 56 mg or 84 mg twice weekly | Escitalopram, Sertraline, Venlafaxine, Duloxetine | 4 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: ESK56 > pcb (p = 0.03) ESK84 = pcb (p = 0.09) |
Ochs-Ross et al. [102] | 122 | 70.0 (±4.52) | Double-blind | Esketamine | 28 mg, 56 mg or 84 mg twice weekly | ≈ | ≈ | ≈ | ↓ MADRS: ESK = pcb (p = 0.06) 65–74 years old: ESK > pcb (p = 0.02) ≥ 75 years old: ESK = pcb (p = 0.93) |
Popova et al. [100] | 197 | ESK: 44.9 (±12.6) pcb: 46.4 (±11.1) | Multicenter, double-blind | Esketamine | 56 mg or 84 mg twice weekly | ≈ | ≈ | ≈ | ↓ MADRS: ESK > pcb (p = 0.02) |
Fava et al., 2020 [94] | 86 | KETA 0.1: 43.1 (±11.9) KETA 0.2: 45.5 (±14.6) KETA 0.5: 48.6 (±12.9) KETA 1.0: 47.4 (±10.1) | Double-blind Comparison KETA 0.1-0.2-0.5-1.0 mg/kg/pcb | IV Ketamine | 0.1-0.2-0.5-1.0 mg/kg | Various ADs | 30 days | HAM-D6 at day 1 and 3 | ↓ HAM-D6: KETA > pcb (p = 0.03) KETA 0.1-0.2-0.5-1.0 mg/kg > pcb (p = 0.04) ↓ HAM-D6 day 1: KETA 0.1–0.2 mg/kg = pcb (p-adj = 0.14 and 0.79) KETA 0.5 mg/kg > pcb (p-adj < 0.001) KETA 1.0 mg/kg > pcb (p-adj = 0.04) ↓ HAM-D6 day 3: KETA 0.1-0.2-0.5-1.0 mg/kg = pcb (p > 0.05) |
Freeman et al. [96] ** | 99 | 18–70 Males: 47.5 (±12.5) Females: 44.8 (±12.7) | ≈ | IV Ketamine | ≈ | ≈ | ≈ | ≈ | ↓ HAM-D6: males = females (groupxgender p = 0.69) |
Feeney et al. [98] ** | 56 | 45.7 (±12.3) | ≈ | IV Ketamine | 0.1-0.5-1.0 mg/kg | ≈ | ≈ | MADRS suicide item | ↓ MADRS suicide item at day 30: KETA > pcb (p = 0.03) |
Ionescu et al. [95] | 26 | 45.4 (±12.4) | Double-blind | IV Ketamine | 0.5 mg/kg | Various ADs | 3 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D: KETA = pcb (p = 0.47) |
Salloum et al. [97] ** | 56 | KETA 0.1: 47.0 (±8.1) KETA 0.5: 45.5 (±11.9) KETA 1.0: 45.3 (±9.6) | Double-blind Comparison KETA 0.1/0.5/1.0 mg/kg | IV Ketamine | 0.1-0.5-1.0 mg/kg | Various ADs | 30 days | MADRS | At day 3: Response rate: 48% Remission rate: 34% At day 30: Remission rate: 21% |
Price et al. [104] | 15 | 50.0 (±12.0) | Pcb substitution Comparison FEN/pcb | Fenfluramine (Amphetamine) | 89.0 (±26.0) mg/d | Desipramine | Mean (SD): 16.4 (±5.0) d | SCRS HAM-D | ↓ SCRS and ↓ HAM-D: FEN = pcb (p > 0.05) |
Richards et al. [105] | Study 1: pcb = 201, LDX = 201; Study 2: pcb = 213, LDX = 211 | Study 1 LDX: 42.2 (±12.3) Study 2 LDX: 42.0 (±11.6) | Multicenter, double-blind Comparison LDX/pcb | Lisdexamfetamine dimesylate (Amphetamine) | Study 1: 46.5 (±13.7) mg/d Study 2: 43.4 (±14.3) mg/d | Various ADs | 16 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS Study 1: LDX = pcb (p = 0.88) ↓ MADRS Study 2: LDX = pcb (p = 0.58) |
Patkar et al. [106] | 50 | 48.5 | Double-blind | Metilphenidate | 34.2 (±6.3) mg/d | Various ADs | 4 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D: MPH = pcb (p = 0.22) Response rates: MPH > pcb (p = 0.12) |
Ravindran et al. [107] | 134 | 43.8 (±11.0) | Multicenter, double-blind | Metilphenidate | 36.4 (±9.1) mg/d | Various ADs | 5 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: MPH = pcb (p = 0.74) |
Open studies | |||||||||
Wajs et al. [103] *** | 150 | 52.2 (±13.7) | Multicenter, open-label | Esketamine | Flexible 14–84 mg once weekly or every-other-week | ≈ | 1 year | ≈ | Response rate: 76.5% Remission rate: 58.2% |
Cusin et al. [93] | 12 | 48.9 | Open-label 6 infusions (2/week): infusion 1–3: 0.50 mg/kg (IV); infusion 4–6: 0.75 mg/kg (IV) | IV Ketamine | Mean (SD): infusion 1–3: 29.0 (±16.2) mg infusion 4–6: 43.5 (±24.3) mg | Various ADs | 3 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D: p < 0.001 Response rate: 41.7% Remission rate: 16.7% |
Schiroma et al. [92] | 14 | 54.0 | Open-label | IV Ketamine | 0.5 mg/kg | Various ADs | 12 days | MADRS | ↓ MADRS (p < 0.001) |
Nasr et al. [108] | 78 | 44.0 | Retrospective | Modafinil | 249.0 (±122.0) mg/d | Various ADs | 9 months | CDRS | ↓ CDRS: p < 0.01 |
Reference | n | Age (Years) | Design | Augmentation Molecule | Dosage | AD | Duration | Primary Outcome Measures | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RCTs | |||||||||
McAllister-Williams et al. [110] | 165 | Range: 18–65 | Double-blind | Metyrapone | 500 mg/bid | Various ADs | 3 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: MET = pcb (p = 0.74) |
Nettis et al. [112] | 39 | MIN (n = 18): 47.0 (±10.0) pcb (n = 21): 43.7 (±10.7) | Double-blind Comparisons: MIN vs. pcb CRP+/MIN vs. CRP-/MIN vs. CRP+/pcb vs. CRP-/pcb | Minocycline | 200 mg/d | ≈ | 4 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D: - MIN = pcb (p = 0.13) - CRP+/MIN > other subgroups (p < 0.001) |
Mischoulon et al. | 12 | Range: 18–65 | Double-blind | Naltrexone | 1 mg/bid | Dopaminergic agents | 3 weeks | ≈ | ↓ HAM-D: LNT = pcb (p = 0.30) |
Moreno et al. [113] | 10 | Mean (SD): 43.0 (±13.0) | Double-blind, crossover | Pindolol | 2.5 mg/tid | Desipramine, fluoxetine, bupropion | 2 weeks | ≈ | ↓ HAM-D: PIN = pcb (p = 0.72) |
Perez et al. | 78 | Mean (SD): 47.1 (±10.1) | Double-blind | Pindolol | 2.5 mg/tid | Clomipramine, fluoxetine, fluvoxamine, paroxetine | 10 days | ≈ | ↓ HAM-D: PIN = pcb (p = 0.22) Remission rates: PIN = pcb (p > 0.05) |
Sokolski et al. [114] | 9 | N.A. | Double-blind | Pindolol | 7.5 mg | Paroxetine | 4 weeks | ≈ | ↓ HAM-D: PIN > pcb (p = 0.001) |
Perry et al. | 34 | Mean (SD): PIN: 49.0 (±13.0) pcb: 43.0 (±11.0) | Double-blind, hemi-crossover | Pindolol | 2.5 mg/bid | Fluoxetine, paroxetine, sertraline | 6 weeks | ≈ | ↓ HAM-D: PIN = pcb (p = 0.93) ↓ HAM-D core mood item: PIN = pcb (p = 0.50) |
Price et al. | 8 | Mean (SD): 50.5 (±13.2) | Double-blind | Reserpine | 5 mg/bid (IM) | Desipramine | 12 days | SCRS, HAM-D | ↓ SCRS and ↓ HAM-D: RES = pcb (p > 0.05) |
Targum et al. | 234 | Range: 21–69 Mean (SD): 47.2 (±10.78) | Multicenter, double-blind | SAME | 800 mg/d | Various ADs | 6 weeks | HAM-D, MADRS, IDS-SR30 | SAME = pcb: ↓HAM-D (p = 0.83) ↓MADRS (p = 0.42) ↓IDS-SR30 (p = 0.70) |
Dichtel et al. | 87 women | Range: 21–70 Mean (SD): 47.0 (±14.0) | Double-blind | Testosterone | Mean (SD): 12.2 mg/d (±5.6) | SSRIs or SNRIs | 8 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS: TXT = pcb (p = 0.91) |
Siwek et al. | 21 | Range: 18–55 Mean (SD): 46.2 (±5.8) | Double-blind | Zinc | 25 mg/d | Imipramine | 12 weeks | HAM-D, MADRS, BDI, CGI | Zinc > pcb: ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.02) ↓ MADRS (p < 0.01) ↓ BDI (p < 0.02) ↓ CGI (p < 0.01) |
Open studies | |||||||||
Mendlewicz et al. [109] | 17 | Range: 29–62 Mean (SD): 46.1 (±9.7) | Open-label | ASA | 160 mg/d | SSRIs | 4 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.0001) Response rate: 52.4% Remission rate: 43% |
Avari et al. [111] | 13 | 73.1 (±11.2) | ≈ | Minocycline | 100 mg twice/d | Various ADs | 8 weeks | MADRS | ↓ MADRS Remission rate: 31% |
Miller et al. | 9 women | Range: 25–59 Mean (SD): 48.1 (±12.2) | ≈ | Testosterone | 300 mcg/d (transdermal) | SSRIs or SNRIs | ≈ | ≈ | ↓ MADRS (p = 0.004) |
Rudas et al. | 9 | Range: 21–68 | ≈ | T3/T4 | Range: 150–300 mcg/d Mean (SD): 235.0 (±58.0) mcg/d | Various ADs | ≈ | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.01) |
Hori and Kunugi | 12 | 18–64 | ≈ | Pramipexole | 0.25–3 mg/d | ≈ | 12 weeks | HAM-D, CGI | ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.0001) ↓ CGI (p = 0.003) |
Cassano et al. | 7 | 18–74 | Prospective, open-label | Ropinirole | 0.25–1.5 mg/d | ≈ | 16 weeks | MADRS, CGI | ↓MADRS (p < 0.02) Response rate: 40% Remission rate: 40% |
De Berardis et al. | 25 | Mean (SD): 32.0 (±5.1) | Open- label, single-blind | SAME | 800 mg/d | ≈ | 8 weeks | HAM-D | ↓ HAM-D (p < 0.001) Response rate: 62.5% Remission rate: 37.5% |
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Caldiroli, A.; Capuzzi, E.; Tagliabue, I.; Capellazzi, M.; Marcatili, M.; Mucci, F.; Colmegna, F.; Clerici, M.; Buoli, M.; Dakanalis, A. Augmentative Pharmacological Strategies in Treatment-Resistant Major Depression: A Comprehensive Review. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2021, 22, 13070. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222313070
Caldiroli A, Capuzzi E, Tagliabue I, Capellazzi M, Marcatili M, Mucci F, Colmegna F, Clerici M, Buoli M, Dakanalis A. Augmentative Pharmacological Strategies in Treatment-Resistant Major Depression: A Comprehensive Review. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2021; 22(23):13070. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222313070
Chicago/Turabian StyleCaldiroli, Alice, Enrico Capuzzi, Ilaria Tagliabue, Martina Capellazzi, Matteo Marcatili, Francesco Mucci, Fabrizia Colmegna, Massimo Clerici, Massimiliano Buoli, and Antonios Dakanalis. 2021. "Augmentative Pharmacological Strategies in Treatment-Resistant Major Depression: A Comprehensive Review" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 22, no. 23: 13070. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222313070
APA StyleCaldiroli, A., Capuzzi, E., Tagliabue, I., Capellazzi, M., Marcatili, M., Mucci, F., Colmegna, F., Clerici, M., Buoli, M., & Dakanalis, A. (2021). Augmentative Pharmacological Strategies in Treatment-Resistant Major Depression: A Comprehensive Review. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(23), 13070. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222313070