TY - JOUR
T1 - Clinical characteristics of outpatients with chronic major depression
AU - Rush, A. John
AU - Laux, Gerd
AU - Giles, Donna E.
AU - Jarrett, Robin B.
AU - Weissenburger, Jan
AU - Feldman-Koffler, Frida
AU - Stone, Lael
N1 - Funding Information:
We wish to expressa ppreciationt o C. Burgess and R. Brown for assistancein data compilation, D. Savagef or secretariala ssistancein manuscript preparation and K.Z. Altshuler, Stanton Sharp DistinguishedC hair and Chairman, for administrative support.S upportedi n part by grantsf rom the National Institute of Mental Health (MH-35370a nd MH-38238) and by a Mental Health Clinical Research Center Grant from NIMH (MH-41115) to the Department of Psychiatry, Universityo f Texas SouthwesternM edical Center at Dallas, TX.
PY - 1995/4/16
Y1 - 1995/4/16
N2 - A cross-sectional evaluation of 243 unipolar, nonpsychotic outpatients with major depression was conducted. All subjects were diagnosed by RDC with SADS-L structured interviews. Diagnoses included RDC primary/secondary, RDC endogenous/nonendogenous and Winokur's family-history subtypes. Symptom severity was assessed by the 17-item Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression. Chronic depression was defined as the current episode of major depression lasting at least 2 years, corresponding to DSM-III-R and -IV criteria. Patients with chronic depression (n = 64) were compared with those with nonchronic depression (n = 179). Chronicity was not related to gender, symptom severity, prior length of illness, age at onset of illness, RDC endogenous/nonendogenous, RDC primary/secondary or Winokur's family-history subtypes. Those with chronic depression were older and had fewer major depressive episodes than the nonchronic group. That the chronic group had fewer total episodes of depression than the nonchronic group, but a similar age at onset, is consistent with the notion that patients in a current chronic episode have characteristically longer depressive episodes throughout the course of their illness. Those with chronic episodes may be subject to psychological, biological and/or sociocultural factors that preclude an earlier episode remission for these individuals.
AB - A cross-sectional evaluation of 243 unipolar, nonpsychotic outpatients with major depression was conducted. All subjects were diagnosed by RDC with SADS-L structured interviews. Diagnoses included RDC primary/secondary, RDC endogenous/nonendogenous and Winokur's family-history subtypes. Symptom severity was assessed by the 17-item Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression. Chronic depression was defined as the current episode of major depression lasting at least 2 years, corresponding to DSM-III-R and -IV criteria. Patients with chronic depression (n = 64) were compared with those with nonchronic depression (n = 179). Chronicity was not related to gender, symptom severity, prior length of illness, age at onset of illness, RDC endogenous/nonendogenous, RDC primary/secondary or Winokur's family-history subtypes. Those with chronic depression were older and had fewer major depressive episodes than the nonchronic group. That the chronic group had fewer total episodes of depression than the nonchronic group, but a similar age at onset, is consistent with the notion that patients in a current chronic episode have characteristically longer depressive episodes throughout the course of their illness. Those with chronic episodes may be subject to psychological, biological and/or sociocultural factors that preclude an earlier episode remission for these individuals.
KW - Chronic depression
KW - Clinical characteristic
KW - Major depression
KW - Outpatient
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U2 - 10.1016/0165-0327(94)00101-E
DO - 10.1016/0165-0327(94)00101-E
M3 - Article
C2 - 7622736
AN - SCOPUS:0028939984
SN - 0165-0327
VL - 34
SP - 25
EP - 32
JO - Journal of Affective Disorders
JF - Journal of Affective Disorders
IS - 1
ER -