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Andrew A. Nierenberg

2 papers in the library · 730 citations · publishing 2019-2023

Papers

Treatment‐resistant depression: definition, prevalence, detection, management, and investigational interventions

World Psychiatry September 15, 2023 Roger S. McIntyre, Mohammad Alsuwaidan, Bernhard T. Baune et al. 712 citations

At least 30% of people with depression meet the common definition of treatment-resistant depression (TRD): inadequate response to two or more antidepressants despite adequate trials and adherence. Many cases are actually pseudo-resistant due to insufficient treatment or non-adherence. No consensus definition with proven predictive utility for clinical decisions exists, leading to varied prevalence estimates and inconsistent care. Intravenous ketamine and intranasal esketamine are effective for TRD. Some second-generation antipsychotics (e.g., aripiprazole, quetiapine XR) help as adjuncts in partial responders, but only the olanzapine-fluoxetine combination has been studied in FDA-defined TRD. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation and electroconvulsive therapy are established effective interventions. Evidence for extending trials, switching, or combining antidepressants is mixed, and manual-based psychotherapies are not effective alone but help when added to antidepressants.

Evolving Issues in the Treatment of Depression

JAMA May 24, 2019 Ole Köhler‐forsberg, Cristina Cusin, Andrew A. Nierenberg 18 citations

Recent evidence shows that several nonpharmacological and drug therapies can benefit people with major depressive disorder. Effective options include exercise, a Mediterranean diet with structured dietary support, ketamine and esketamine, anti-inflammatory drugs, brexanolone, and psilocybin.