OBJECTIVE: This study was conducted to identify which elderly patients
with remitted recurrent major depression remain well with maintenance
interpersonal psychotherapy after discontinuation of active antidepressant
medication (nortriptyline). METHOD: The authors examined outcomes of
maintenance therapy over 1 year for 47 elderly patients who were randomly
assigned to monthly maintenance interpersonal psychotherapy with placebo (N
= 19) or to placebo and a supportive medication clinic without
interpersonal psychotherapy (N = 28). A Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was
performed on the basis of treatment assignment and subjective sleep quality
assessed by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, on which good subjective
sleep quality is indicated by a score of 5 or lower. RESULTS: Nine (90%) of
10 patients reporting good subjective sleep quality (by 1 month into
continuation treatment) remained well for at least 1 year when treated with
monthly maintenance interpersonal psychotherapy, versus five (31%) of 16
patients with good sleep quality assigned to a medication clinic, three
(33%) of nine patients with impaired sleep quality treated with maintenance
interpersonal psychotherapy, and two (17%) of 12 patients with impaired
sleep quality assigned to a medication clinic. CONCLUSIONS: Recovery of
good subjective sleep quality by early continuation treatment is useful in
identifying which remitted elderly depressed patients will remain well with
monthly maintenance interpersonal psychotherapy, following discontinuation
of antidepressant medication, and which patients may be more vulnerable to
recurrence of major depressive episodes in the absence of antidepressant
medication.Abstract Teaser