A 74-year-old man living by himself, without any personal or familial psychiatric history, was admitted to our psychiatry department for drug-resistant major depression despite successive treatments with sertraline, clomipramine, and moclobemide over 3 years; a previous psychiatric hospitalization; and current treatment with imipramine (appropriate dosages and durations). He presented significant sadness, anxiety, sense of failure, loss of interest, anhedonia, concentration difficulties, indecision, suicidal ideas, asthenia, decreased appetite, decreased weight, and social withdrawal. He scored 21 on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D) and 30 on the Mini-Mental State Examination.