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Editorial| Volume 29, ISSUE 9, P956-957, September 2021

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Antidepressants May Not Be Enough When Frailty Complicates Depression in Late Life

  • Gary J. Kennedy
    Correspondence
    Send correspondence and reprint requests to Gary J. Kennedy, M.D., Division of Geriatric Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY
    Affiliations
    Division of Geriatric Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY
    Search for articles by this author
Published:January 09, 2021DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jagp.2021.01.003
      Brown et al.’s paper

      Brown PJ, Roose SP, Ciarleglio A, et al. Frailty worsens antidepressant treatment outcomes in late life depression. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 2020;S1064-7481(20)30593-5. doi: 10.1016/j.jagp.2020.12.024

      in this issue of the Journal expands upon the authors’ prior work on the frailty-depression phenotype to examine the impact of physical frailty on 8 weeks of antidepressant treatment among 100 adults aged 60 and over with major depression. Almost half the participants met the author's definition of frailty but did not differ from the rest on measures of medical co-morbidity, demography, depression severity, and cognitive performance. All were followed for 10 months of open-label pharmacotherapy after the initial 8 weeks of double-blind, randomized intervention. Because criteria for both frailty and depression such as fatigue, slowed physical activity, and weight loss overlap, the authors needed to statistically correct for a potential specious relationship. Of the frailty measures, only lessor physical activity and weaker grip strength were associated with attenuated response to antidepressant treatment. Executive dysfunction, a predictor of inadequate response to antidepressant therapy was not individually measured but the participants reported on average 16 years of education and scored well into the unimpaired range (27–30 points) on the Mini Mental State Exam. Similarly, most participants reported the first depressive episode in their late 30s in which executive dysfunction is less prevalent than episodes beginning after age 55. The finding that a threshold of elevations in three or more of the five frailty criteria was associated with attenuated response suggests it may be used, like executive dysfunction as a response predictor and an indicator of the need from more than an antidepressant. This is similar to findings that neural network connectivity and varying interactions between nodes of the networks predict treatment response and may dictate the choice of psychotherapy or pharmacotherapy.
      • Chin Fatt CR
      • Jha MK
      • Cooper CM
      • et al.
      Effect of intrinsic patterns of functional brain connectivity in moderating antidepressant treatment response in major depression.
      ,
      • Whitton AE
      • Webb CA
      • Dillon DG
      • et al.
      Pretreatment rostral anterior cingulate cortex connectivity with salience network predicts depression recovery: findings from the EMBARC randomized clinical trial.
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      References

      1. Brown PJ, Roose SP, Ciarleglio A, et al. Frailty worsens antidepressant treatment outcomes in late life depression. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 2020;S1064-7481(20)30593-5. doi: 10.1016/j.jagp.2020.12.024

        • Chin Fatt CR
        • Jha MK
        • Cooper CM
        • et al.
        Effect of intrinsic patterns of functional brain connectivity in moderating antidepressant treatment response in major depression.
        Am J Psychiatry. 2020; 177 (Epub 2019 Sep 20PMID:31537090): 143-154https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.2019.18070870
        • Whitton AE
        • Webb CA
        • Dillon DG
        • et al.
        Pretreatment rostral anterior cingulate cortex connectivity with salience network predicts depression recovery: findings from the EMBARC randomized clinical trial.
        Biol Psychiatry. 2019; 85 (PMID:30718038): 872-880https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2018.12.007
        • Brown PJ
        • Roose SP
        • Fieo R
        • et al.
        Frailty and depression in older adults: a high-risk clinical population.
        Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2014; 22: 1083-1095
        • E. Lugtenburg A
        • Zuidersma M
        • Wardenaar KJ
        • et al.
        Subtypes of late-life depression: a data-driven approach on cognitive domains and physical frailty.
        J Gerontol. 2021; 76: 141-150
        • Gallo JJ
        • Hwang S
        • Joo JH
        • et al.
        Multimorbidity, depression, and mortality in primary care: randomized clinical trial of an evidence-based depression care management program on mortality risk.
        J Gen Intern Med. 2015; https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-015-3524-y
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