Title of article :
A comparative trial of psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy for “pure” dysthymic patients
Author/Authors :
Markowitz، نويسنده , , John C. and Kocsis، نويسنده , , James H. and Bleiberg، نويسنده , , Kathryn L. and Christos، نويسنده , , Paul J. and Sacks، نويسنده , , Michael، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Background
therapy of “pure” dysthymic disorder remains understudied. This article reports outcomes of an acute randomized trial of 94 subjects treated for 16 weeks with either interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT), brief supportive psychotherapy (BSP), sertraline, or sertraline plus IPT.
s
ted by clinical referral and advertising, subjects met DSM-IV criteria for early onset dysthymic disorder, with no episode of major depression in the prior six months. They were randomly assigned to one of four 16-week treatments, with options for crossover or continuation treatment. Results were analyzed from the intention-to-treat sample by ANCOVA, controlling for baseline depressive severity.
s
ts improved in all conditions over time, with the cells including sertraline pharmacotherapy showing superiority over psychotherapy alone for response and remission. Response rates were 58% for sertraline alone, 57% for combined treatment, 35% for IPT, and 31% for BSP.
tions
udy was underpowered and may have employed too “active” a control condition. Follow-up data were unobtainable.
sions
s acute trial for “pure” dysthymic disorder, sertraline with or without IPT showed advantages relative to IPT and BSP. Methodological difficulties may have limited differential outcome findings. This study bolsters a small but growing literature on the treatment of dysthymic disorder, suggesting that pharmacotherapy may acutely benefit patients more than psychotherapy.
Keywords :
supportive therapy , pharmacotherapy , Dysthymic disorder , Combined treatment , interpersonal psychotherapy
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Journal title :
Journal of Affective Disorders