-
Drug Design, Development and Therapy
-
About Dovepress
Open access peer-reviewed scientific and medical journals.
-
Open Access
Dove Medical Press is now a member of the Open Access Initiative
-
An Author's Guide
A guide to help authors get their paper published.
-
Advocacy
Support Open Access and Dove Press
-
Reprints
Promotional Article Monitoring - further details
-
Favored Author Program
Real benefits for authors, including fast-track processing of papers.
Continuation treatment of major depressive disorder: is there a case for duloxetine?
Review
(4318) Views (1124) Full article downloads
Authors: Trevor R Norman, James S Olver
Published Date February 2010
Volume 2010:4 Pages 19 - 31
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/DDDT.S4358
Trevor R Norman, James S Olver
Department of Psychiatry, University of Melbourne, Austin Hospital, Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia
Abstract: Duloxetine is a serotonin–noradrenaline reuptake inhibitor with established efficacy for the short-term treatment of major depressive disorder. Efficacy in continuation treatment (greater than six months of continuous treatment) has been established from both open and placebocontrolled relapse prevention and comparative studies. Seven published studies were available for review and showed that in both younger and older populations (aged more than 65 years) the acute efficacy of duloxetine was maintained for up to one year. Response to treatment was based on accepted criteria for remission of depression and in continuation studies remission rates were greater than 70%. Comparative studies showed that duloxetine was superior to placebo and comparable to paroxetine and escitalopram in relapse prevention. Importantly a study of duloxetine in patients prone to relapse of major depressive disorder showed that the medication was more effective than placebo in this difficult to treat population. Side effects of duloxetine during continuation treatment were predictable on the basis of the known pharmacology of the drug. In particular there were no significant life-threatening events which emerged with continued use of the medication. On the other hand vigilance is required since the data base on which to judge very rare events is limited by the relatively low exposure to the drug. Duloxetine has established both efficacy and safety for continuation treatment but its place as a first-line treatment of relapse prevention requires further experience. In particular further comparative studies against established agents would be useful in deciding the place of duloxetine in therapy.
Keywords: major depression, duloxetine, continuation treatment, placebo studies, relapse prevention, clinical trials
Other articles by Dr Trevor Norman
Readers of this article also read:
New developments in the management of major depressive disorder and generalized anxiety disorder: role of quetiapine
Update on duloxetine for the management of stress urinary incontinence
Desvenlafaxine in the treatment of major depressive disorder
Role of aliskiren in cardio-renal protection and use in hypertensives with multiple risk factors
Duloxetine for the management of fibromyalgia syndrome
Measurement of treatment adherence with antipsychotic agents in patients with schizophrenia
Preferences related to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and its treatment
Reasons for continuing or discontinuing olanzapine in the treatment of schizophrenia from the perspectives of patients and clinicians
Predictors of continuation with olanzapine during the 1-year naturalistic treatment of patients with schizophrenia in Japan
- Testimonials
"... I was impressed at the rapidity of publication from submission to final acceptance." Dr Edwin Thrower, PhD, Yale University
- The benefits and risks of testosterone replacement therapy: a review
- Tenofovir-associated bone density loss
- Drug design with Cdc7 kinase: a potential novel cancer therapy target
- Development of mucosal adjuvants for intranasal vaccine for H5N1 influenza viruses




