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Major depression frequently co-occurs with alcohol dependence. Clinicians have had little evidence-based guidance for deciding whether to treat the depression immediately or to wait to see the clinical picture that emerges after alcohol dependence has resolved. These investigators conducted a federally funded, single-site, randomized, controlled trial of 170 outpatients with major depression and alcohol dependence.
Patients were assigned to 14 weeks of sertraline (starting dose, 50 mg/day; maximum, 200 mg/day), naltrexone (starting dose, 50 mg; maximum, 100 mg/day), combined naltrexone and sertraline (N+S), or placebo. Patients had support group meetings and weekly cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for substance abuse that was adapted to also help depression. The treatment groups had similar rates of medication adherence (overall, 87%); mean attendance of CBT sessions was 59%. During the trial, 43% of patients discontinued prematurely for social or clinical reasons, with no between-group differences.
At the end of treatment, intent-to-treat analyses showed that the N+S group had a significantly higher percentage of patients who were abstinent for 14 weeks than the other three groups combined (54% vs. 24%) and took significantly longer to relapse to heavy drinking (64 vs. 42 days). Again compared with the other treatment groups combined, the N+S group showed a nonsignificant trend toward a greater percentage of patients not depressed at the end of treatment (58% vs. 83%).
Pettinati HM et al. A double-blind, placebo-controlled trial combining sertraline and naltrexone for treating co-occurring depression and alcohol dependence. Am J Psychiatry 2010 Mar 15; [e-pub ahead of print]. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.2009.08060852)
Comment
This short-term study, enlisting voluntary ambulatory patients seen at a substance-abuse treatment facility, bears repetition and extension to assess the replicability and sustainability of these reported benefits. How effective the treatments might be without CBT and the social aspects of the program is also unknown. Nevertheless, clinicians will want to consider these findings in developing treatment plans for patients with comorbid alcohol dependence and major depression.