What To Do When Your Antidepressant Doesn’t Work

June 25, 2008
By Johns Hopkins Health Alerts, www.johnshopkinshealthalerts.com



If you’re on an antidepressant and it’s not working, don’t give up on it: You may need a higher dose, a longer duration of therapy, a different antidepressant altogether, or a combination of medications. That’s the important lesson to learn from a large, six-year, four-step government study called the Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression trial, or STAR*D. In fact, the researchers found that systematically trying these treatment options can lead to a remission in symptoms in up to half of severely depressed, treatment-resistant patients.

The STAR*D study, which looked at the use of popular antidepressants in people with chronic depression (lasting, in some cases, 15–16 years), is the first to provide "real world" scientific data on what to do when someone doesn't respond to a particular antidepressant, has severe depression, or suffers from multiple mental and physical ailments. These types of treatment-resistant patients are not typically included in antidepressant drug trials sponsored by pharmaceutical companies.

Here are nine important take-home messages from the STAR*D study: