Original Research November 15, 2006

Escitalopram Maintenance Treatment for Prevention of Recurrent Depression: A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial

Susan G. Kornstein, MD; Anjana Bose, PhD; Dayong Li, PhD; Khalil G. Saikali, PhD, MBA; Chetan Gandhi, PhD

J Clin Psychiatry 2006;67(11):1767-1775

Article Abstract

Background: Major depressive disorder is a recurrent illness that often requires maintenance antidepressant treatment. Escitalopram is a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) that has shown efficacy in both acute and continuation treatment of major depressive disorder. The current trial examined the efficacy of maintenance escitalopram treatment in preventing depression recurrence in patients who responded to acute SSRI therapy.

Method: Patients with recurrent DSM-IV-defined major depressive disorder (>= 2 previous episodes; baseline Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale [MADRS] score >= 22) who had responded (MADRS score = 22 or insufficient therapeutic response during the double-blind phase. The study was conducted between October 16, 2000, and February 4, 2003.

Results: A total of 234 patients who responded to acute open-label treatment with 1 of 4 SSRIs received at least 1 dose of open-label escitalopram continuation treatment. Of 164 patients who completed escitalopram continuation treatment, 139 were randomly assigned to double-blind maintenance treatment with escitalopram (N = 73) or placebo (N = 66). Mean baseline MADRS scores at the start of the maintenance phase were < 5 for both the placebo- and escitalopram-treatment groups. Time to recurrence was significantly longer in patients who received maintenance treatment with escitalopram compared with patients switched to placebo (hazard ratio = 0.26, 95% CI = 0.13 to 0.52, p < .001). Long-term escitalopram treatment was well tolerated.

Conclusion: Maintenance treatment with escitalopram was well tolerated and significantly reduced the risk for recurrence of depression. Patients with few residual symptoms following continuation treatment with escitalopram experienced a high rate of depression recurrence when switched to placebo, demonstrating the need for maintenance therapy of recurrent major depressive disorder beyond 4 to 6 months of initial symptom resolution even if few residual