Article May 13, 2009

Suicidal Events in the Treatment for Adolescents With Depression Study (TADS)

Benedetto Vitiello; Susan G. Silva; Paul Rohde; Christopher J. Kratochvil; Betsy D. Kennard; Mark A. Reinecke; Taryn L. Mayes; Kelly Posner; Diane E. May; John S. March

J Clin Psychiatry 2009;70(5):741-747

Article Abstract

Objective: The Treatment for Adolescents with Depression Study (TADS) database was analyzed to determine whether suicidal events (attempts and ideation) occurred early in treatment, could be predicted by severity of depression or other clinical characteristics, and were preceded by clinical deterioration or symptoms of increased irritability, akathisia, sleep disruption, or mania.

Method: TADS was a 36-week randomized, controlled clinical trial of pharmacologic and psychotherapeutic treatments involving 439 youths with major depressive disorder (DSM-IV criteria). Suicidal events were defined according to the Columbia Classification Algorithm of Suicidal Assessment. Patients were randomly assigned into the study between spring 2000 and summer 2003.

Results: Forty-four patients (10.0%) had at least 1 suicidal event (no suicide occurred). Events occurred 0.4 to 31.1 weeks (mean ± SD = 11.9 ± 8.2) after starting TADS treatment, with no difference in event timing for patients receiving medication versus those not receiving medication. Severity of self-rated pretreatment suicidal ideation (Suicidal Ideation Questionnaire adapted for adolescents score ≥ 31) and depressive symptoms (Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale score ≥ 91) predicted occurrence of suicidal events during treatment (P

Conclusion: Most suicidal events occurred in the context of persistent depression and insufficient improvement without evidence of medication-induced behavioral activation as a precursor. Severity of self-rated suicidal ideation and depressive symptoms predicted emergence of suicidality during treatment. Risk for suicidal events did not decrease after the first month of treatment, suggesting the need for careful clinical monitoring for several months after starting treatment.