Article April 22, 2015

Whether to Increase or Maintain Dosage of Mirtazapine in Early Nonimprovers With Depression

Fumihiko Ueno, MD; Shinichiro Nakajima, MD, PhD; Takefumi Suzuki, MD, PhD; Takayuki Abe, PhD; Yuji Sato, MD, PhD; Masaru Mimura, MD, PhD; Hiroyuki Uchida, MD, PhD

J Clin Psychiatry 2015;76(4):434-439

Article Abstract

Objective: To compare outcomes between increasing versus maintaining the dose of mirtazapine in patients with depression without initial improvement.

Method: Data from a 6-week double-blind randomized placebo-controlled trial of mirtazapine in major depressive disorder (DSM-IV) conducted from November 2004 to December 2005 were used. Percentages of remitters (ie, a score of ≤ 7 in the 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale [HDRS-17]) and HDRS-17 score changes from baseline to week 6 were compared in the following 2 pairs, using Fisher exact test or mixed-effects model for repeated measures: (1) subjects who failed to show a ≥ 20% decrease in the HDRS-17 total scores at week 1 but were assigned to continue 15 mg/d (stay15 group) versus those who were assigned to increase the dose to 30 mg/d (increase30 group) and (2) subjects who failed to show a ≥ 20% decrease in the HDRS-17 total scores with 30 mg/d at week 2 but were assigned to continue 30 mg/d (stay30 group) versus those who were assigned to increase the dose to 45 mg/d (increase45 group).

Results: The increase30 group showed a numerically but not significantly higher remission rate and a significantly greater decrease in the HDRS-17 total score at week 6 than the stay15 group (34.7% [8 of 23 patients] vs 14.3% [3 of 21 patients], P = .2; least squares mean, −15.8 vs −10.9, P = .003). No significant differences were found between the increase45 and stay30 groups.

Conclusions: Dose increase of mirtazapine from 15 mg/d to 30 mg/d may be effective for patients with depression without initial improvement. However, effectiveness may not be the case beyond 30 mg/d.

Trial Registration: JapicCTI identifier: 152830

Continue Reading...

Did you know members enjoy unlimited free PDF downloads as part of their subscription? Subscribe today for instant access to this article and our entire library in your preferred format. Alternatively, you can purchase the PDF of this article individually.

Subscribe Now

Already a member? Login

Purchase PDF for $40.00

Members enjoy free PDF downloads on all articles. Join today