Pharmacopsychiatry 2005; 38(5): 194-200
DOI: 10.1055/s-2005-873153
Original Paper
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Predicting Stable Treatment Response in Patients with Major Depression Treated with Hypericum Extract WS® 5570/5572

M. Kieser1 , A. Szegedi2
  • 1Dr. Willmar Schwabe Pharmaceuticals, P O Box 410925, 76209 Karlsruhe, Germany
  • 2Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Klinik und Hochschulambulanz für Psychiatrie und Psychotherapie, Eschenallee 3, 14050 Berlin, Germany
Further Information

Publication History

Received: 3.6.2004 Revised: 9.8.2004

Accepted: 13.4.2005

Publication Date:
27 September 2005 (online)

Preview

Objective: Recent research with several synthetic antidepressants indicates that early improvement during the initial weeks of treatment may be a highly sensitive predictor of therapeutic success in major depression. We investigated whether early improvement is sensitive and specific in predicting sustained response and non-response to antidepressant treatment with Hypericum extract WS® 5570/5572 and whether the results reported for synthetic antidepressants apply to these Hypericum extracts as well. Methods: We analyzed original data of 3 double-blind, randomized trials including a total of 594 adult out-patients suffering from major depression according to DSM-IV criteria, who received well-characterized Hypericum extract preparations WS® 5570, WS® 5572, WS® 5573 or placebo for 6 weeks. The main outcome measure was the prediction of a sustained ≥ 50 % decrease of the Hamilton Depression Scale (HAM-D) total score versus baseline (‘sustained response’) by the presence of ≥20 % HAM-D total score improvement after 1 and 2 weeks of treatment (‘early improvement’). Results: For Hypericum extract, early improvement had a sensitivity of 87 % (95 % confidence interval [CI], 82-93 %) and a specificity of 54 % (95 % CI, 45-62 %) at day 14, and a sensitivity of 43 % (95 % CI, 35-51 %) and a specificity of 86 % (95 % CI, 80-92 %) at day 7 for predicting sustained response. After 2 weeks of treatment, 78 % (95 % CI, 69-87 %) of the patients who failed to improve did not show sustained response later during treatment. Conclusion: A substantial fraction of the patients treated with Hypericum extracts WS® 5570/5572 showed a meaningful reduction of depressive symptoms during the first two weeks of treatment (early improvement), which was found to be a sensitive predictor of sustained response. The results determined for the herbal extracts were comparable to those for effective synthetic antidepressants investigated previously.

References

1 All extracts were manufactured by Dr. Willmar Schwabe Pharmaceuticals, Karlsruhe, Germany

Dr. Willmar Schwabe Pharmaceuticals

PO Box 410925

76209 Karlsruhe

Germany

Phone: +49 721 4005 572

Fax: +49 721 4005 333

Email: meinhard.kieser@schwabe.de