Objective: The aim of this study was to compare the efficacy and safety profiles between fluvoxamine
and nortriptyline in Japanese patients with major depression. Methods: The efficacy and safety profiles of fluvoxamine, a selective serotonin-reuptake inhibitor,
and nortriptyline were compared under a single-blind fashion in 74 Japanese patients
with major depression. The efficacy was assessed using the 17-item Hamilton Rating
Scale for Depression (HAM-D), Clinical Global Impression Scale (CGI) severity and
improvement scores, while the safety profiles were assessed using the UKU Side Effect
Rating Scale at baseline, and on days 7, 14, 28 and 56. Moreover, with the aim of
determining the distinct efficacy profiles of each drug, the effects on each of the
factor scores extracted by the principal component analysis performed for HAM-D scores
were compared between drugs. Results: Both drug groups showed significant amelioration of depressive symptomatology over
the trial period lasting for 8 weeks. Statistical analyses revealed no significant
between-group differences regarding the efficacy assessed by either HAM-D or CGI scores;
however, the efficacy of nortriptyline tended to appear earlier than that of fluvoxamine.
Moreover, no significant differences were obtained for the factor scores, representing
‘depressed mood’, ‘physical symptoms’ or ‘sleep disturbances’, although ‘sleep disturbances’
appeared to improve earlier in the nortriptyline group than in the fluvoxamine group.
As for the safety profiles, the nortriptyline group scored a significantly higher
incidence of adverse events such as dysarthria or orthostatic dizziness, as well as
increased heart rate. Conclusions: These findings suggest that fluvoxamine is generally comparable to nortriptyline
in its efficacy and superior in its safety profile, in accordance with findings obtained
in previous comparative clinical trials conducted in Caucasian populations.
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Kazuyuki Nakagome
Department of Psychiatry
School of Medicine
Showa University
1-5-8, Hatanodai, Shinagawa-ku
Tokyo 142-8666
Japan
Phone: +81-3-3784-8703
Phone: +81-3-3784-8569
Fax: +81-3-3784-8354
Email: nakagome@med.showa-u.ac.jp