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Telephone-Delivered Care for treating
Depression after CABG Surgery appears to
improve outcomes
Newswise — Patients who received
telephone-delivered collaborative care for
treatment of depression after coronary
artery bypass graft surgery reported greater
improvement in measures of quality of life,
physical functioning and mood than patients
who received usual care, according to a
study in the November 18 issue of JAMA.
The study is being released early online
because of its presentation at an American
Heart Association scientific conference.
Coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery
is one of the most common and costly medical
procedures performed in the United States.
As many as half of CABG patients report
depressive symptoms after surgery, and are
also more likely to experience a decreased
health-related quality of life (HRQL) and
functional status, according to background
information in the article.
Several
trials for treatment of depression have been
conducted in cardiac populations, but most
achieved less than anticipated benefits with
regard to reducing mood symptoms.
“Moreover, none used the proven effective
collaborative care approach recently
recommended by a National Institutes of
Health expert consensus panel,” the authors
write. Collaborative care emphasizes a
flexible real-world treatment package that
involves active follow-up by a nonphysician
care manager who adheres to evidence-based
treatment protocols.
Bruce L. Rollman, M.D., M.P.H., of the
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine,
and colleagues conducted a randomized trial
to test the effectiveness of
telephone-delivered collaborative care for
post-CABG depression vs. usual physician
care.
The study included 302 post-CABG patients
with depression (150, intervention; 152,
usual care) and a comparison group of 151
randomly sampled post-CABG patients without
depression, recruited between March 2004 and
September 2007, and observed as outpatients
until June 2008. Measures of HRQL, mood
symptoms, functioning status and hospital
readmissions were gauged via various surveys
or tests.
Intervention patients received eight months
of telephone-delivered collaborative care,
in which a nurse care manager telephoned
patients to review their psychiatric
history, provide basic psychoeducation about
depression and its effect on cardiac
disease, and describe treatment options.
The nurses worked with patients’ primary
care physicians and were supervised by a
psychiatrist and primary care physician from
this study.
The researchers found that intervention
patients reported greater improvements in
mental HRQL, physical functioning and mood
symptoms.
Overall, 50 percent of intervention patients
reported a 50 percent or greater reduction
in mood symptoms from baseline to 8-month
follow-up vs. 29.6 percent of patients in
usual care.
“Men with depression were particularly
likely to benefit from the intervention.
However, the mean HRQL and physical
functioning of intervention patients did not
reach that of the nondepressed comparison
group,” the authors write.
“Since a substantial minority of patients
did not benefit from our depression
intervention, it is vital to identify post-CABG
patients most likely to become treatment
resistant so as to develop more effective
treatments for them.
"Identifying
the intervention components that maximally
contribute to our outcomes is also of great
interest.
"However,
collaborative care is a complex intervention
involving a number of separate mechanisms
that have proven difficult to disentangle
from the nonspecific effects of increased
attention by the care manager.”
“Additional research is necessary to develop
improved treatments for women and patients
with resistant depression, and to examine
the economic effect of this intervention,”
the researchers conclude.
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