Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://oxfordhealth-nhs.archive.knowledgearc.net/handle/123456789/569
Title: Predicting treatment effects in unipolar depression: A meta-review
Authors: Tomlinson, Anneka
Cipriani, Andrea
Keywords: Depressive Disorders
Clinical Prediction Models
Antidepressant Drugs
Issue Date: Aug-2020
Citation: George Gillett, Anneka Tomlinson, Orestis Efthimiou, Andrea Cipriani. Predicting treatment effects in unipolar depression: A meta-review. Pharmacology & Therapeutics Volume 212, August 2020, 107557
Abstract: There is increasing interest in clinical prediction models in psychiatry, which focus on developing multivariate algorithms to guide personalized diagnostic or management decisions. The main target of these models is the prediction of treatment response to different antidepressant therapies. This is because the ability to predict response based on patients' personal data may allow clinicians to make improved treatment decisions, and to provide more efficacious or more tolerable medications to the right patient. We searched the literature for systematic reviews about treatment prediction in the context of existing treatment modalities for adult unipolar depression, until July 2019. Treatment effect is defined broadly to include efficacy, safety, tolerability and acceptability outcomes. We first focused on the identification of individual predictor variables that might predict treatment response, and second, we considered multivariate clinical prediction models. Our meta-review included a total of 10 systematic reviews; seven (from 2014 to 2018) focusing on individual predictor variables and three focusing on clinical prediction models. These identified a number of sociodemographic, phenomenological, clinical, neuroimaging, remote monitoring, genetic and serum marker variables as possible predictor variables for treatment response, alongside statistical and machine-learning approaches to clinical prediction model development. Effect sizes for individual predictor variables were generally small and clinical prediction models had generally not been validated in external populations. There is a need for rigorous model validation in large external data-sets to prove the clinical utility of models. We also discuss potential future avenues in the field of personalized psychiatry, particularly the combination of multiple sources of data and the emerging field of artificial intelligence and digital mental health to identify new individual predictor variables.
URI: https://oxfordhealth-nhs.archive.knowledgearc.net/handle/123456789/569
ISSN: 0163-7258
Appears in Collections:Depressive Disorders

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