St. John's wort and S-adenosyl methionine as "natural" alternatives to conventional antidepressants in the era of the suicidality boxed warning: what is the evidence for clinically relevant benefit?

Alternative Medicine Review Pub Date : 2011-03-01
David J Carpenter
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Abstract

Introduction: A boxed-warning in antidepressant labeling now informs prescribers of the potential for treatment-emergent suicidality to occur. Consequently, alternative "natural" antidepressant therapies widely viewed to be devoid of this risk, such as St. John's wort (SJW) and s-adenosyl methionine (SAM-e), may experience a resurgence in popularity and expansion of use beyond mild forms of depressive illness. The purpose of this article is to critically assess whether the clinical evidence supports the use of SJW and SAM-e as alternatives to conventional antidepressants in the treatment of major depressive disorder (MDD). In addition, this article evaluates whether the behavioral adverse event profiles of SJW and SAM-e suggest an increased risk for suicidality, like their conventional counterparts.

Methods: A comprehensive literature review was performed (Jan 1975-July 2010) to identify all English language reports of placebo-controlled studies of SJW and SAM-e conducted for psychiatric indications. MDD studies were categorized as "positive" or "negative" based on statistical superiority to placebo on prospectively-defined, primary, clinician-rated efficacy parameters (e.g., change in Hamilton Depression scores [HAM-D] or Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale [MADRS] total). Treatment effect size (Cohen's d) was also calculated in each case to assess the clinical relevance of the findings. Behavioral-related adverse events were summarized by treatment.

Results: Ten of 14 (71%) SJW studies in mild-to-moderate MDD were positive. The mean and median effect sizes for HAM-D change in those studies were 0.64 and 0.48, respectively, indicative of a moderately-large treatment effect. In the few studies that included patients with severe symptoms, however, or which evaluated long-term maintenance of effect, SJW did not differentiate from placebo. The majority of SAM-e studies in MDD were also positive (8/14, 57%); however, most were methodologically flawed to some extent. Based on the magnitude of the treatment-effect size in a number of positive studies, SJW appears to be useful for the short-term treatment of mild-to-moderate depressive illness in adults. Existing data do not support the use of SJW in more severely depressed individuals. The SAM-e clinical data also are strongly suggestive of antidepressant efficacy; however, until more rigorously generated data become available it is not possible to reach a more definitive conclusion. There are no long-term treatment data that convincingly demonstrate long-term maintenance of effect for either product. The reviewed studies did not reveal evidence of treatment-emergent suicidality, suggesting that this risk for either product is low. However, the studies examined were not prospectively designed to detect such events and therefore were likely unable to reliably assess this risk.

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圣约翰草和s -腺苷蛋氨酸作为传统抗抑郁药的“天然”替代品在自杀警告时代:临床相关益处的证据是什么?
简介:抗抑郁药标签上的黑框警告现在告知处方者治疗后出现自杀的可能性。因此,被广泛认为没有这种风险的替代性“天然”抗抑郁疗法,如圣约翰草(SJW)和s-腺苷蛋氨酸(SAM-e),可能会重新流行起来,并扩大使用范围,超出轻度抑郁症的范围。本文的目的是批判性地评估临床证据是否支持使用SJW和SAM-e作为传统抗抑郁药治疗重度抑郁症(MDD)的替代品。此外,本文还评估了SJW和SAM-e的行为不良事件特征是否表明他们的自杀风险增加,就像他们的常规对手一样。方法:进行全面的文献综述(1975年1月- 2010年7月),以确定所有用于精神适应症的SJW和SAM-e安慰剂对照研究的英文报告。根据前瞻性定义的、主要的、临床评定的疗效参数(如汉密尔顿抑郁评分[HAM-D]或蒙哥马利-阿斯伯格抑郁评定量表[MADRS]总分的变化)与安慰剂相比的统计学优势,MDD研究被分类为“阳性”或“阴性”。还计算了每个病例的治疗效应大小(Cohen’s d),以评估研究结果的临床相关性。行为相关不良事件按治疗进行汇总。结果:14项SJW研究中有10项(71%)为轻至中度MDD阳性。在这些研究中,HAM-D变化的平均效应量和中位效应量分别为0.64和0.48,表明治疗效果中等。然而,在少数包括严重症状患者或评估长期维持效果的研究中,SJW与安慰剂没有区别。大多数MDD的SAM-e研究也呈阳性(8/14,57%);然而,大多数在方法上都存在一定程度的缺陷。根据许多阳性研究的治疗效果大小的大小,SJW似乎对成人轻度至中度抑郁症的短期治疗有用。现有数据不支持在更严重的抑郁症患者中使用SJW。SAM-e临床数据也强烈提示抗抑郁药的疗效;然而,在获得更严格的数据之前,不可能得出更明确的结论。没有长期治疗数据令人信服地证明任何一种产品的长期维持效果。经过审查的研究没有发现治疗后出现自杀的证据,这表明这两种产品的风险都很低。然而,所检查的研究没有前瞻性设计来检测此类事件,因此可能无法可靠地评估这种风险。
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来源期刊
Alternative Medicine Review
Alternative Medicine Review 医学-全科医学与补充医学
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>12 weeks
期刊最新文献
Alternative Medicine: A Critical Assessment of 202 Modalities Acknowledgments I II. Alternative Medicine III. Plonk Frontmatter
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