The natural course of major depressive disorder in primary care: the predict-nl study
background Major depressive disorder
(mdd) tends to be chronic. However, few studies
have examined the long-term course of mdd
in primary care.
aim To examine the 39-month natural
history of mdd in adult primary care patients,
and whether the outcome is related to severity of
depression.
methods Prospective cohort study of
1338 consecutive attendees with follow-up after
six, 12 and 39 months with dsm-iv mdd and
severity of depression (phq-9) at each assessment.
results At baseline, mdd was present
in 13%. Of these, 38% remained depressed or were
again depressed after 39 months, and 20% were in
remission but had multiple episodes. Patients
with a chronic or recurrent course had severer
depressive symptoms at baseline than those who
remitted.
conclusion The majority of patients
with mdd attending primary care have a chronic
or recurrent course. Furthermore, chronic and
intermittent course patterns are associated with
higher levels of severity of depression.