# Pharmacotherapy guideline concordance for major depressive disorder and its link to functioning via symptom change

**Authors:** Mason T. Breitzig, Fan He, Lan Kong, Guodong Liu, Daniel A. Waschbusch, Jeff D. Yanosky, Duanping Liao, Erika F.H. Saunders

PMC · DOI: 10.1017/cts.2024.562 · 2024-09-16

## TL;DR

Following depression treatment guidelines improves patient functioning mainly by reducing symptoms over time.

## Contribution

Shows guideline adherence improves functioning via symptom reduction in MDD patients.

## Key findings

- Higher guideline concordance linked to 0.48-point disability score reduction.
- Symptom severity change significantly mediated the effect on functioning.
- Direct effect of guidelines independent of symptoms was not significant.

## Abstract

Alleviation of symptom severity for major depressive disorder (MDD) is known to be associated with a lagged improvement of functioning. Pharmacotherapy guidelines support algorithms for MDD treatment. However, it is currently unclear whether concordance with guidelines influences functional recovery. A guideline concordance algorithm (GCA-8) was used to measure this pathway in a naturalistic clinical setting.

Data from 1403 adults (67% female, 84% non-Hispanic/Latino White, mean age of 43 years) with nonpsychotic MDD from the Penn State Psychiatry Clinical Assessment and Rating Evaluation System registry (visits from 02/01/2015 to 04/13/2021) were evaluated. Multivariable linear regression measured associations between GCA-8 and World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 (WHODAS) scores. Mediation by MDD symptom severity using the Patient Health Questionnaire depression module (PHQ-9) was also evaluated.

This study found a statistically significant improvement in WHODAS scores (functioning) between baseline and final measures (−2 points, P < .001) within one year. A one standard deviation increase in the GCA-8 score was associated with a 0.48-point reduction in mean disability score (total effect; P = .02) with significant mediation by the change in MDD symptom severity (coefficient = −0.51, P < .001) and a nonsignificant natural direct effect of the GCA-8 independent of PHQ-9 change (coefficient = −0.02, P = .92).

Higher pharmacotherapy guideline concordance is associated with better functioning for MDD patients; this association likely occurs through improvement in MDD symptom severity rather than directly.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** major depressive disorder (MONDO:0002009), MDD (MONDO:0012048)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** MDD (MESH:D003865), depression (MESH:D003866)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11428114/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11428114