Adjunctive brexpiprazole in patients with major depressive disorder who show minimal or partial response to antidepressant treatment: post hoc analysis of randomized controlled trials
Shivani Kapadia, Zhen Zhang, Ferhat Ardic, Mehul Patel, Michael E Thase, George I Papakostas

TL;DR
Adding brexpiprazole to antidepressants improves depression symptoms in patients who show little or partial improvement from antidepressants alone.
Contribution
This study demonstrates brexpiprazole's efficacy as an adjunct treatment for depression in patients with minimal or partial response to antidepressants.
Findings
Brexpiprazole improved depression scores more than placebo in patients with minimal antidepressant response.
Similar improvements were observed in patients with partial antidepressant response.
Safety profiles showed higher adverse event rates with brexpiprazole compared to placebo.
Abstract
Many patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) have <50% symptom reduction on antidepressant treatment, and may benefit from an adjunctive atypical antipsychotic. This post hoc analysis aimed to investigate the efficacy and safety of adjunctive brexpiprazole in patients with minimal (>0% to <25%) and partial (≥25% to <50%) response to antidepressant treatment. Data were pooled from three international, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, Phase 3 trials. Adult outpatients with MDD and inadequate response to antidepressant treatments were enrolled. Patients were stratified post hoc into minimal and partial response subgroups based on their response over an 8-week prospective antidepressant treatment period. Adjunctive brexpiprazole 2–3 mg/day (versus adjunctive placebo) was investigated in a 6-week randomized treatment period. Efficacy was assessed using the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTreatment of Major Depression · Electroconvulsive Therapy Studies · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
