• JAMA · Nov 2009

    Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study

    Telephone-delivered collaborative care for treating post-CABG depression: a randomized controlled trial.

    • Bruce L Rollman, Bea Herbeck Belnap, Michelle S LeMenager, Sati Mazumdar, Patricia R Houck, Peter J Counihan, Wishwa N Kapoor, Herbert C Schulberg, and Charles F Reynolds.
    • Division of General Internal Medicine, Center for Research on Health Care, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. rollmanbl@upmc.edu
    • JAMA. 2009 Nov 18; 302 (19): 2095-103.

    ContextDepressive symptoms commonly follow coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery and are associated with less positive clinical outcomes.ObjectiveTo test the effectiveness of telephone-delivered collaborative care for post-CABG depression vs usual physician care.Design, Setting, And ParticipantsSingle-blind effectiveness trial at 7 university-based and community hospitals in or near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Participants were 302 post-CABG patients with depression (150, intervention; 152, usual care) and a comparison group of 151 randomly sampled post-CABG patients without depression recruited between March 2004 and September 2007 and observed as outpatients until June 2008.InterventionEight months of telephone-delivered collaborative care provided by nurses working with patients' primary care physicians and supervised by a psychiatrist and primary care physician from this study.Main Outcome MeasuresMental health-related quality of life (HRQL) measured by the Short Form-36 Mental Component Summary (SF-36 MCS) at 8-month follow-up; secondary outcome measures included assessment of mood symptoms (Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression [HRS-D]), physical HRQL (SF-36 PCS), and functional status (Duke Activity Status Index [DASI]); and hospital readmissions.ResultsThe intervention patients reported greater improvements in mental HRQL (all P < or = .02) (SF-36 MCS: Delta, 3.2 points; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.5-6.0), physical functioning (DASI: Delta, 4.6 points; 95% CI, 1.9-7.3), and mood symptoms (HRS-D: Delta, 3.1 points; 95% CI, 1.3-4.9); and were more likely to report a 50% or greater decline in HRS-D score from baseline (50.0% vs 29.6%; number needed to treat, 4.9 [95% CI, 3.2-10.4]) than usual care patients (P < .001). Men with depression were particularly likely to benefit from the intervention (SF-36 MCS: Delta, 5.7 points; 95% CI, 2.2-9.2; P = .001). However, the mean HRQL and physical functioning of intervention patients did not reach that of the nondepressed comparison group.ConclusionCompared with usual care, telephone-delivered collaborative care for treatment of post-CABG depression resulted in improved HRQL, physical functioning, and mood symptoms at 8-month follow-up.Trial Registrationclinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00091962.

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