From the Journals

CBT prevents depression in up to 50% of patients with insomnia


 

FROM JAMA PSYCHIATRY

Convincing argument?

Commenting on the findings for this news organization, Philip R. Muskin, MD, professor of psychiatry at Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, said the study was “nicely written” and the authors put forward “a very convincing argument” for CBT-I to prevent depression.

“It’s eye opening in that it’s a robust study; it’s carefully done; subjects were followed for a long period of time, and it’s an accessible treatment,” said Dr. Muskin, who was not involved with the research.

The study also shows “it’s possible to intervene in something we know is a risk factor in elderly people,” he added. “We think of older people as being less malleable to these kinds of things, but they’re not. They clearly participated, and there wasn’t a huge dropout rate.”

Dr. Muskin noted that less than half of the older participants were married or had a partner. He would have liked more information on this status because being widowed or divorced, as well as when this life change occurred, could affect vulnerability to depression.

The authors of an accompanying editorial called the study “seminal,” and noted that insomnia treatment possibly preventing depressive disorders is a “major finding.”

Proving this preventive strategy is effective in older adults will be important because “insomnia and depression are highly prevalent in this population and the uptake of both preventive and treatment services is low,” wrote Pim Cuijpers, PhD, department of clinical, neuro, and developmental psychology, Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, and Charles F. Reynolds III, MD, department of psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh.

If the reduced rates of depression observed in the study could be generalized to the total population with insomnia, “the incidence of major depression could be reduced considerably,” they wrote.

“Can we prevent depression through interventions aimed at procrastination in college students, interventions aimed at perfectionism in perinatal women, stress management training for employees, social skills training in adolescents?” they asked.

This approach to preventing depressive disorders “offers all kinds of new opportunities to develop and test indirect interventions” for problems that are significantly associated with the onset of depression, the editorialists wrote.

The study was funded by a grant from the National Institute on Aging to the University of California, which partially supported the authors’ salaries. Dr. Irwin, Dr. Muskin, and Dr. Cuijpers have reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Reynolds reported being coinventor of the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, for which he receives royalties.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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