Pharmacopsychiatry 1999; 32(3): 87-92
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-979200
Original Papers

© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Depressed In-Patients Respond Differently to Imipramine and Mirtazapine

J. A. Bruijn1 , P. Moleman2 , P. G. H. Mulder3 , W. W. van den Broek1
  • 1Department of Psychiatry, Dijkzigt, University Hospital, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
  • 2Moleman Research, Amerongen, The Netherlands
  • 3Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
20 April 2007 (online)

Abstract

Tricyclic antidepressants and more recent antidepressants are generally considered to have equivalent efficacy in the treatment of depression. After a previous report of a marked difference in the response to mirtazapine compared to imipramine, we report here an analysis of different symptom clusters. One hundred seven consecutive in-patients with major depression (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual III-R, DSM-III-R) and a Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRS-D) score of 18 points or more were randomly assigned to double-blind treatment. Two and four weeks after predefined blood levels had been obtained, the severity of depression was assessed using the HRS-D. The mean dosages used were 235 mg/day of imipramine and 77 mg/day of mirtazapine, the latter being in excess of the 15 - 45 mg/day range currently advised. Total HRS-D scores and seven symptom clusters were analyzed in the 85 patients (79 %) who were not receiving any co-medication. Imipramine was more effective against the clusters related to core symptoms of depression: ”depression and guilt", "retardation", and "melancholia", respectively. Mirtazapine showed a biphasic response with regard to the clusters "sleep" and "anxiety/agitation", respectively, which consisted of a marked response after two weeks of predefined blood level, but with a waning of this effect at four weeks. Imipramine produced a more gradual response on these clusters, which was more pronounced at four weeks than with mirtazapine. Two aspects of the present study could be related to this finding: blood level control resulted in optimal treatment with imipramine but not mirtazapine, and - most importantly - the patients were not receiving any anxiolytic or hypnotic co-medication. These findings suggest that mirtazapine may have anxiolytic and sedative properties and fewer antidepressant properties than imipramine in severely depressed in-patients.

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