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1: J Affect Disord. 1998 Feb;48(1):47-56.Click here to read Links

Amisulpride versus fluoxetine in patients with dysthymia or major depression in partial remission: a double-blind, comparative study.

Istituto Scientifico Ospedale San Raffaele, Department of Neuropsychiatric Sciences, University of Milan-School of Medicine, Italy.

In a multicentre, double blind, parallel group study 281 patients with DSM III-R diagnosis of dysthymia or a single episode of major depression in partial remission were randomised to 3 months of treatment with amisulpride 50 mg/day or fluoxetine 20 mg/day. The baseline Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) total score was reduced by at least 50% in 74.1% of patients (103/139) with amisulpride and 67.4% (87/129) with fluoxetine (P =0.230). No significant differences between treatment groups were found in the reductions in mean total score with the MADRS, Widlöcher psychomotor retardation scale, Sheehan disability scale, and CGI. Anxiety measured by HAM-A total mean score decreased significantly more with amisulpride (63%) than with fluoxetine (54%; P = 0.021). There were 13 dropouts due to adverse events with amisulpride and ten with fluoxetine. The number of patients reporting at least one adverse event was similar in the two groups (amisulpride 47.5%; fluoxetine 40.9%). As expected, in the amisulpride group endocrine-like adverse events in female patients were the most common, while nausea, dyspepsia, anorexia and insomnia occurred more frequently with fluoxetine.

PMID: 9495601 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]