Making The Diagnosis Of Clinical Depression
Q: A diagnosis of depression can be complicated by concomitant illnesses
or medications that mimic the symptoms of depression. Williams and
colleagues researched the most effective methods of diagnosing
depression and determining which symptoms are related to depression
and which are related to other causes.
A:Major depression is defined as depressed mood or anhedonia lasting at
least two weeks plus a set number of psychologic or physical symptoms.
Dysthymia has fewer symptoms than major depression and is a chronic
illness lasting at least two years. A condition known as depression
not otherwise specified includes conditions that do not have enough
symptoms (fewer than five) or are of insufficient duration to be
considered major depression.
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommends a case-finding
approach to diagnosing depression. Patients are routinely asked to
complete a depression questionnaire at routine points of contact with
their physician. Another approach is to evaluate patients when their
symptoms and signs raise the index of suspicion of depression.
Patients who have chronic medical illness, chronic pain syndrome,
stress, and unexplained clinical syndromes are up to 3.5 times more
likely to have depression. The diagnosis of depression, regardless of
which approach is used, requires a thorough clinical interview. The
accompanying table offers suggestions for assessing major depression.
The authors' MEDLINE search for studies evaluating instruments for
depression assessment yielded 11 questionnaires, six of which are
depression-specific instruments. The latter consists of the Beck
Depression Inventory (BDI), the Center for Epidemiologic Studies
Depression Screen (CES-D), the Depression Scale (DEPS), the Geriatric
Depression Scale (GDS), the Zung Self-Assessment Depression Scale
(SDS), and the Single Question (SQ) test. The remaining
questionnaires, the nondepression-specific tests, are the Duke Anxiety
and Depression Scale (DADS), the Hopkins Symptom Check List (HSCL),
the Primary Care Evaluation of Mental Disorders (PRIME-MD), the
PRIME-MD Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ), and the Symptom Driven
Diagnostic System-Primary Care (SDDS-PC).
The BDI, CES-D, and SDS are used to rate depression severity and
monitor response to therapy. The GDS has been tested in patients older
than 60 years. Selection of a specific instrument will take into
account patient characteristics, response format, and brevity, as well
as the need to monitor treatment and screen for other psychiatric
problems. For example, the SQ test may be appropriate if the patient
needs to be screened during a routine visit or if events have occurred
that would increase the likelihood of depression.
Overall, taking into account all studies utilizing these instruments,
a depressed patient is 3.3 times more likely to have a positive screen
than