Critical analysis of the efficacy of meditation therapies for acute and subacute phase treatment of depressive disorders: a systematic review.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the evidence supporting the use of meditation therapies, particularly mindfulness, for treating depressive disorders in non-remitted patients.
Results Summary
The study found moderate to large reductions in depression symptoms for patients with acute major depressive episodes and residual subacute symptoms, though there was significant heterogeneity in techniques and trial designs. Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy was the most studied approach.
Population
Patients with clinically diagnosed depressive disorders, not currently in remission, including those with acute major depressive episodes and residual subacute symptoms.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
meditation therapies | decrease | clinical depressive disorders | patients having clinical depressive disorders during the acute and subacute phases of treatment | - | may have salutary effects | #1 |
Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy | neutral | - | - | - | comprised the largest proportion of studies | #2 |
meditation therapies | decrease | depression symptoms | patients having acute major depressive episodes | moderate to large | demonstrated moderate to large reductions | #3 |
meditation therapies | decrease | depression symptoms | patients with residual subacute clinical symptoms despite initial treatment | moderate to large | demonstrated moderate to large reductions | #4 |
BACKGROUND: Recently, the application of meditative practices to the treatment of depressive disorders has met with increasing clinical and scientific interest, owing to a lower side-effect burden, potential reduction of polypharmacy, and theoretical considerations that such interventions may target some of the cognitive roots of depression. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to determine the state of the evidence supporting this application. METHODS: Randomized controlled trials of techniques meeting the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality definition of meditation, for participants having clinically diagnosed depressive disorders, not currently in remission, were selected. Meditation therapies were separated into praxis (i.e., how they were applied) components, and trial outcomes were reviewed. RESULTS: 18 studies meeting the inclusion criteria were identified, encompassing 7 distinct techniques and 1173 patients. Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy comprised the largest proportion of studies. Studies including patients having acute major depressive episodes (n = 10 studies), and those with residual subacute clinical symptoms despite initial treatment (n = 8), demonstrated moderate to large reductions in depression symptoms within the group, and relative to control groups. There was significant heterogeneity of techniques and trial designs. CONCLUSIONS: A substantial body of evidence indicates that meditation therapies may have salutary effects on patients having clinical depressive disorders during the acute and subacute phases of treatment. Owing to methodologic deficiencies and trial heterogeneity, large-scale, randomized controlled trials with well-described comparator interventions and measures of expectation are needed to clarify the role of meditation in the depression treatment armamentarium.