News Report on Depression Study Shows Depression Will Burden Society. Focus on More
Drugs:
In a report (Copyright © 1997 Nando.net; and Copyright © 1997 Reuter Information
Service) from VIENNA, Austria (September 14, 1997) , Elizabeth Fullerton wrote that:
Depression will become a huge burden on society, costing billions of
dollars in treatment and lost productivity, unless better drugs are developed to combat
the disorder, a study released Sunday showed.
Whether or not "Better Drugs" alone will be needed is a
question not discussed in the news article. It is however, that Better Therapies
in general will be needed. Therapies including "Phototherapy" -narrow band light
therapy- and full spectrum light phototherapy, biofeedback, and nutrition, as well as
"better" drugs.
The news article, focusing on drug treatment, stated:
The report, presented by Oxford University professor of psychiatry Guy Goodwin at a
conference of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ENCP) in Vienna, showed
psychiatrists are dissatisfied with the treatments available.
The study by British research company ISIS on behalf of Organon, a business unit of
chemicals group Akzo Nobel, involved 150 doctors -- mostly psychiatrists -- attending the
World Congress of Biological Psychiatry in France in June.
"Depression is becoming more, not less, of a problem to to society. We cannot
afford to ignore this serious and often deadly illness," Goodwin said, speaking ahead
of the four-day Vienna forum which opened Sunday.
Depression -- mood and anxiety disorder -- is estimated to cost the United States alone
over $53 billion a year, mainly through absenteeism among workers and reduced
productivity.
The study showed most psychiatrists agreed with a World Health Organization forecast
that depression will be the leading cause of disability in the developing world by 2020.
The news article continued with this report of widespread dissatisfaction with the
current treatments... drugs. The drug focus of the news article continued:
"Only 14 percent of psychiatrists believe patients are satisfied with the
treatment they currently receive," said Goodwin.
More drugs:
At the same time Professor Norman Sussman of New York University School of Medicine
outlined his experience of Organon's new antidepressant Remeron (mirtazapine), which has
been on the U.S. market for just over one year.
"It is an excellent and ground-breaking first choice treatment for
depression," he said.
The news release continued with more information on new drugs. Drugs to treat
depression. No mention that other therapies in addition to or in place of more drugs may
be useful in ameliorating depression: (This was after all a conference of the European
College of Neuropsychopharmacology which would, of course, focus on drugs)
Remeron's fast onset of action, efficacy and tolerability were all important factors in
the drug's favour, he added.
"Many patients experience an almost immediate improvement in sleep, and highly
anxious and agitated patients report immediate relief of these symptoms," said
Sussman.
Remeron is a novel dual-action drug which acts on both the brain's noradrenergic and
serotonergic neurotransmitters, where an imbalance is believed to be the cause of
depression.
Antidepressants come in three main classes -- tricyclics, selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitors which just act on the serotonin transmitter, and dual-action noradrenergic and
specific serotonergic anti-depressants.
Professor David Nutt of Bristol University's pyschopharmacology unit said Remeron will
have a very positive role in treating depression in the future.
"I was impressed. It has a unique mode of action, a very nice side-effect profile,
and it's very safe," he said.
Will there be future "drug wars" between competing pills and pill companies?
It's a multi-billion dollar market and the new "Remeron" reporting claims in the
news article of superiority:
Sussman said he had found Remeron to be superior in its efficacy to Eli Lilly's Prozac,
the best-selling treatment for depression.
Prozac sales were over $2.0 billion in 1995 but Remeron has already gained over 1
percent of the U.S. market.
Organon says its new drug has fewer side-effects than other anti-depressants, which can
cause sexual dysfunction, dry mouth, constipation and nausea. Remeron causes some weight
gain and drowsiness but is safe in high doses.
Remeron is available in 16 countries and is due for release in Britain on Sept. 22 and
in France early next year.
For information on a non-drug approach -
phototherapy- to depression, see the SLTBR reference. It has been
clearly shown that phototherapy is a successful therapy in cases of depression.