Estimating the smallest worthwhile difference of antidepressants: a cross-sectional survey

BMJ Ment Health. 2024 Jan 8;27(1):e300919. doi: 10.1136/bmjment-2023-300919.

Abstract

Background: Approximately 30% of patients experience substantial improvement in depression after 2 months without treatment, and 45% with antidepressants. The smallest worthwhile difference (SWD) refers to an intervention's smallest beneficial effect over a comparison patients deem worthwhile given treatment burdens (harms, expenses and inconveniences), but is undetermined for antidepressants.

Objective: Estimating the SWD of commonly prescribed antidepressants for depression compared to no treatment.

Methods: The SWD was estimated as a patient-required difference in response rates between antidepressants and no treatment after 2 months. An online cross-sectional survey using Prolific, MQ Mental Health and Amazon Mechanical Turk crowdsourcing services in the UK and USA between October 2022 and January 2023 garnered participants (N=935) that were a mean age of 44.1 (SD=13.9) and 66% women (n=617).

Findings: Of 935 participants, 124 reported moderate-to-severe depressive symptoms but were not in treatment, 390 were in treatment and 495 reported absent-to-mild symptoms with or without treatment experiences. The median SWD was a 20% (IQR=10-30%) difference in response rates for people with moderate-to-severe depressive symptoms, not in treatment, and willing to consider antidepressants, and 25% (IQR=10-35%) for the full sample.

Conclusions: Our observed SWDs mean that the current 15% antidepressant benefit over no treatment was sufficient for one in three people to accept antidepressants given the burdens, but two in three expected greater treatment benefits.

Implications: While a minority may be satisfied with the best currently available antidepressants, more effective and/or less burdensome medications are needed, with more attention given to patient perspectives.

Keywords: data interpretation, statistical; depression.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Antidepressive Agents* / therapeutic use
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Crowdsourcing*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Mental Health
  • Minority Groups

Substances

  • Antidepressive Agents