The Treatment of Depressive Disorders in Children and Adolescents

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MEDICINE

CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINE

The Treatment of Depressive Disorders in


Children and Adolescents
Kathrin Dolle, Gerd Schulte-Krne

SUMMARY
Background: Depressive disorders are among the more
common mental illnesses around the world. About 3% of
prepubertal children and 6% of postpubertal children and
adolescents are affected. Many physicians are unsure
about which treatment approaches are effective and how
the treatment should be planned.
Methods: A systematic literature search was carried out in
electronic databases and study registries and as a manual
search. More than 450 studies (mostly randomized
controlled trials [RCTs]) were identified and summarized in
five evidence tables. The ensuing recommendations were
agreed upon in a consensus conference in which 23
organizations were represented.
Results: The recommended treatment of first choice for
children from age 8 onward and for adolescents is either
cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) (Cohens d [effect
strength]: 0.52) or interpersonal psychotherapy (Cohens
d: 0.50.6). Fluoxetine is recommended for drug treatment
(Cohens d: 0.35.6), either alone or in combination with
CBT. The analysis revealed a lower level of evidence for
psychodynamic or systemic psychotherapy or for drug
treatment with escitalopram, citalopram, or sertraline. For
mild or moderate depression, psychotherapy is recommended; for severe depression, combination therapy.
Particularly for children, there is a lack of adequately
informative comparative studies on these treatment
approaches as well as on other, complementary interventions (e.g., art therapy, sleep deprivation, youth welfare
services).
Conclusion: There is adequate evidence to support some
recommendations for the treatment of depressive disorders in adolescents, but evidence for children is lacking.
There is a pressing need for intervention research in this
area for both children and adolescents.
Cite this as:
Dolle K, Schulte-Krne G: Clinical practice guideline: The
treatment of depressive disorders in children and
adolescents. Dtsch Arztebl Int 2013; 110(50): 85460.
DOI: 10.3238/arztebl.2013.0854

epressive disorders are among the more common


mental illnesses all over the world, with an
estimated 121 million sufferers, according to the World
Health Organization (WHO). Depressive disorders are
currently the single most important cause of years lost
due to disability (YLDa statistical measure of years
lived with a disability, multiplied by the severity of the
disability). It is projected that, by the year 2020, depressive disorders will also become the second most
important cause of loss of disability-adjusted life
years (DALY) (WHO, 2012) (1).
Depressive disorders can arise early in life: some
3% of prepubertal children and 6% of postpubertal
children and adolescents are affected (e1). These disorders manifest themselves in episodes of varying
duration and are often chronic. They markedly impair psychosocial development. An adolescent who
has had one episode has a 50% to 70% chance of
having a second one within five years (e2).
Not all of the affected children and adolescents
receive optimal treatment (2). For many of the
currently available treatment options, evidence of
efficacy is lacking. Recommendations about the
treatment of depressive disorders in adults (e3) do
not necessarily apply to younger patients, as both the
manifestations of disease and the appropriateness
and efficacy of various forms of treatment depend on
the patients age and level of development.
In 2010, the German Society for Child and
Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy (Deutsche Gesellschaft fr Kinder- und
Jugendpsychiatrie, Psychosomatik und Psychotherapie, DGKJP) initiated a project to develop a
new evidence- and consensus-based S3 guideline for
the treatment of depressive disorders (ICD-10 codes
F32, F33, F34.1 and F92.0) in children and adolescents (ages 318), so that more of these younger patients can receive optimal treatment. The guideline
contains information on the current state of scientific
knowledge about treatment and gives recommendations for the selection and planning of effective
treatment strategies (3).

Methods

Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics, and


Psychotherapy, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich
Dipl.-Psych. Dolle, Prof. Dr. med. Schulte-Krne

A systematic search for existing guidelines (Figure


1) yielded three of these (47). In addition, searches
for relevant publications that appeared from July

854

Deutsches rzteblatt International | Dtsch Arztebl Int 2013; 110(50): 85460

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