Antidepressants for pediatric patients
Optimal prescribing depends on a thorough understanding of these agents’ efficacy and safety.
How long should the antidepressant be continued?
Many patients are concerned about how long they may be taking medication, and whether they will be taking an antidepressant “forever.” A treatment course can be broken into an acute phase, wherein remission is achieved and maintained for 6 to 8 weeks. This is followed by a continuation phase, with the goal of relapse prevention, lasting 16 to 20 weeks. The length of the last phase—the maintenance phase—depends both on the child’s history, the underlying therapeutic indication, the adverse effect burden experienced, and the family’s preferences/values. In general, for a first depressive episode, after treating for 1 year, a trial of discontinuation can be attempted with close monitoring. For a second depressive episode, we recommend 2 years of remission on antidepressant therapy before attempting discontinuation. In patients who have had 3 depressive episodes, or have had episodes of high severity, we recommend continuing antidepressant treatment indefinitely. Although much less well studied, the risk of relapse following SSRI discontinuation appears much more significant in OCD, whereas anxiety disorders and MDD have a relatively comparable risk.52
In general, stopping an antidepressant should be done carefully and slowly.
What to do when first-line treatments fail
Adequate psychotherapy? To determine whether children are receiving adequate CBT, ask:
- if the child receives homework from psychotherapy
- if the parents are included in treatment
- if therapy has involved identifying thought patterns that may be contributing to the child’s illness, and
- if the therapist has ever exposed the child to a challenge likely to produce anxiety or distress in a supervised environment and has developed an exposure hierarchy (for conditions with primarily exposure-based therapies, such as OCD or anxiety disorders).
If a family is not receiving most of these elements in psychotherapy, this is a good indicator that they may not be receiving evidence-based CBT.
Continue to: Adequate pharmacotherapy?