Trajectories of remitted psychotic depression: identification of predictors of worsening by machine learning.

TitleTrajectories of remitted psychotic depression: identification of predictors of worsening by machine learning.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2024
AuthorsBanerjee S, Wu Y, Bingham KS, Marino P, Meyers BS, Mulsant BH, Neufeld NH, Oliver LD, Power JD, Rothschild AJ, Sirey JAnne, Voineskos AN, Whyte EM, Alexopoulos GS, Flint AJ
Corporate AuthorsSTOP-PD II Study Group
JournalPsychol Med
Volume54
Issue6
Pagination1142-1151
Date Published2024 Apr
ISSN1469-8978
KeywordsDepression, Depressive Disorder, Major, Humans, Olanzapine, Psychotic Disorders, Sertraline
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Remitted psychotic depression (MDDPsy) has heterogeneity of outcome. The study's aims were to identify subgroups of persons with remitted MDDPsy with distinct trajectories of depression severity during continuation treatment and to detect predictors of membership to the worsening trajectory.

METHOD: One hundred and twenty-six persons aged 18-85 years participated in a 36-week randomized placebo-controlled trial (RCT) that examined the clinical effects of continuing olanzapine once an episode of MDDPsy had remitted with sertraline plus olanzapine. Latent class mixed modeling was used to identify subgroups of participants with distinct trajectories of depression severity during the RCT. Machine learning was used to predict membership to the trajectories based on participant pre-trajectory characteristics.

RESULTS: Seventy-one (56.3%) participants belonged to a subgroup with a stable trajectory of depression scores and 55 (43.7%) belonged to a subgroup with a worsening trajectory. A random forest model with high prediction accuracy (AUC of 0.812) found that the strongest predictors of membership to the worsening subgroup were residual depression symptoms at onset of remission, followed by anxiety score at RCT baseline and age of onset of the first lifetime depressive episode. In a logistic regression model that examined depression score at onset of remission as the only predictor variable, the AUC (0.778) was close to that of the machine learning model.

CONCLUSIONS: Residual depression at onset of remission has high accuracy in predicting membership to worsening outcome of remitted MDDPsy. Research is needed to determine how best to optimize the outcome of psychotic MDDPsy with residual symptoms.

DOI10.1017/S0033291723002945
Alternate JournalPsychol Med
PubMed ID37818656