๐Ÿ”‘ Key Learning

  • Depression is diagnosed if โ‰ฅ5 symptoms persist for โ‰ฅ2 weeks, including low mood or anhedonia
  • Severity is classified using symptom count or the PHQ-9 score
  • Management is stepped, based on severity and patient preference, with CBT and SSRIs as first-line treatments

  • Fluoxetine is preferred in children; sertraline is safest in comorbid physical illness

๐Ÿ“‹ Diagnosis of Depression (DSM-5)

A diagnosis of major depressive disorder requires 5 or more of the following symptoms for โ‰ฅ2 weeks, including either depressed mood or anhedonia:

  • Depressed mood most of the time
  • Anhedonia โ€“ loss of interest or pleasure
  • Weight change (loss or gain)
  • Psychomotor retardation (slow movement/thought)
  • Fatigue
  • Feelings of worthlessness or guilt
  • Poor concentration or indecisiveness
  • Recurrent thoughts of death or suicidal ideation
  • Sleep disturbance (insomnia or hypersomnia)
  • Appetite changes
  • Irritability

Classification by symptom count

  • <5 symptoms = Subthreshold
  • 5โ€“6 symptoms with mild functional impairment = Mild
  • Moderate = Intermediate severity
  • Severe = Most symptoms + marked functional impairment

๐Ÿงช Assessment Tools

PHQ-9

  • 9 questions, each scored 0โ€“3
  • Score < 16 โ†’ less severe depression
  • Score โ‰ฅ 16 โ†’ moderate or severe depression
  • Used to guide diagnosis and monitor progress

๐Ÿ’Š Management of Depression (NICE CKS 2024)

Less severe depression

No treatment requested / symptoms improving

  • Active monitoring
  • Review in 2โ€“4 weeks

Wants treatment

  • First-line: Guided self-help (CBT-based)
  • Do not routinely offer antidepressants
  • If patient prefers medication: consider SSRI

More severe depression

Offer one of the following based on patient preference:

  • CBT (individual)
  • Behavioural activation therapy
  • Group exercise
  • Antidepressants (SSRI or SNRI)

Review all patients in 2โ€“4 weeks after starting treatment

๐Ÿ’Š Choosing an Antidepressant

First-line: SSRIs

  • Sertraline or citalopram preferred for tolerability
  • Citalopram โ€“ may prolong QTc (consider ECG if cardiac risk)
  • Sertraline โ€“ safer in patients with ischaemic heart disease, or patients on multiple drugs (few interactions)
  • Fluoxetine โ€“ preferred in children and adolescents

๐Ÿ‘ต Depression in the Elderly

Clinical features

  • Atypical presentation โ€“ may lack low mood
  • Agitation, insomnia, somatic symptoms (e.g. weight loss)
  • Often present with memory concerns (global memory loss)

Management

  • First-line: SSRI

โšก Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT)

Used in severe, treatment-resistant depression

Contraindication

  • Raised intracranial pressure

Adverse effects

  • Short-term: headache, memory loss, arrhythmia
  • Long-term: persistent memory impairment

โ„๏ธ Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)

Description

  • Recurrent depressive symptoms during winter months

Management

  • Same as typical depression: CBT, SSRIs as needed

โš ๏ธ Suicide Risk Stratification

Risk factors for suicide include:

  • Male sex
  • History of self-harm or suicide attempt
  • Alcohol or drug misuse
  • Pre-existing mental illness
  • Chronic physical illness
  • Increasing age
  • Unemployment
  • Social isolation or loneliness
  • Living alone
  • Single, widowed, or divorced

๐Ÿ“ Exam Clues & Clinchers

  • โ‰ฅ5 symptoms for โ‰ฅ2 weeks including low mood or anhedonia โ†’ think depression
  • Elderly patient with weight loss, agitation and memory concerns โ†’ consider depression, not just dementia
  • PHQ-9 score โ‰ฅ16 โ†’ treat as moderate to severe
  • First-line pharmacological treatment โ†’ SSRI (sertraline or citalopram)
  • Patient with IHD or polypharmacy โ†’ sertraline is safest
  • Patient prefers non-drug treatment โ†’ guided CBT or behavioural activation
  • Atypical symptoms + memory loss โ†’ think depression in elderly
  • Fluoxetine is safest in young people

๐Ÿ”— Useful Links and References

NICE CKS- Depression: Management [Last revised June 2024]