Cognitive therapy versus fluoxetine in the treatment of dysthymic disorder.

Category Primary study
JournalDepression
Year 1996
We studied the effects of a fixed dose of fluoxetine (20 mg) or cognitive psychotherapy in a 16 week trial of patients with dysthymic disorder. More patients assigned to fluoxetine dropped out of the 16 week treatment (33%) than those assigned to cognitive therapy (9%), but this difference did not attain statistical significance. Both treatments showed improvement over baseline conditions at 8 weeks and further improvement at 16 weeks. There were no statistically significant group differences in treatment response. No follow-up data were collected so the enduring effects of the treatments are unknown. An optimal treatment for dysthymic disorder may be combined psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy for a longer period of time.
Epistemonikos ID: 260028f76a2bfd035cff6fde7bdca72b998b25fe
First added on: Jan 14, 2014