2020
DOI: 10.1002/wps.20771
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The clinical characterization of the adult patient with depression aimed at personalization of management

Abstract: Depression is widely acknowledged to be a heterogeneous entity, and the need to further characterize the individual patient who has received this diagnosis in order to personalize the management plan has been repeatedly emphasized. However, the research evidence that should guide this personalization is at present fragmentary, and the selection of treatment is usually based on the clinician's and/or the patient's preference and on safety issues, in a trial‐and‐error fashion, paying little attention to the part… Show more

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Cited by 198 publications
(160 citation statements)
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References 276 publications
(286 reference statements)
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“…One could argue that clinicians do not like to use standardized assessment instruments in their routine practice, and that they often do not even use formal diagnostic systems in that practice. However, as we already pointed out in the paper on the clinical characterization of the patient with a diagnosis of depression 14 , our experience with the above diagnostic systems is very telling in this respect. Although those systems are seldom formally used in routine practice, several elements of their description of major mental disorders have been incorporated by most clinicians in their personal prototypes of those disorders, so that the reliability of psychiatric diagnosis has become today, although certainly far from optimal, much better than it was in the 1970s.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…One could argue that clinicians do not like to use standardized assessment instruments in their routine practice, and that they often do not even use formal diagnostic systems in that practice. However, as we already pointed out in the paper on the clinical characterization of the patient with a diagnosis of depression 14 , our experience with the above diagnostic systems is very telling in this respect. Although those systems are seldom formally used in routine practice, several elements of their description of major mental disorders have been incorporated by most clinicians in their personal prototypes of those disorders, so that the reliability of psychiatric diagnosis has become today, although certainly far from optimal, much better than it was in the 1970s.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…The present paper, which has been produced in parallel with a similar one focusing on depression 14 , aims to address the situation we have just described. Its main objectives are: a) to reinforce the emerging awareness of the need to personalize the management of patients with primary psychosis, taking into account all the available treatment modalities whose efficacy is supported by research evidence; b) to help in the identification of the salient domains to be considered in the characterization of the individual patient with primary psychosis aimed at personalization of management (see Table 1); c) to help in the selection of simple assessment instruments that can already be considered for use in clinical practice today, and can be included in comprehensive batteries of measures to be tested in large observational studies in order to guide the development of standardized decision tools 15 ; and d) to encourage a clinical practice that is recovery‐oriented as well as evidence‐based.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a potential marker of functioning, ES-SCZ can be used for the severity stratification in large-scale clinical trials and observational studies [19]. Furthermore, ES-SCZ can be integrated into clinical characterization [55] and future transdiagnostic staging models [56]. However, prospective controlled studies, ideally conducted in first episode psychosis (FEP) cohorts, are required to assess the prognostic performance of ESC-SCZ for predicting outcome in psychotic disorders.…”
Section: Controls Siblings Patientsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We also avoid a distinction between moderators versus mediators of treatment outcomes, or whether a model predicts outcomes specifically for a treatment versus others or predicts outcomes more generically for multiple treatments 8 . Finally, we do not aim to review the many sociodemographic and clinical variables that have been or can be used for prediction of treatment response in psychiatry, which generally have the most predictive power and are cheapest to collect 9,10 .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%