Group-Based Symptom Trajectories in Indicated Prevention of Adolescent Depression


Autoria(s): Nault-Brière, Frédéric; Rohde, Paul; Stice, Eric; Morizot, Julien
Contribuinte(s)

Université de Montréal. Faculté des arts et des sciences. École de psychoéducation

Data(s)

31/05/2016

31/12/1969

31/05/2016

01/05/2016

Resumo

Background: Adolescent depression prevention research has focused on mean intervention outcomes, but has not considered heterogeneity in symptom course. Here, we empirically identify subgroups with distinct trajectories of depressive symptom change among adolescents enrolled in two indicated depression preven- tion trials and examine how cognitive-behavioral (CB) interventions and baseline predictors relate to trajectory membership. Methods: Six hundred thirty-one participants were assigned to one of three conditions: CB group intervention, CB bibliotherapy, and brochure control. We used group-based trajectory modeling to identify trajectories of depressive symptoms from pretest to 2-year follow-up. We examined associations between class membership and conditions using chi- square tests and baseline predictors using multinomial regressions. Results: We identified four trajectories in the full sample. Qualitatively similar trajectories were found in each condition separately. Two trajectories of positive symptom course (low-declining, high-declining) had declining symptoms and were dis- tinguished by baseline symptom severity. Two trajectories of negative course (high-persistent, resurging), respectively, showed no decline in symptoms or de- cline followed by symptom reappearance. Participants in the brochure control condition were significantly more likely to populate the high-persistent trajectory relative to either CB condition and were significantly less likely to populate the low-declining trajectory relative to CB group. Several baseline factors predicted trajectory classes, but gender was the most informative prognostic factor, with males having increased odds of membership in a high-persistent trajectory rel- ative to other trajectories. Conclusions: Findings suggest that CB preventive interventions do not alter the nature of trajectories, but reduce the risk that adolescents follow a trajectory of chronically elevated symptoms.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/1866/13932

10.1002/da.22440

1520-6394

http://hdl.handle.net/1866/13932

http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/da.22440

Idioma(s)

eng

Relação

Depression and Anxiety;Vol. 33, no. 5

Palavras-Chave #Group-based trajectory modeling #Latent class growth analysis #Depression #Prevention #Adolescence #Randomized controlled trial
Tipo

journal article

article

Formato

application/pdf