Introduction: There are no conclusive data on the effectiveness of antidepressant drugs in the treatment of comorbid cases of alcohol dependence and depression.
Objectives: To determine the effectiveness of venlafaxine on depression and on severity (need of treatment) of alcohol dependence and related problems.
Methods: Observational, open-label, multicenter, 24-week follow-up study.
Patients: 90 outpatients with diagnosis of alcohol dependence and associated major depression disorder (DSMIV criteria).
Outcomes measures: the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HAM-D17), European Addiction Severity Index (EuropASI) and Clinical Global Impression, severity and improvement subscales, (CGI-S and CGI-I). Evaluations were performed at baseline and at weeks 2, 4, 8 and 24.
Results: Mean age 44.94+/-9.74 years; 73.3 % man. HAM-D17 mean scores significantly decreased from baseline (24.85+/-5.94) to week 24 (5.976+/-4.68) and at each of the follow-up visits vs previous visit (p < 0.0005). Significant decreases from baseline to week 24 were obtained in four areas of EuropASI: medical status (2.12+/-2.45 to 1.07+/-1.68), alcohol use (5.29+/-2.24 to 3.04+/-2.35), family/ social relationships (3.68+/-2.36 to 1.71+/-2.06) and psychiatric status (5.61+/-1.81 to 2.67+/-2.03). Tolerance was excellent or good in 76.7% of the patients.
Conclusions: Venlafaxine demonstrated to be effective in the treatment of depressive alcoholic patients. Furthermore, it seems to be useful to decrease the severity of problems related with the alcohol use.