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OBJECTIVES: Should a young person receive psychotherapy or medication for their depression and on what evidence do we base this decision? In this paper, we test the factors across modalities that may influence comparability between medication and psychotherapy trials. METHODS: We included 92 randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of psychotherapy and medication for child and adolescent depression (mean age 4-18 years). Using meta-analyses, we compared (a) participant characteristics and (b) trial characteristics in medication and psychotherapy trials. Lastly, we examined whether psychotherapy controls are well-matched to active conditions. RESULTS: Participants in medication RCTs had higher depression severity and were more frequently male compared with psychotherapy RCTs. There was a dramatic difference in the within-subject improvement due to placebo (SMD=-1.9 (95% CI: -2.1 to -1.7)) vs. psychotherapy controls (SMD=-0.6 (95% CI: -0.9 to -0.3)). Within psychotherapy RCTs, control conditions were less intensive on average than active conditions. CONCLUSIONS: Medication and psychotherapy RCTs differ on fundamental participant and methodological characteristics, thereby raising questions about their comparability. Psychotherapy controls often involve little therapist contact and are easy-to-beat comparators. These findings cast doubt on the confidence with which psychotherapy is recommended for youth depression and highlight the pressing need to improve the evidence base.

Original publication

DOI

10.1136/bmjment-2024-301162

Type

Journal article

Journal

BMJ Ment Health

Publication Date

19/01/2025

Volume

28

Keywords

Child & adolescent psychiatry, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Depression, Humans, Adolescent, Child, Psychotherapy, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Antidepressive Agents, Male, Depression, Female, Child, Preschool, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Depressive Disorder, Evidence-Based Medicine