Advertisement
The researchers, including those from Tongji Hospital in China, said that a third of clinically depressed people across the world don’t respond well to current drug and counselling therapies, and drug side effects are relatively common.
The study, published in the Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, is a pooled analysis of the available evidence of the effectiveness of using anti-inflammatory drugs to treat MDD.
The researchers analysed data from clinical studies published up to January 2019, and found 30 randomised controlled trials involving 1610 people which reported changes in depression scales with the use of anti-inflammatory drugs.
Related Articles
Advertisement
The drugs were 52 per cent more effective in reducing symptom severity, overall, and 79 per cent more effective in eliminating symptoms than a placebo, the study noted.
According to the researchers, no major side effects were evident from the studies, except for some gut symptoms among those taking statins and NACs.
They added that the study was inconclusive if the anti-inflammatory drugs improved the quality of life in depressed patients.
“Owing to the chronic course of MDD, quality of life and adverse effects should be further investigated in high-quality randomised clinical trials with long-term follow-up,” the researchers wrote in the study.