This application requests support for an Intervention Research Center in Late-Life Mood Disorders (IRC/LLMD) (PAR-98-020) and is the competing continuation of P30 MH52247 (MHCRC for Late-Life Mood Disorders), funded since March 1, 1995. The IRC/LLMD consists of six cores: 1) Administrative, Data Management, and Information Dissemination; 2) Methodology; 3) Recruitment, Assessment and Follow- up; 4) Health and Behavior; 5) Geriatric Psychopharmacology; and 6) Functional Brain Imaging. The goal of the IRC/LLMD is to understand and reduce treatment response variability in geriatric depression and related disorders. This theme encompasses several broad issues: 1) what is treatment response in late-life depression? 2) how can treatment response by accelerated? 3) How can treatment response be maintained? 4) Why does age matter as a source of short- and long-term treatment-response variability? 5) How can the identification and management of treatment-resistant depression in later life be improved? And 6) What are the costs and benefits of combined treatment (either polypharmacy or medication plus psychotherapy) versus monotherapy? The IRC/LLMD will provide infrastructure support to a portfolio of research projects, career development, and training grant awards aimed at: 1) improving treatment of elderly patients in the general medical sector and ameliorating risk factors for suicide risk factors for resistance and developing strategies for improving response in such patients; 4) finding maintenance treatments with long term efficacy, especially for patients over age 70; 5) developing preventive interventions to reduce the liability to late-onset depression; 6) developing strategies for minimizing residual disability and facilitating full recovery; and 7) developing cost-benefit information for combined treatments versus monotherapy. The growing significance of global illness burden attributable to depression and suicide over the next 20 years, as reported by the World Health Organization (1996), undergoes the central rationale for the IRC/LLMD: to develop clinical preventive strategies to reduce the incidence of geriatric expression; to develop treatment strategies to accelerate treatment response; to improve early recognition and management of treatment resistance; to maintain treatment response; to minimize residual disability; to improve quality of life in elderly persons afflicted with depressions.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
2P30MH052247-06
Application #
6020146
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZMH1-CRB-H (02))
Program Officer
Lebowitz, Barry D
Project Start
1995-03-01
Project End
2005-02-28
Budget Start
2000-03-01
Budget End
2001-02-28
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$1,279,469
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pittsburgh
Department
Psychiatry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
053785812
City
Pittsburgh
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
15213
Smagula, Stephen F; Beach, Scott; Rosso, Andrea L et al. (2017) Brain Structural Markers and Caregiving Characteristics as Interacting Correlates of Caregiving Strain. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 25:582-591
Smagula, Stephen F; Wallace, Meredith L; Anderson, Stewart J et al. (2016) Combining moderators to identify clinical profiles of patients who will, and will not, benefit from aripiprazole augmentation for treatment resistant late-life major depressive disorder. J Psychiatr Res 81:112-8
Khalaf, Alexander; Edelman, Kathryn; Tudorascu, Dana et al. (2015) White Matter Hyperintensity Accumulation During Treatment of Late-Life Depression. Neuropsychopharmacology 40:3027-35
Patel, Meenal J; Andreescu, Carmen; Price, Julie C et al. (2015) Machine learning approaches for integrating clinical and imaging features in late-life depression classification and response prediction. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 30:1056-67
Joel, Ian; Begley, Amy E; Mulsant, Benoit H et al. (2014) Dynamic prediction of treatment response in late-life depression. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 22:167-76
Diniz, Breno S; Reynolds 3rd, Charles F; Butters, Meryl A et al. (2014) The effect of gender, age, and symptom severity in late-life depression on the risk of all-cause mortality: the BambuĂ­ Cohort Study of Aging. Depress Anxiety 31:787-95
Andreescu, Carmen; Teverovsky, Esther; Fu, Bo et al. (2014) Old worries and new anxieties: behavioral symptoms and mild cognitive impairment in a population study. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 22:274-84
Chisholm, Denise; Toto, Pamela; Raina, Ketki et al. (2014) Evaluating capacity to live independently and safely in the community: Performance Assessment of Self-care Skills. Br J Occup Ther 77:59-63
Gallo, Joseph J; Morales, Knashawn H; Bogner, Hillary R et al. (2013) Long term effect of depression care management on mortality in older adults: follow-up of cluster randomized clinical trial in primary care. BMJ 346:f2570
Sherer, Eric A; Sale, Mark E; Pollock, Bruce G et al. (2012) Application of a single-objective, hybrid genetic algorithm approach to pharmacokinetic model building. J Pharmacokinet Pharmacodyn 39:393-414

Showing the most recent 10 out of 347 publications