Objective: To develop a claims-based scale for treatment-resistant depression (TRD) and estimate the associated direct cost burden. Study Design: Retrospective, observational study of patients receiving antidepressant therapy between January 2000 and June 2007 (N = 78,477). Methods: The Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) clinical staging method for treatment resistance (assigning points for adequate trials of antidepressant medication, upward dose titration, extended duration, augmentation, and electroconvulsive therapy) was applied to claims data from the MarketScan Research Databases over a 24-month time period. Direct expenditures were measured over a subsequent 12-month period. Patients identified as having TRD (MGH score ≥3.5) (n = 22,593) were matched to depressed patients without TRD using propensity score methods. Regression models estimated the relationship between TRD and expenditures, controlling for sociodemographics, health plan type, and health status. Similar regression models estimated costs for an antidepressant-only version of the scale (MGH-AD). Results: Treatment resistance among depressed patients was associated with 40% higher medical care costs (P
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Gibson, T. B., Jing, Y., Carls, G. S., Kim, E., Bagalman, J. E., Burton, W. N., … Goetzel, R. Z. (2010). Cost burden of treatment resistance in patients with depression. American Journal of Managed Care, 16(5), 370–377.
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