Objectives: Interpersonal problems are a fundamental feature of depression, but study-level meta-analyses of their association with treatment outcome have been limited by heterogeneity in primary studies' analyses and reported results. We conducted a pre-registered individual participant data meta-analysis (IPD-MA) to examine this relationship for adult depression. This meta-analytic strategy can reduce variability by standardizing data analysis across primary studies. Methods: We included studies examining the efficacy of five treatments for adult depression and assessing interpersonal problems at baseline. One-stage IPD-MA was conducted with three-level mixed models to determine whether baseline overall interpersonal distress, agency, and communion predicted depressive symptom level at post-treatment, 12-month, and 24-month follow-up. The moderating effect of treatment type was also investigated. Results: Ten studies (including n = 1282 participants) met inclusion criteria. Only overall interpersonal distress was negatively related with outcomes at post-treatment (γ = 0.11, CI95[0.06, 0.16], r = 0.11), 12-month follow-up (γ = 0.17, CI95[0.08, 0.25], r = 0.17), and 24-month follow-up (γ = 0.16, CI95[0.05, 0.26], r = 0.16), indicative of smaller effect sizes. The agency and communion dimensions were not significantly related to outcome. Treatment type did not significantly moderate interpersonal distress-outcome associations. Discussion: Results show a small association between patient baseline overall interpersonal distress and subsequent depression treatment outcome in brief treatments for depression. Further studies might require to account for therapist effects. Registration number osf.io/u46t7.

Gómez Penedo, J.M., Meglio, M., Flückiger, C., Wienicke, F.J., Breunese, J., Menchetti, M., et al. (2025). Interpersonal problems as a predictor of treatment outcome in adult depression: An individual participant data meta-analysis. CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW, 118, 1-11 [10.1016/j.cpr.2025.102570].

Interpersonal problems as a predictor of treatment outcome in adult depression: An individual participant data meta-analysis

Menchetti M.;Rucci P.;
2025

Abstract

Objectives: Interpersonal problems are a fundamental feature of depression, but study-level meta-analyses of their association with treatment outcome have been limited by heterogeneity in primary studies' analyses and reported results. We conducted a pre-registered individual participant data meta-analysis (IPD-MA) to examine this relationship for adult depression. This meta-analytic strategy can reduce variability by standardizing data analysis across primary studies. Methods: We included studies examining the efficacy of five treatments for adult depression and assessing interpersonal problems at baseline. One-stage IPD-MA was conducted with three-level mixed models to determine whether baseline overall interpersonal distress, agency, and communion predicted depressive symptom level at post-treatment, 12-month, and 24-month follow-up. The moderating effect of treatment type was also investigated. Results: Ten studies (including n = 1282 participants) met inclusion criteria. Only overall interpersonal distress was negatively related with outcomes at post-treatment (γ = 0.11, CI95[0.06, 0.16], r = 0.11), 12-month follow-up (γ = 0.17, CI95[0.08, 0.25], r = 0.17), and 24-month follow-up (γ = 0.16, CI95[0.05, 0.26], r = 0.16), indicative of smaller effect sizes. The agency and communion dimensions were not significantly related to outcome. Treatment type did not significantly moderate interpersonal distress-outcome associations. Discussion: Results show a small association between patient baseline overall interpersonal distress and subsequent depression treatment outcome in brief treatments for depression. Further studies might require to account for therapist effects. Registration number osf.io/u46t7.
2025
Gómez Penedo, J.M., Meglio, M., Flückiger, C., Wienicke, F.J., Breunese, J., Menchetti, M., et al. (2025). Interpersonal problems as a predictor of treatment outcome in adult depression: An individual participant data meta-analysis. CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW, 118, 1-11 [10.1016/j.cpr.2025.102570].
Gómez Penedo, J. M.; Meglio, M.; Flückiger, C.; Wienicke, F. J.; Breunese, J.; Menchetti, M.; Rucci, P.; Johansson, R.; Town, J. M.; Abbass, A. A.; Li...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/1044791
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