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Cover of Service delivery Models and settings for delivery of services

Service delivery Models and settings for delivery of services

Depression in adults

Evidence review A

NICE Guideline, No. 222

London: National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE); .
ISBN-13: 978-1-4731-4622-8

Service delivery

This evidence report contains 2 reviews relating to service delivery

  • Review question 1.1 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different models for the coordination and delivery of services?
  • Review question 1.2 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different settings for the delivery of care?

Models of care

Review question

For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different models for the coordination and delivery of services?

Introduction

To improve the treatment of adult depression, there has been a growing interest in the development of systems of care, with some influences from chronic disease management programmes seen in physical healthcare. Different systems of care have been developed and evaluated to see which may improve access to and efficacy of treatment and the efficiency and cost-efficiency of services. Models widely adopted in the UK include the stepped-care model, often associated with the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) programme. This seeks to offer people their least burdensome, most effective therapy first, usually a low intensity therapy (such as guided self-help) where appropriate, and then have their progress reviewed in conjunction with a therapist at regular intervals, with the option to step-up to higher intensity treatment, or step-across to another treatment of the same intensity, depending on progress. Alternatively, people can start on a higher intensity treatment where appropriate and step across or step down, depending on progress. Another model widely used is collaborative care, where a case manager or key worker is in regular contact with the person with depression to help coordinate their care, often involving liaison with the person’s GP, specialists such as psychiatrists, and other psychological therapists if required. They may also support additional needs such employment. There may be overlap between these models of care where, for example, collaborative care may also include stepped care, and there are a number of other models including medication management, the attached professional (where a mental health professional has direct responsibility for the care of a person), and shared care, which may be delivered separately, or may be delivered within a broader place-based or community-based model of care.

The aim of this review is to identify benefits associated with different models of care for adults with depression.

Summary of the protocol

See Table 1 for a summary of the Population, Intervention, Comparison and Outcome (PICO) characteristics of this review.

Table 1. Summary of the protocol (PICO table).

Table 1

Summary of the protocol (PICO table).

For further details see the review protocol in appendix A.

Methods and process

This evidence review was developed using the methods and process described in Developing NICE guidelines: the manual. Methods specific to this review question are described in the review protocol in appendix A.

Declarations of interest were recorded according to NICE’s 2014 conflicts of interest policy until 31 March 2018. From 1 April 2018, declarations of interest were recorded according to NICE’s 2018 conflicts of interest policy. Those interests declared until April 2018 were reclassified according to NICE’s 2018 conflicts of interest policy (see Register of Interests).

Clinical evidence

Included studies

56 randomised controlled trials (RCTs) were identified for inclusion in this review and the model of care described was identified.

For this review, a coding system for classifying the complexity and type of service delivery model was developed by the committee specifically for the purpose of this guideline. The service delivery model was rated on this 17-item coding system to generate an overall rating between 0-20 (see Figure 1). Service delivery models scoring at least 6 were considered a collaborative care intervention. Collaborative care interventions were further sub-divided into simple collaborative care (score of 6-12) and complex collaborative care (score ≥13). Service delivery models scoring below 6 were classified as an alternative service delivery model (e.g. care coordination) or a stand-alone psychological intervention (e.g. self-help with support).

Figure 1. Coding system for service delivery models (Collaborative Care Component Score Method).

Figure 1

Coding system for service delivery models (Collaborative Care Component Score Method).

39 RCTS were categorised as collaborative care (Aragones 2012; Araya 2003; Berghofer 2012; Bjorkelund 2018; Bosanquet 2017; Bruce 2004; Buszewicz 2016; Capoccia 2004; Chen 2015; Curth 2020; Dobscha 2006; Ell 2007; Finley 2003; Fortney 2007; Gensichen 2009; Gilbody 2017/Lewis 2017; Harter 2018; Holzel 2018; Huang 2018; Huijbregts 2013; Jarjoura 2004; Jeong 2013; Katon 1999; Katzelnick 2000; Landis 2007; Ludman 2007; Morriss 2016; Ng 2020; Oladeji 2015; Richards 2013/2016; Simon 2004 (CM); Simon 2004 (CM + psych); Simon 2006; Smit 2006; Swindle 2003; Unutzer 2002/Arean 2005; Wells 2000; Yeung 2010; Yeung 2016.

Of the 39 RCTs categorised as collaborative care, 6 were categorised as complex collaborative care (score ≥13) (Fortney 2007; Holzel 2018; Huijbregts 2013; Morris 2016; Simon 2004 CM+psych; Unutzer 2002/Arean 2005) and the remaining 33 RCTs were categorised as simple collaborative care (score of 6 to 12).

1 RCT was categorised as collaborative care for relapse prevention (Katon 2001).

5 RCTs were categorised as stepped care (Adewuya 2019; Callahan 1994; Gureje 2019; Knapstad 2020; Van Der Weele 2012).

1 RCT was categorised as stepped care for relapse prevention (Apil 2012).

5 RCTs were categorised as medication management (Akerblad 2003; Aljumah 2015; Rickles 2005; Rubio-Valera 2013a; Sirey 20105).

2 RCTs were categorised as care coordination (McMahon 2007; Salisbury 2016).

1 RCT was categorised as attached professional model (Bedoya 2014).

1 RCT was categorised as shared care (Banerjee 1996).

1 RCT was categorised as measurement-based care (Guo 2015).

The included studies are summarised in Table 2 to Table 10.

Planned subgroup analyses were outlined in the full review protocol (see appendix A) to include (where possible) for all reviews, the influence of the following subgroups: chronic depression; depression with coexisting personality disorder; psychotic depression; older adults; BME populations; men. For the collaborative care review, planned subgroup analyses included the following which were informed by the collaborative care component score method (in Figure 1): type of collaborative care; stepped care component; case manager background; psychological interventions delivered as part of the model of care; number of contacts/sessions/follow-up visits provided as part of the intervention. The committee were also interested in post-hoc subgroup analyses comparing outcomes by baseline severity. Subgroup analysis was considered for all critical outcomes with at least 2 studies in each subgroup. Subgroup analysis was only possible for the collaborative care dataset, where subgroup analyses were possible for older adults, BME groups, baseline severity, and the different collaborative care components outlined above.

See the literature search strategy in appendix B and study selection flow chart in appendix C.

Excluded studies

Studies not included in this review with reasons for their exclusions are provided in appendix K.

Summary of clinical studies included in the evidence review

Comparison 1. Collaborative care (simple or complex) versus standard care/enhanced standard care

Collaborative care is defined as a multi-professional approach to care for people with depression, involving a structured management plan, scheduled follow-ups and enhanced inter-professional communication. Collaborative care may also include elements of other models, such as stepped care, psychoeducation, psychological interventions or medication management.

Summaries of the studies included for the comparison of collaborative care versus standard care or enhanced standard care are presented in Table 2.

Subgroup analysis of the collaborative care dataset was possible for:

  • Older adults (mean age ≥ 60 years) versus younger adults (mean age <60 years) for the following outcomes: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months; response at 6 months; response at 12 months; remission at 6 months; remission at 12 months
  • BME groups, comparing studies where less than 50% of the population were from a BME group with studies where 50-100% of the population were from a BME group, for the following outcome: remission at 6 months
  • Baseline severity, comparing studies where the mean depression scale score indicated less severe depression (corresponding to the traditional categories of mild and subthreshold) with more severe depression (corresponding to the traditional categories of moderate and severe depression), for the following outcomes: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months; response at 6 months; response at 12 months; remission at 6 months; remission at 12 months
  • Type of collaborative care, simple versus complex, for the following outcomes: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months; response at 6 months; response at 12 months; remission at 6 months; remission at 12 months
  • Stepped care component, comparing interventions that included a stepped care component, interventions that included only a medication algorithm, and interventions with no stepped care component or algorithm, for the following outcomes: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months; response at 6 months; response at 12 months; remission at 6 months; remission at 12 months
  • Case manager background, comparing studies where the case manager had a prior mental health background and studies where the case manager did not have a prior mental health background, for the following outcomes: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months
  • Inclusion of psychological interventions, comparing studies where psychological interventions were delivered as part of the model of care with studies where psychological interventions were not part of the service delivery model, for the following outcomes: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months; response at 6 months; response at 12 months; remission at 6 months; remission at 12 months
  • Number of contacts provided as part of the intervention, comparing less than 13 contacts with 13 or more contacts, for the following outcomes: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months; response at 6 months; response at 12 months; remission at 6 months; remission at 12 months

Table 2. Summary of included studies for Comparison 1: Collaborative care (simple or complex) versus standard care/enhanced standard care.

Table 2

Summary of included studies for Comparison 1: Collaborative care (simple or complex) versus standard care/enhanced standard care.

There were no statistically significant subgroup differences between older and younger adults for the comparison collaborative care versus standard care or enhanced standard care on: depression symptomatology at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.74, df = 1, p = 0.39); depression symptomatology at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.01, df = 1, p = 0.32); response at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.34, df = 1, p = 0.25); response at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.34, df = 1, p = 0.25); remission at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.20, df = 1, p = 0.27); remission at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.52, df = 1, p = 0.47). Although there was a consistent trend for larger benefits for older adults, for example, for younger adults the effect estimate for collaborative care versus standard care/enhanced standard care on depression symptomatology at 12 months was SMD −0.25 [−0.33, −0.17] (K=7; N=2865) relative to older adults where the effect estimate was SMD −0.47 [−0.88, −0.05] (K=6; N=2543).

There was no statistically significant subgroup differences between studies with a predominantly white population and studies where the majority of participants were from BME groups for the comparison collaborative care versus standard care or enhanced standard care on: remission at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.79, df = 1, p = 0.38).

There was a statistically significant subgroup difference between studies where the mean depression scale score indicated less severe depression and studies where participants had more severe depression, for the comparison collaborative care versus standard care or enhanced standard care, on remission at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 8.54, df = 1, p = 0.003). Larger benefits were observed for more severe depression populations (RR 2.31 [1.59, 3.36]; K=6; N=1273), relative to less severe depression (RR 1.21 [0.97, 1.51]; K=4; N=1076). However, this pattern was not consistent across outcomes, and subgroup differences were not statistically significant for: depression symptomatology at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.07, df = 1, p = 0.79); depression symptomatology at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.47, df = 1, p = 0.49); response at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.49, df = 1, p = 0.49); response at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.05, df = 1, p = 0.31); remission at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.32, df = 1, p = 0.57).

There were no statistically significant subgroup differences between simple and complex collaborative care for the comparison collaborative care versus standard care or enhanced standard care on: depression symptomatology at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.69, df = 1, p = 0.41); response at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.17, df = 1, p = 0.68); remission at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 2.79, df = 1, p = 0.09).

There were no statistically significant subgroup differences between interventions that included a stepped care component, interventions that included only a medication algorithm, and interventions with no stepped care component or algorithm for the comparison collaborative care versus standard care or enhanced standard care on: depression symptomatology at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 2.33, df = 2, p = 0.31); depression symptomatology at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 5.44, df = 2, p = 0.07); response at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 2.07, df = 2, p = 0.36); response at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 3.96, df = 2, p = 0.14); remission at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 4.02, df = 2, p = 0.13); remission at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 4.30, df = 2, p = 0.12). Although there was a consistent trend for larger benefits for interventions that included a stepped care component, for example, for interventions that included a stepped care component the effect estimate for collaborative care versus standard care/enhanced standard care on depression symptomatology at 12 months was SMD −0.61 [−1.10, −0.11] (K=5; N=1717) relative to interventions that included a medication algorithm-only where the effect estimate was SMD −0.10 [−0.23, 0.03] (K=3; N=1081), or no stepped care component where the effect estimate was SMD −0.25 [−0.39, −0.12] (K=5; N=2610).

There were no statistically significant subgroup differences between interventions where the case manager had a prior mental health background and interventions where the case manager did not have a prior mental health background, for the comparison collaborative care versus standard care or enhanced standard care on: depression symptomatology at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.18, df = 1, p = 0.67); depression symptomatology at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.02, df = 1, p = 0.31).

There were no statistically significant subgroup differences between studies where psychological interventions were delivered as part of the model of care and studies where psychological interventions were not part of the service delivery model, for the comparison collaborative care versus standard care or enhanced standard care on: depression symptomatology at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.00, df = 1, p = 0.98); depression symptomatology at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.01, df = 1, p = 0.91); response at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.01, df = 1, p = 0.94); response at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.14, df = 1, p = 0.71); remission at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.12, df = 1, p = 0.29); remission at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.09, df = 1, p = 0.76).

There was a statistically significant subgroup difference between interventions with fewer than 13 contacts and interventions with 13 or more contacts, for the comparison collaborative care versus standard care or enhanced standard care, on remission at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 4.23, df = 1, p = 0.04). Interventions with 13+ contacts showed larger benefits (RR 1.97 [1.33, 2.91]; K=8; N=3188) than interventions with <13 contacts (RR 1.25 [1.06, 1.48]; K=6; N=3067). Although heterogeneity remained fairly high within (as well as between) subgroups, with I2 values of 79% for interventions with 13+ contacts and 56% for interventions with <13 contacts. There was a trend for larger benefits associated with more contacts across other outcomes, although subgroup differences were not statistically significant for: depression symptomatology at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.35, df = 1, p = 0.55); depression symptomatology at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.13, df = 1, p = 0.29); response at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.02, df = 1, p = 0.88); response at 12 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.41, df = 1, p = 0.52); remission at 6 months (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.84, df = 1, p = 0.36).

Comparison 2. Collaborative care versus standard care for relapse prevention

Collaborative care can also be used for those in full or partial remission from depression, particularly those at higher risk of relapse, as a strategy to keep well.

A summary of the study included for the comparison of collaborative care versus standard care for relapse prevention is presented in Table 3.

Table 3. Summary of included studies for Comparison 2: Collaborative care versus standard care for relapse prevention.

Table 3

Summary of included studies for Comparison 2: Collaborative care versus standard care for relapse prevention.

Comparison 3. Stepped care versus standard care/enhanced standard care

Stepped care provides the most effective yet least burdensome treatment for people with depression first, but if a person does not benefit from an initial intervention they are ‘stepped up’ to a more complex intervention. Typically, stepped care starts by providing a low intensity intervention, but in patient-specific stepped care a higher intensity intervention may be commenced if, for example, a person is very ill or suicidal and a low intensity intervention would not be appropriate.

Summaries of the studies included for the comparison of stepped care versus standard care or enhanced standard care are presented in Table 4.

Table 4. Summary of included studies for Comparison 3: Stepped care versus standard care/enhanced standard care.

Table 4

Summary of included studies for Comparison 3: Stepped care versus standard care/enhanced standard care.

Comparison 4. Stepped care versus standard care for relapse prevention

Stepped care can also be used for those in full or partial remission from depression, as a strategy to keep well.

A summary of the study included for the comparison of stepped care versus standard care for relapse prevention is presented in Table 5.

Table 5. Summary of included studies for Comparison 4: Stepped care versus standard care for relapse prevention.

Table 5

Summary of included studies for Comparison 4: Stepped care versus standard care for relapse prevention.

Comparison 5. Pure medication management versus standard care

Medication management can be a component of a broader service delivery model (for example, as part of collaborative care) or as a stand-alone intervention (pure medication management). Medication management is an intervention to ensure medication taken for depression has the greatest opportunity to be effective, by working with people to increase understanding of their medication, promote adherence, ensure adequate therapeutic levels are obtained, and allow people to discuss their medicine use and so reduce unnecessary discontinuation of medication due to lack of benefits or side effects.

Summaries of the studies included for the comparison of pure medication management versus standard care are presented in Table 6Table 4.

Table 6. Summary of included studies for Comparison 5: Pure medication management versus standard care.

Table 6

Summary of included studies for Comparison 5: Pure medication management versus standard care.

Comparison 6. Care coordination versus standard care/enhanced standard care

Care coordination can be a component of a broader service delivery model (for example, as part of collaborative care) or as a stand-alone intervention. Care coordination (also known as case management) is a system where an individual healthcare professional takes responsibility for the coordination of the care of a person with depression, but is not necessarily directly involved in the provision of any intervention; it may also involve the coordination of follow-up.

Summaries of the studies included for the comparison of care coordination versus standard care or enhanced standard care are presented in Table 7Table 4.

Table 7. Summary of included studies for Comparison 6: Care coordination versus standard care/enhanced standard care.

Table 7

Summary of included studies for Comparison 6: Care coordination versus standard care/enhanced standard care.

Comparison 7. Attached professional model versus enhanced standard care

In this model a mental health professional has direct responsibility for the care of a person (usually in primary care) focusing on the primary treatment of the depression. The coordination of care remains with the GP/primary care team. Contact with the attached professional is usually limited to treatment and involves little or no follow-up beyond that determined by the specific intervention offered (for example, booster sessions in CBT).

A summary of the study included for the comparison of attached professional model versus enhanced standard care is presented in Table 8.

Table 8. Summary of included studies for Comparison 7: Attached professional model versus enhanced standard care.

Table 8

Summary of included studies for Comparison 7: Attached professional model versus enhanced standard care.

Comparison 8. Shared care versus standard care

Shared care is the involvement of a multidisciplinary team who work together to plan and deliver individualised care for people with depression. The team will usually include involvement from both primary care and specialist services.

A summary of the study included for the comparison of shared care versus standard care is presented in Table 9.

Table 9. Summary of included studies for Comparison 8: Shared care versus standard care.

Table 9

Summary of included studies for Comparison 8: Shared care versus standard care.

Comparison 9. Measurement-based care versus standard care

Measurement-based care is similar to stepped care with defined levels of treatment but progression to different steps or alternative treatments is guided by the use of a predefined algorithm that utilises objective measures of efficacy.

A summary of the study included for the comparison of measurement-based care versus standard care is presented in Table 10.

Table 10. Summary of included studies for Comparison 9: Measurement-based care versus standard care.

Table 10

Summary of included studies for Comparison 9: Measurement-based care versus standard care.

See the full evidence tables in appendix D and the forest plots in appendix E.

Quality assessment of clinical outcomes included in the evidence review

See the clinical evidence profiles in appendix F.

Economic evidence

Included studies

A single economic search was undertaken for all topics included in the scope of this guideline. See the literature search strategy in appendix B and economic study selection flow chart in appendix G. Details on the hierarchy of inclusion criteria for economic studies are provided in supplement 1 (methods supplement).

The systematic search of the literature identified 12 studies (in 13 publications) on the cost effectiveness of different models for the coordination and delivery of services for adults with depression.

There were 3 UK studies that assessed simple collaborative care (Bosanquet 2017; Green 2014; Lewis 2017) and 1 UK study that assessed complex collaborative care (Morriss 2016). Following the hierarchy of inclusion criteria regarding country settings, 1 Dutch (Goorden 2015) and 1 German (Grochtdreis 2019) studies assessing the cost effectiveness of complex collaborative care were also included in the review. In addition, the search identified 1 US study assessing the cost effectiveness of simple collaborative care in relapse prevention (Simon 2002) and given that the study focused on a different population that was not covered by UK studies or other studies ranking higher on the hierarchy of inclusion criteria, this study was also included in the review.

One UK study assessed the cost effectiveness of stepped care (Mukuria 2013). Following the hierarchy of inclusion criteria regarding country settings, 2 Dutch (van der Weele 2012, Meeuwissen 2019) and 1 Canadian economic study (Health Quality Ontario 2019) were also included in the economic review of stepped care.

No UK studies on the cost effectiveness of medication management for adults with depression were identified. Following the hierarchy of inclusion criteria regarding country settings, 1 Spanish study (Rubio-Valera 2013) was included in the review.

No UK studies on the cost effectiveness of shared care for adults with depression were identified. Following the hierarchy of inclusion criteria regarding country settings, 1 US study (Wiley-Exley 2009) was included in the review.

No studies assessing the cost effectiveness of care coordination, the attached professional model, or measurement-based care for adults with depression were identified.

Economic evidence tables are provided in appendix H. Economic evidence profiles are shown in appendix I.

Excluded studies

A list of excluded economic and utility studies, with reasons for exclusion, is provided in supplement 3 - Economic evidence included & excluded studies.

Summary of studies included in the economic evidence review
Simple collaborative care

Bosanquet 2017 performed a cost-utility analysis alongside a RCT (Bosanquet 2017; N=485; at 18 months n=344; cost data available for n=447) that compared simple collaborative care in addition to usual primary care versus primary care alone for older adults who screened positive for major depression in the UK. The perspective of the analysis was the NHS and personal social services (PSS). Healthcare costs consisted exclusively of intervention and primary care costs. National unit costs were used. The outcome measure was the QALY estimated based on SF-6D ratings (UK tariff). The duration of the analysis was 18 months.

Simple collaborative care was found to be more effective and more costly than usual (primary) care alone, with an ICER of £28,765/QALY (uplifted to 2020 prices). The probability of simple collaborative care being cost-effective at the NICE lower (£20,000/QALY) and upper (£30,000/QALY) cost effectiveness threshold was 0.39 and 0.55, respectively. When only participants who engaged with 5 or more sessions of collaborative care were included in the analysis, the ICER fell at £10,922/QALY (in 2020 prices). The study is directly applicable to the UK context but is characterised by potentially serious limitations, mainly the inclusion of intervention and primary care costs only.

Green 2014 conducted a cost-utility analysis alongside a RCT (Richards 2013; N=581, efficacy data available for n=466; resource use data available for n=447) that compared simple collaborative care in addition to usual primary care versus primary care alone for adults with depression in the UK. The perspective of the analysis was the NHS and personal social services (PSS); a broader perspective that included informal care costs and service user expenses was considered in a sensitivity analysis. Healthcare costs consisted of intervention costs, staff time (such as GP, mental health nurse, mental health worker, psychiatrist, psychologist), other outpatient and inpatient care, day care, walk-in-centre, and A&E. National unit costs were used. The outcome measure was the QALY estimated based on EQ-5D ratings (UK tariff); QALY estimates based on the SF-6D (UK tariff) were used in sensitivity analysis. The duration of the analysis was 12 months.

Simple collaborative care was found to be more effective and more costly than usual (primary) care alone, with an Incremental Cost Effectiveness Ratio (ICER) of £16,361/QALY (in 2020 prices). The probability of simple collaborative care being cost-effective at the NICE lower (£20,000/QALY) and upper (£30,000/QALY) cost effectiveness threshold was 0.58 and 0.65, respectively. Results were robust to multiple imputation of missing data, use of SF-6D utility values, and use of alternative collaborative care costs. The study is directly applicable to the UK context and is characterised by minor limitations.

Lewis 2017 also conducted a cost-utility analysis alongside a RCT (Gilbody 2017; N=705, complete data for economic analysis n=448) that compared simple collaborative care in addition to usual primary care versus primary care alone for older adults who screened positive for subthreshold depression in the UK. The perspective of the analysis was the NHS and PSS. Healthcare costs consisted exclusively of intervention and primary care costs. National unit costs were used. The outcome measure was the QALY estimated based on EQ-5D ratings (UK tariff). The duration of the analysis was 12 months.

Simple collaborative care was found to be more effective and more costly than usual (primary) care alone, with an ICER of £10,653/QALY (in 2020 prices). The probability of simple collaborative care being cost-effective at the NICE lower (£20,000/QALY) and upper (£30,000/QALY) cost effectiveness threshold was 0.92 and 0.97, respectively. Accounting for the true observed case manager contact rate (rather than the expected contact rate that was used in the base-case analysis), the ICER fell at £3,681/QALY (in 2020 prices). The study is directly applicable to the UK context but is characterised by potentially serious limitations, mainly the high attrition that was markedly greater in the collaborative care arm, and the consideration of intervention and primary care costs only.

Simple collaborative care for relapse prevention

Simon 2002 assessed the cost effectiveness of simple collaborative care versus usual care alongside a RCT (Katon 2001; N=386, 82% completed all follow-up assessments and 98% remained enrolled throughout the follow-up period) that compared simple collaborative care with treatment as usual for adults with a history of either recurrent major depression or dysthymia that had recovered from a depressive episode following antidepressant treatment in primary care in the US. The study, which adopted a 3rd party payer perspective, considered costs of medication, staff time, as well as costs of any inpatient and outpatient services for mental health or general medical care; local prices were used. The outcome measure was the number of depression-free days, defined as days with a Hopkins Symptoms Checklist (HSCL) depression score ≤ 0.5; days with a HSCL score above 0.5 but < 2 were considered as being 50% depression free. The time horizon of the analysis was 12 months.

Simple collaborative care was found to be more effective and more costly than usual care, with an ICER of $1 per depression-free day (95%CI −$134 to $344, 1998 US$), which translates to £1.2 per depression-free day in 2020 prices. The study is only partially applicable to the NICE decision-making context as it was conducted in the US and does not use the QALY as the outcome measure, which requires judgement on whether the additional benefit is worth the extra cost. It is also characterised by potentially serious limitations, resulting mainly from the fact that analyses of clinical data included only those completing all blinded follow-up assessments; cost analyses included only those remaining enrolled throughout the follow-up period. However, participation in follow-up interviews was significantly greater in the intervention group than in usual care, introducing a possibility of bias.

Complex collaborative care

Morriss 2016 assessed the cost-utility of complex collaborative care versus usual secondary mental health care in the UK. The economic analysis was carried out alongside a RCT (Morriss 2016; N=187; 84% completed at 6 months, 72% at 12 months and 59% at 18 months). Complex collaborating care comprised secondary outpatient specialist depression services offering tailored integrated pharmacological and psychological (CBT, MBCT and compassion focused therapy, as appropriate) treatment within a collaborative care approach for 12-15 months. The analysis adopted a NHS and PSS perspective. Healthcare costs consisted of intervention costs, primary care (GP surgery and home attendances), inpatient and outpatient (psychiatric or other) care, other staff time (practice - district - community psychiatric nurse, psychotherapist), A&E attendances, and medication. National unit costs were used. The outcome measure was the QALY estimated based on EQ-5D ratings (UK tariff). The duration of the analysis was 18 months.

Complex collaborative care was more effective and more costly than usual secondary mental health care, with an ICER of £47,690/QALY (in 2020 prices). Controlling for baseline differences and cluster effects, the probability of complex collaborative care being cost-effective exceeded 50% at a cost effectiveness threshold of £45,500/QALY, which is well above the NICE cost effectiveness threshold of £30,000/QALY. The study is directly applicable to the UK context and is characterised by minor limitations.

Goorden 2015 assessed the cost effectiveness of complex collaborative care versus treatment as usual in a Dutch primary care setting. The study, which was conducted alongside a RCT (Huijbregts 2013), adopted a healthcare perspective, with productivity losses being reported separately. Healthcare costs consisted of intervention costs (care manager), other staff time (such as GP, mental health care professional, psychologist/psychiatrist, social worker, occupational therapist), self-help groups, day care, psychiatric inpatient care and medication. National unit costs were used. The outcome measure was the QALY estimated based on EQ-5D ratings (Dutch tariff). The time horizon was 12 months.

Complex collaborative care was found to be more effective and more costly than treatment as usual, with an ICER of €53,717/QALY in 2013 prices (£54,087 in 2020 prices), and a probability of being cost-effective of 0.20 and 0.70 at a cost effectiveness threshold of £20,100 and £80,500/QALY, respectively. The study is partially applicable to the UK context and is characterised by potentially serious limitations, mainly by the fact that, although the RCT included 150 participants, 93 identified by screening and 47 by GP referral, the cost-utility analysis was based only on the 93 participants that were identified by screening.

Grochtdreis 2019 assessed the cost effectiveness of complex collaborative care versus treatment as usual for adults aged ≥ 60 years with moderate depressive symptoms in Germany. The study was undertaken alongside a cluster RCT (Hölzel 2018; N=246 from 71 clusters) and adopted a healthcare perspective, with informal care costs being reported separately. Healthcare costs consisted of outpatient physician and non-physician services (e.g. physiotherapy, occupational therapy, massage), inpatient care, rehabilitation, formal nursing care (professional nurse or housekeeper), informal nursing care (family or friends), medication and medical devices. National unit costs were used. The outcome measure was the number of depression-free days (DFDs), determined by a PHQ-9 score <5. QALYs were also used as a secondary outcome, estimated based on EQ-5D ratings (UK tariff). The time horizon was 12 months.

Complex collaborative care was found to be more effective and more costly than treatment as usual, with an ICER of €26.07/DFD or €55,800/QALY in 2013 prices (£26/DFD or £56,184/QALY in 2020 prices), and a probability of being cost-effective of 0.95 at a cost-effetiveness threshold of £204/DFD and 0.45 at a cost-effectiveness threshold of £50,400/QALY. The study is partially applicable to the UK context and is characterised by minor limitations.

Stepped care

Mukuria 2013 assessed the cost-utility of stepped care for people with depression or anxiety in the UK, as reflected in the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) service, in addition to treatment as usual, versus treatment as usual alone; the latter comprised GP care, primary care counselling and referral to secondary mental health services. The study was conducted alongside a prospective cohort study with matched sites (N=403), and more than 95% of the study sample included people with a primary diagnosis of depression. The analysis adopted a NHS and social services perspective; productivity losses were assessed separately. Healthcare costs consisted of intervention (staff time, training, equipment, facilities and overheads), other mental healthcare (psychiatrist, psychologist, community psychiatric nurse, etc.), primary and secondary care, and social care; medication costs were not considered. Unit costs were based on IAPT data and national sources. The outcome measures of the analysis were the proportion of people with a reliable and clinically significant (RCS) improvement on the PHQ-9 and the QALY based on SF-6D ratings (UK tariff); QALYs estimated based on predicted EQ-5D ratings (UK tariff), estimated from SF-6D using an empirical mapping function, were used in sensitivity analysis. The duration of the analysis was 8 months.

IAPT added to treatment as usual was more costly and more effective than treatment as usual alone, with ICERs of £11,234 per additional participant with RCS improvement, £35,106/QALY using the SF-6D and £20,059/QALY using predicted EQ-5D scores (figures uplifted to 2020 prices). The probability of IAPT being cost-effective using SF-6D QALYs was less than 0.40 at a cost effectiveness threshold of £30,000/QALY; using QALYs estimated based on predicted EQ-5D ratings the probability of IAPT being cost-effective was 0.38 and 0.53 at cost effectiveness thresholds of £20,000 and £30,000/QALY, respectively. Using national unit costs instead of IAPT financial data resulted in an ICER of £4,522 per additional participant achieving RCS improvement and £14,132/QALY using SF-6D ratings (2020 prices). It is noted that NICE recommends use of EQ-5D for the estimation of QALYs in adults.

The study is directly applicable to the UK context and is characterised by potentially serious limitations such as its short time horizon, its study design, the sensitivity of results to unit costs of IAPT, the low response rate at recruitment (403 out of 3,391, 11.9%); and the fact that the IAPT service was assessed over the first 2 years of establishment, therefore costs associated with learning effects were likely.

Meeuwissen 2019 assessed the cost-utility of stepped care versus treatment as usual for adults with mild, moderate or severe major depression in the Netherlands. The study employed decision-economic modelling and adopted a healthcare perspective. Efficacy data were taken from a literature review, resource use data were based on published literature and national unit costs were likely used. Healthcare costs consisted of health professional time (GP, psychologist, psychiatrist, etc.), antidepressants, telephone consultation, self-help book or information leaflet, group therapy, crisis intervention, inpatient care, day care, homecare, and other out-patient care. The outcome measure of the analysis was the QALY, following transformation of the effect size into a utility increment. The time horizon of the analysis was 5 years.

Stepped care was found to dominate treatment as usual in adults with mild depression; it was more effective and costlier in adults with moderate/severe depression, with an ICER of €3,166/QALY (in 2017 prices) or £3,159/QALY (in 2020 prices). The probability of stepped care being dominant was 0.67 in adults with mild depression and 0.33 in adults with moderate/severe depression. The probability of stepped care being cost-effective at a cost-effectiveness threshold of approximately £20,000/QALY was more than 0.95 in both populations.

The study is partially applicable to the UK NHS context, as it was conducted in the Netherlands and the method of estimation of QALYs was not the one recommended by NICE, and is characterised by minor limitations.

Van der Weele 2012 assessed the cost-utility of stepped care versus treatment as usual for adults aged ≥ 75 years with depressive symptoms in the Netherlands. The study was undertaken alongside a cluster RCT (van der Weele 2012; N=239; completers n=194) and adopted a healthcare perspective, with service user and informal care costs being reported separately. Healthcare costs consisted of intervention costs (individual consultation, course sessions, course instructors, room rental, refreshments, course materials), staff time (psychiatrist, psychologist, GP, physiotherapist), medication, hospitalisation (psychiatric & general), hospital day care, specialist care, paramedical care, service user costs (time & travel) and informal care. National unit costs were used. The outcome measures were the MADRS change score, and the QALY based on EQ-5D and SF-6D ratings (UK tariff). The time horizon was 12 months.

Stepped care was found to be dominated by treatment as usual in adults aged 75-79 years, when QALYs were derived by EQ-5D ratings, and to dominate treatment as usual in adults aged ≥80 years. The study is partially applicable to the UK NHS context, as it was conducted in the Netherlands, and is characterised by potentially serious limitations, mainly because there was no estimation of the uncertainty in the cost effectiveness results.

Health Quality Ontario 2019 assessed the cost-utility of stepped care for people with mild to moderate depression in Canada based on decision-economic modelling. Two separate analyses were conducted: one analysis compared stepped care comprising computerised CBT (cCBT) with support followed by individual or group CBT with treatment as usual; the other analysis assessed stepped care comprising cCBT without support followed by cCBT with support versus individual CBT, group CBT and treatment as usual in people who are likely to drop out of treatment. The perspective of the analysis was that of healthcare and long term care. Efficacy data were taken from a systematic literature review, resource use data were based on published literature and expert opinion and national unit costs were used. Costs consisted of intervention costs (health professional time, training and supervision, equipment), assessment, medication, follow-up care with GP, and psychiatrist time. The outcome measure of the analysis was the QALY; utility data were derived from a literature review; various scales were used for the quality of life ratings. The time horizon was lifetime for the first analysis and 1 year for the second analysis (the one on adults with mild to moderate depression at risk of dropping out).

Stepped care was found to dominate treatment as usual in adults with mild to moderate depression (first analysis); results were robust to change in efficacy, dropout rates, utilities, medication costs, time horizon. The probability of stepped care where cCBT was followed by individual CBT was 0.60 at a cost effectiveness threshold of about £30,000/QALY. Regarding adults with mild to moderate depression at risk of dropping out, stepped care was the most cost-effective option assessed: it was more effective and costlier than treatment as usual, with an ICER of Can$19,454/QALY (in 2018 prices) or £11,666/QALY (in 2019 prices). Individual and group CBT were less cost-effective than stepped care at a cost-effectiveness threshold of about £30,000/QALY, as their ICERs versus stepped care reached or exceeded £40,000/QALY. The probability of stepped care being cost-effective among individual CBT, group CBT and treatment as usual was 0.48 at this threshold.

The study is partially applicable to the UK NHS context, as it was conducted in Canada and the method of estimation of QALYs was not the one recommended by NICE, and is characterised by minor limitations.

Medication management

Rubio-Valera 2013 conducted an economic evaluation of medication management versus treatment as usual for adults with depression treated in primary care. The study was undertaken alongside a RCT (Rubio-Valera 2013, N=179; 71% completed at 6 months; n=151 received intervention as allocated). The study adopted a healthcare and a societal perspective; costs included intervention, publicly funded healthcare services (GP, nurse, psychologist, psychiatrist, other specialists, social worker, hospital emergency visits, hospital stay, diagnostic tests, medication), privately funded healthcare services (psychiatrist, psychologist, medical specialist, GP), and absenteeism from paid labour. Regional unit prices were used. The study used 3 outcome measures: adherence to antidepressant treatment measured using electronic pharmacy records; remission of depressive symptoms defined as a reduction in the Patient Health Questionnaire 9-item (PHQ-9) of at least 50%; and the QALY based on EQ-5D ratings and the Spanish tariff. The time horizon of the analysis was 6 months.

Under the healthcare perspective, medication management was more expensive than treatment is usual. It was also more effective in terms of adherence to antidepressant treatment and the QALYs gained. The respective ICERs were €962 per extra adherent service user and €3,592/QALY (2009 prices; translating into figures of £935 per extra adherent service user and £3,495/QALY in 2020 prices). However, when remission was used as an outcome, medication management was dominated by treatment as usual, as it was more expensive and less effective. The probability of medication management being cost-effective was 0.71 and 0.76 for WTP £5,800/adherent service user and £29,000/QALY, respectively (2020 prices). Using remission as an outcome, the maximum probability of medication management being cost-effective was only 0.46, irrespective of the cost effectiveness threshold used. Results were robust to different scenarios such as a per protocol or complete case analysis, use of different diagnostic criteria for depression, changes in intervention costs or different methodology used for estimating indirect costs. The study is partially applicable to the UK decision-making context, as it was conducted in Spain. The findings of the study are inconsistent across the outcome measures used (i.e. the study appears to be cost-effective using the QALY, but cost-ineffective using remission as measure of outcome). The study was characterised by potentially serious limitations, mainly its contradictory results, its short time horizon and the use of regional unit costs.

Shared care

Wiley-Exley 2009 evaluated the cost effectiveness of integrated (shared) care compared with primary care with a referral system to specialist care for older adults with depression in the US. The study, which was conducted alongside a RCT (N=840), analysed 4 different combinations of populations and settings: people major and minor depression (full sample) in the Veteran Affairs (VA) setting (n=365), full sample outside VA (n=475); people with major depression within VA (n=214), and people with major depression outside VA (n=302). The analysis adopted a healthcare and service users’ and carers’ perspective and included intervention costs, outpatient and inpatient care, nursing home, rehabilitation, emergency room, medication, service users’ and caregivers’ time and travel costs. National unit costs were used. The study included various measures of outcome, such as the CES-D score; the number of depression-free days derived from CES-D; the number of QALYs estimated based on depression-free days, using utility weights of health=1, depression=0.59; the number of QALYs estimated based on SF-36, using preferences for matched vignettes created following cluster analysis of SF-12 mental and physical component scores, elicited by US service users with depression using SG. Only results for the latter are reported here (full results of the study are provided in the study’s evidence table in appendix H). The time horizon of the analysis was 6 months.

Integrated care was found to dominate usual primary care in the full sample (major and minor depression), VA setting. It was more costly and more effective than usual primary care regarding the full sample outside VA setting and major depression sample in the VA setting, with ICERs of £91,674/QALY and £56,799/QALY, respectively (2020 prices). It was less effective and less costly than usual primary care in the major depression sample, outside the VA setting, with an ICER of £76,861/QALY (saving per QALY lost).

The probability of integrated care being cost-effective was more than 0.70 for any cost effectiveness threshold only in the full sample and VA setting. The probability of integrated care being cost-effective was low at levels of willingness to pay that corresponded to NICE cost effectiveness thresholds. The study is partially applicable to the UK as it was conducted in the US, and is characterised by potentially serious limitations, including the short time horizon and the contradictory results across sub-analyses.

Economic model

No economic modelling was undertaken for this review because the committee agreed that other topics were higher priorities for economic evaluation.

Evidence statements

Clinical evidence statements
Comparison 1. Collaborative care (simple or complex) versus standard care/enhanced standard care
Critical outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Very low quality evidence from 9 RCTs (N=2791) shows a statistically significant but not clinically important benefit of collaborative care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on depression symptomatology at 6 months for adults with depression.
  • Very low quality evidence from 13 RCTs (N=5408) shows a statistically significant but not clinically important benefit of collaborative care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on depression symptomatology at 12 months for adults with depression.
Response
  • Low quality evidence from 8 RCTs (N=1703) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of collaborative care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on the rate of response at 6 months for adults with depression.
  • Low quality evidence from 13 RCTs (N=4910) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of collaborative care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on the rate of response at 12 months for adults with depression.
Remission
  • Low quality evidence from 12 RCTs (N=3933) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of collaborative care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on the rate of remission at 6 months for adults with depression.
  • Very low quality evidence from 14 RCTs (N=6255) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of collaborative care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on the rate of remission at 12 months for adults with depression.
Important outcomes
Antidepressant use
  • Very low quality evidence from 11 RCTs (N=4022) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant effect of collaborative care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on antidepressant use at 6 months for adults with depression.
  • Very low quality evidence from 13 RCTs (N=5666) shows a statistically significant but not clinically important benefit of collaborative care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on antidepressant use at 12 months for adults with depression.
Discontinuation
  • Low quality evidence from 19 RCTs (N=8305) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant effect of collaborative care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on discontinuation at 6 months for adults with depression.
  • Moderate quality evidence from 22 RCTs (N=10,916) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant effect of collaborative care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on discontinuation at 12 months for adults with depression
Subgroup analysis 1a: Simple versus complex collaborative care
  • Subgroup analysis of collaborative care compared to standard care or enhanced standard care for adults with depression, shows no statistically significant difference between simple and complex collaborative care, on any of the outcomes for which sub-analysis was possible: depression symptomatology at 12 months; response at 12 months; remission at 12 months.
Subgroup analysis 1b: Older adults
  • Subgroup analysis of collaborative care compared to standard care or enhanced standard care for adults with depression, shows no statistically significant difference between older adults and younger adults, on any of the outcomes for which sub-analysis was possible: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months; response at 6 months; response at 12 months; remission at 6 months; remission at 12 months. Although there was a consistent trend for larger benefits for older adults.
Subgroup analysis 1c: BME groups
  • Subgroup analysis of collaborative care compared to standard care or enhanced standard care for adults with depression, shows no statistically significant difference between studies with a predominantly white population and studies where the majority of participants were from BME groups, on the one outcome for which sub-analysis was possible: remission at 6 months.
Subgroup analysis 1d: Stepped care component
  • Subgroup analysis of collaborative care compared to standard care or enhanced standard care for adults with depression, shows no statistically significant difference between interventions that included a stepped care component, interventions that included only a medication algorithm, and interventions with no stepped care component or algorithm, on any of the outcomes for which sub-analysis was possible: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months; response at 6 months; response at 12 months; remission at 6 months; remission at 12 months. Although there was a consistent trend for larger benefits for interventions that included a stepped care component.
Subgroup analysis 1e: Case manager background
  • Subgroup analysis of collaborative care compared to standard care or enhanced standard care for adults with depression, shows no statistically significant difference between interventions where the case manager had a prior mental health background and interventions where the case manager did not have a prior mental health background, on any of the outcomes for which sub-analysis was possible: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months.
Subgroup analysis 1f: Psychological intervention
  • Subgroup analysis of collaborative care compared to standard care or enhanced standard care for adults with depression, shows no statistically significant difference between studies where psychological interventions were delivered as part of the model of care and studies where psychological interventions were not part of the service delivery model, on any of the outcomes for which sub-analysis was possible: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months; response at 6 months; response at 12 months; remission at 6 months; remission at 12 months.
Subgroup analysis 1g: Number of contacts
  • Subgroup analysis of collaborative care compared to standard care or enhanced standard care for adults with depression, showed a statistically significant subgroup difference between interventions with fewer than 13 contacts and interventions with 13 or more contacts on the rate of remission at 12 months, with larger benefits associated with 13+ contacts. Although heterogeneity remained fairly high within (as well as between) subgroups. There was a trend for larger benefits associated with more contacts across other outcomes, although subgroup differences were not statistically significant for: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months; response at 6 months; response at 12 months; remission at 6 months.
Subgroup analysis 1h: Baseline severity
  • Subgroup analysis of collaborative care compared to standard care or enhanced standard care for adults with depression, showed a statistically significant subgroup difference between studies where the mean depression scale score indicated less severe depression and studies where participants had more severe depression on the rate of remission at 6 months, with larger benefits associated with more severe depression. However, this pattern was not consistent across outcomes, and subgroup differences were not statistically significant for: depression symptomatology at 6 months; depression symptomatology at 12 months; response at 6 months; response at 12 months; remission at 12 months.
Comparison 2: Collaborative care versus standard care for relapse prevention
Critical outcomes
Relapse
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=386) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant effect of collaborative care, relative to standard care, on the rate of relapse for adults with remitted depression.
Important outcomes
Antidepressant use
  • Low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=386) shows a statistically significant but not clinically important benefit of collaborative care, relative to standard care, on antidepressant use at 6 months for adults with remitted depression.
  • Low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=386) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of collaborative care, relative to standard care, on antidepressant use at 12 months for adults with remitted depression.
Discontinuation
  • Low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=386) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of collaborative care, relative to standard care, on discontinuation at 12 months for adults with remitted depression.
Comparison 3: Stepped care versus standard care/enhanced standard care
Critical outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Very low quality evidence from 2 RCTs (N=1614) shows a statistically significant but not clinically important benefit of stepped care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on depression symptomatology endpoint score at 6 months for adults with depression.
  • Very low quality evidence from 2 RCTs (N=826) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of stepped care, relative to standard care, on depression symptomatology change score at 6 months for adults with depression.
  • Moderate quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=998) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant effect of stepped care, relative to enhanced standard care, on depression symptomatology endpoint score at 12 months for adults with depression.
  • Low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=194) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant effect of stepped care, relative to standard care, on depression symptomatology change score at 12 months for adults with depression.
Response
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=239) shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of standard care, relative to stepped care, on the rate of response at 6 months for adults with depression.
  • Low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=239) shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of standard care, relative to stepped care, on the rate of response at 12 months for adults with depression.
Remission
  • Low quality evidence from 2 RCTs (N=1082) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of stepped care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on the rate of remission at 6 months for adults with depression.
  • Very low quality evidence from 2 RCTs (N=2085) shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of stepped care, relative to enhanced standard care, on the rate of remission at 12 months for adults with depression.
Important outcomes
Antidepressant use
  • Moderate quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=175) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of stepped care, relative to standard care, on antidepressant use at 6 months for adults with depression.
Discontinuation
  • Low quality evidence from 5 RCTs (N=3180) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of stepped care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on discontinuation at 6 months for adults with depression.
  • Moderate quality evidence from 3 RCTs (N=2324) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of stepped care, relative to standard care or enhanced standard care, on discontinuation at 12 months for adults with depression.
Comparison 4: Stepped care versus standard care for relapse prevention
Critical outcomes
Relapse
  • Low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=135) shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of standard care, relative to stepped care, on the rate of relapse at 12 months in adults with remitted depression.
Important outcomes
Antidepressant use
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=94) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant effect of stepped care, relative to standard care, on antidepressant use at 12 months for adults with remitted depression.
Discontinuation
  • Low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=74) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant effect of stepped care, relative to standard care, on discontinuation at 12 months for adults with remitted depression.
Comparison 5: Pure medication management versus standard care
Critical outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • High quality evidence from 2 RCTs (N=399) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant benefit of pure medication management, relative to standard care, on depression symptomatology at 6 months for adults with depression.
Response
  • Moderate quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=70) shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of pure medication management, relative to standard care, on the rate of response at 6 months for adults with depression.
Important outcomes
Antidepressant use
  • Low quality evidence from 3 RCTs (N=904) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of pure medication management, relative to standard care, on antidepressant use at 6 months for adults with depression.
Discontinuation
  • Moderate quality evidence from 5 RCTs (N=1216) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant benefit of pure medication management, relative to standard care, on discontinuation at 6 months for adults with depression.
Comparison 6: Care coordination versus standard care/enhanced standard care
Critical outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=62) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant benefit of care coordination, relative to enhanced standard care, on depression symptomatology at 6 months for adults with depression.
  • Moderate quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=516) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant benefit of care coordination, relative to standard care, on depression symptomatology at 12 months for adults with depression.
Remission
  • Low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=609) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant benefit of care coordination, relative to standard care, on the rate of remission at 12 months for adults with depression.
Important outcomes
Discontinuation
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=62) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant effect of care coordination, relative to enhanced standard care, on discontinuation at 6 months for adults with depression.
  • Low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=609) shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of standard care, relative to care coordination, on discontinuation at 12 months for adults with depression.
Comparison 7: Attached professional model versus enhanced standard care
Critical outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=118) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant benefit of attached professional model care, relative to enhanced standard care, on depression symptomatology at 6 months for adults with depression.
Important outcomes
Discontinuation
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=120) shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of attached professional model care, relative to enhanced standard care, on discontinuation at 6 months for adults with depression.
Comparison 8: Shared care versus standard care
Critical outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • High quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=69) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of shared care, relative to standard care, on depression symptomatology at 6 months for adults with depression.
Remission
  • Moderate quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=69) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of shared care, relative to standard care, on the rate of remission at 6 months for adults with depression.
Important outcomes
Antidepressant use
  • High quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=69) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of shared care, relative to standard care, on antidepressant use at 6 months for adults with depression.
Discontinuation
  • Low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=69) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant effect of shared care, relative to standard care, on discontinuation at 6 months for adults with depression.
Comparison 9: Measurement-based care versus standard care
Critical outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Moderate quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=81) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of measurement-based care, relative to standard care, on depression symptomatology at 6 months for adults with depression.
Response
  • Low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=120) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of measurement-based care, relative to standard care, on the rate of response at 6 months for adults with depression.
Remission
  • Moderate quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=120) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of measurement-based care, relative to standard care, on remission at 6 months for adults with depression.
Important outcomes
Discontinuation
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=120) shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of measurement-based care, relative to standard care, on discontinuation at 6 months for adults with depression.
Economic evidence statements
Collaborative care
  • Evidence from 3 UK economic evaluations conducted alongside RCTs (N = 1,771; complete data for economic analysis n=1341) suggest that simple collaborative care is possibly a cost-effective model for delivering services to adults or older adults with depression. This evidence is directly applicable to the UK context and is coming from one study with minor and two studies with potentially serious methodological limitations.
  • Evidence from 1 US study conducted alongside a RCT (N=386) suggests that simple collaborative care aiming at relapse prevention may be cost-effective in adults with depression that is in remission. This evidence is partially applicable to the NICE decision-making context as it comes from a US study and is not using the QALY as the outcome measure. The study is characterised by potentially serious methodological limitations.
  • Evidence from 1 UK study conducted alongside a RCT (N=187) suggests that complex collaborative care is not cost-effective compared with usual secondary mental health care for adults with depression. This evidence is directly applicable to the UK context and is characterised by minor limitations.
  • Evidence from 1 Dutch study and 1 German study conducted alongside RCTs (N=396) suggest that complex collaborative care is unlikely to be cost-effective compared with treatment as usual in adults with depression in primary care. This evidence is partially applicable to the NICE decision-making context as the studies were conducted outside the UK and, in the Dutch study, utility values were based on EQ-5D ratings using the Dutch tariff. One study is characterised by potentially serious limitations and the other study by minor limitations.
Stepped care
  • Evidence from 1 UK study conducted alongside a cohort study with matched sites (N=403), and 3 non-UK studies (2 Dutch and 1 Canadian) based on decision-analytic economic modelling suggests that stepped care might be cost-effective for adults with depression in primary care, although results were inconsistent within and across studies. This evidence is directly applicable (UK study) and partially applicable (Dutch and Canadian studies) to the NICE decision-making context. The UK study is characterised by potentially serious limitations; of the 3 non-UK studies, 1 is characterised by potentially serious limitations and 2 are characterised by minor limitations.
Medication management
  • Evidence from 1 Spanish study conducted alongside a RCT (N=179) suggests that medication management may be cost-effective for adults with depression. This evidence is partially applicable to the NICE decision-making context as it was conducted outside the UK and is characterised by potentially serious limitations.
Care co-ordination
  • No evidence on the cost effectiveness of care co-ordination for adults with depression is available.
Attached professional model
  • No evidence on the cost effectiveness of the attached professional model for adults with depression is available.
Shared care
  • Evidence from 1 US study conducted alongside a multi-site pragmatic RCT (N=840) is inconclusive regarding the cost effectiveness of shared care compared with usual primary care that includes a referral system to specialist care. The evidence is partially applicable to the NICE decision making context (US study, QALYs based on SF-36 using preferences for matched vignettes created following cluster analysis of SF-12 mental and physical component scores, elicited by US service users with depression using SG) and is characterised by potentially serious limitations.
Measurement-based care
  • No evidence on the cost effectiveness of measurement-based care for adults with depression is available.

The committee’s discussion of the evidence

Interpreting the evidence
The outcomes that matter most

The aim of this review was to determine if different models of service delivery improved outcomes for people with depression so the committee identified depression symptomatology and response, remission and relapse to be the critical outcomes for this question. Antidepressant use and discontinuation were identified as important outcomes. For all outcomes, time points of 6 and 12 months were used, to ensure comparability across interventions.

Evidence was available for all outcomes and time points of interest for the collaborative care dataset (comparison 1), but for all other comparisons data were only available for some of the outcomes. A number of different care models did not have available data on the outcomes of remission and response. Therefore when considering the evidence the committee placed the greatest emphasis on depression symptomatology and antidepressant use, as these provided the best point of comparison across different interventions.

The quality of the evidence

The committee noted that most outcomes for most of the comparisons had been assessed in GRADE as either low or very low quality. Most outcomes were downgraded due to risk of bias (common reasons for downgrading included a lack of blinding of participants and intervention administrators, and non-blind or unclear blinding of outcome assessment, and significant baseline differences between groups) and imprecision. The committee also noted the absence of evidence identified for head-to-head comparisons of different service delivery models.

Benefits and harms

The committee considered that effective service delivery models would enhance clinical outcomes by improved engagement with effective interventions and thereby improve outcomes in terms of depression symptomatology and response, remission and relapse.

For collaborative care, the committee noted that there was evidence from a number of UK and international trials for clinical benefits associated with the use of collaborative care compared to standard care or enhanced standard care, with higher rates of response and remission at both 6 and 12 months. However, the committee noted that the heterogeneity was very high, and effect sizes for depression symptomatology were small compared to first-line acute treatments. Based on these factors, the committee made a ‘consider’ rather than ‘offer’ recommendation and identified groups where collaborative care may confer significant added value, for example, those with significant physical health problems or who are socially isolated.

Older adults were also identified as a group that may particularly benefit from collaborative care. Subgroup analysis comparing outcomes for older (mean age ≥ 60 years) and younger (mean age <60 years) adults did not identify statistically significant subgroup differences. However, there was a consistent trend for larger benefits of collaborative care for older adults. Considered together with the committee knowledge and experience of difficulties with engagement in older adults particularly for those with physical health problems, and evidence for the cost-effectiveness of collaborative care in older people, the committee agreed to also recommend collaborative care for this group.

The committee defined the components of collaborative care that are important, based both on their expertise and experience and on the results of sub-analyses of the collaborative care dataset. Subgroup analyses examined the impact of complex (relative to simple) collaborative care, case manager background, use of a psychological intervention or stepped care algorithm, and the number of contacts provided as part of the intervention. No significant subgroup differences or consistent pattern in results were observed for analyses comparing outcomes for complex versus simple collaborative care, or case manager with mental health background versus case manager without a mental health background.

The inclusion of a stepped care algorithm showed a trend for larger effect sizes compared to no stepped care algorithm. There were no significant subgroup differences for the inclusion of psychological interventions, however, the committee agreed based on their knowledge and experience that collaborative care should include delivery of psychological and psychosocial interventions within a structured protocol. This was also reinforced by evidence for the benefits of stepped care interventions (that were not integrated into collaborative care models) relative to standard care on depression symptomatology, the rate of remission and antidepressant use at 6 months. The committee agreed that the key principles of stepped care, or more accurately matched care, were covered by existing recommendations and were integrated into a care pathway that emphasises patient choice.

Subgroup analysis comparing the outcomes of collaborative care between interventions with fewer than 13 contacts and interventions with 13 contacts or more contacts, showed a trend for larger effects sizes with more contacts and this difference was statistically significant for remission at 12 months. However, the committee did not consider this evidence sufficiently compelling to specify the number of contacts that a collaborative care intervention should include.

The committee were aware of the importance of medication adherence, in particular, for people with severe and chronic depressive symptoms and noted that although the evidence for pure medication management was limited and did not show significant benefits on clinical outcomes, there were benefits on antidepressant use at 6 months. Based on this limited evidence, the committee agreed not to make any recommendations about the use of medication management as an independent service delivery model. For people with depression who may have specific difficulties with the uptake of, or engagement with, treatment the committee agreed that medication adherence would be more effectively promoted through the delivery of care in a collaborative, multidisciplinary manner and that included medication management as a component within a collaborative care model.

The committee acknowledged that for more severe depression or chronic depression with multiple complicating problems or significant coexisting conditions there was no direct evidence to guide the development of recommendations. The committee were, however, aware of the very significant difficulties that people with severe, chronic and complex depression face and the burden of suffering this represents for families and carers. Such high levels of need are best met by specialist services within specialist secondary care. The committee therefore drew on their expert knowledge and experience of specialist services and used informal consensus to develop a series of recommendations on who might benefit from specialist services, how these services should be co-ordinated and what the nature of the co-ordination of the services should involve. The committee were of the view that the development of a comprehensive multidisciplinary care plan will allow more timely, appropriate, and individualised planning and delivery of care to people with more severe or more chronic depression with multiple complicating problems or significant coexisting conditions, and that these benefits should offset (fully or partially) the costs associated with development of the care plan. In contrast, lack of a detailed care plan may lead to sub-optimal, less clinically and cost-effective care pathways and inappropriate treatments, ultimately leading to sub-optimal outcomes for the person and higher healthcare costs.

Cost effectiveness and resource use

The committee agreed that, overall, the published economic evidence indicated that simple collaborative care is potentially a cost-effective model for delivering services to adults with depression, including older adults. This is because out of the 3 UK cost-utility studies included in the review, 2 found simple collaborative care cost-effective when added to usual primary care compared with usual primary care alone at the NICE lower cost-effectiveness threshold of £20,000/QALY. The third study reported an ICER for simple collaborative care between the NICE lower and upper (£30,000/QALY) cost-effectiveness thresholds. The two studies that found simple collaborative care cost-effective were also somewhat larger than the one that found it cost-ineffective at the lower NICE cost-effectiveness threshold. The committee also noted that, among the 3 studies, there was one with minor methodological limitations (the other two were characterised by potentially serious limitations), and this found simple collaborative care to be cost-effective. In contrast, the only UK study on more resource-intensive complex collaborative care included in the review suggested this is unlikely to be cost-effective compared with usual secondary mental health care, as its ICER was well above the NICE upper cost-effectiveness threshold of £30,000/QALY. Therefore, the committee decided to recommend collaborative care with the characteristics of the less resource-intensive, simple collaborative care, as defined in this review, for organising the delivery of care and treatment of people with depression.

The committee noted, based on the evidence, that stepped care might also be cost-effective for adults with depression. They therefore agreed that the recommendations they made on treatment, which reflected the key principles of stepped (or, more accurately, matched) care, ensured efficient use of resources.

The committee noted that no UK economic evidence was available and non-UK evidence did not provide any substantial support for the cost effectiveness of medication management as an independent service delivery model for adults with depression. They also noted that non-UK economic evidence on shared care was inconclusive.

The committee acknowledged that referring people with more severe depression or chronic depressive symptoms and multiple complicating problems (such as unemployment, poor housing or financial problems) or significant coexisting conditions to specialist mental health services, if they have not benefitted from treatment or if they have impaired functioning, is likely to incur additional costs compared with no referral. However, they agreed that the number of people affected would be small and any additional costs were likely to be offset by cost-savings resulting from more appropriate care for this population following referral (compared with treatment in primary care settings), leading to improved outcomes and reduction in the need for potentially costly care further down the care pathway.

Recommendations supported by this evidence review

This evidence review supports recommendations 1.16.7 to 1.16.10 in the NICE guideline.

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Settings of care

Review question

For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different settings for the delivery of care?

Introduction

Care for adults with depression can be provided in a variety of different settings, ranging from care in people’s own homes, primary care and day hospitals, through to inpatient care or tertiary settings, and the setting in which care is delivered may have a bearing on the outcomes for individuals, and the effectiveness of the interventions.

The aim of this review is to identify if there is a setting which delivers optimal results for people with depression, and if there is anything about the general management of care that should be done differently when delivered in different settings.

Summary of the protocol

Please see Table 11 for a summary of the Population, Intervention, Comparison and Outcome (PICO) characteristics of this review.

Table 11. Summary of the protocol (PICO table).

Table 11

Summary of the protocol (PICO table).

For further details see the review protocol in appendix A.

Methods and process

This evidence review was developed using the methods and process described in Developing NICE guidelines: the manual. Methods specific to this review question are described in the review protocol in appendix A.

Declarations of interest were recorded according to NICE’s 2014 conflicts of interest policy until 31 March 2018. From 1 April 2018, declarations of interest were recorded according to NICE’s 2018 conflicts of interest policy. Those interests declared until April 2018 were reclassified according to NICE’s 2018 conflicts of interest policy (see Register of Interests).

Clinical evidence

Included studies

No randomised controlled trial (RCT) evidence was identified that specifically addressed the following settings: primary care, and inpatient care, therefore, as specified in the full protocol (see Appendix A), indirect evidence was considered in the form of sub-analyses of the NMA dataset (Evidence report B: Treatment of a new episode of depression).

Comparison 1. Primary care versus secondary care

As outlined above, no RCT evidence was identified that specifically addressed this comparison. Therefore the committee considered indirect evidence in the form of sub-analyses of the NMA dataset (Evidence report B: Treatment of a new episode of depression). Primary versus secondary care differences were examined for critical outcomes that had more than 2 studies in each subgroup.

Subgroup analysis of primary care versus secondary care was possible for 5 comparisons in the NMA dataset, and all 5 comparisons were for adults with more severe depression (corresponding to the categories of moderate and severe depression):

  • Comparison 1a. Cognitive and cognitive behavioural therapies individual + antidepressant versus antidepressant, with 2 RCTs included for primary care (Naeem 2011; Scott 1997) and 4 RCTs included for secondary care (Ashouri 2013; Hautzinger 1996; Hollon 1992; Zu 2014). Primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis was possible for the depression symptoms endpoint outcome only.
  • Comparison 1b. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) versus placebo, with 5 RCTs included for primary care (Bjerkenstedt 2005; Doogan 1994; Lepola 2003; Lopez-Rodriguez 2004; Wade 2002) and 78 RCTs included for secondary care (29060 07 001; Andreoli 2002/ Dubini 1997/ Massana 1998_study 1 [1 study reported across 3 papers]; Baune 2018; Binnemann 2008; Bose 2008; Burke 2002; Byerley 1988; Claghorn 1992a; Claghorn 1992b; Clayton 2006_study 1; Clayton 2006_study 2; CL3-20098-022; CL3-20098-023; CL3-20098-024; Detke 2004; Dube 2010; Dunbar 1993; Eli Lilly HMAT-A; Emsley 2018; Fabre 1992; Fabre 1995a; Fava 1998a; Fava 2005; FDA 245 (EMD 68 843-010); FDA 246 (SB 659746-003); Forest Laboratories 2000; Forest Research Institute 2005; Golden 2002_448; Golden 2002_449; Goldstein 2002; Goldstein 2004; Gual 2003; Higuchi 2009; Hirayasu 2011a; Hirayasu 2011b; Jefferson 2000; Kasper 2012; Katz 2004; Keller 2006_Study 062; Kramer 1998; Kranzler 2006_Group A; Lam 2016; Macias-Cortes 2015; Mathews 2015; Mendels 1999; Miller 1989a; Montgomery 1992; Mundt 2012; MY-1042/BRL-029060/CPMS-251; MY-1042/BRL-029060/1 (PAR 128); Nemeroff 2007; Nierenberg 2007; NKD20006 (NCT00048204); Nyth 1992; Olie 1997; PAR 01 001 (GSK & FDA); Perahia 2006; Peselow 1989a; Peselow 1989b; Rapaport 2009; Ratti 2011_study 096; Ravindran 1995; Reimherr 1990; Rickels 1992; Rudolph 1999; SER 315 (FDA); Sheehan 2009b; Smith 1992; Stark 1985; Study 62b (FDA); Study F1J-MC-HMAQ- Study Group B; Tollefson 1993/1995 [1 study reported across 2 papers]; Valle-Cabrera 2018; VEN XR 367 (FDA); Wang 2014c; WELL AK1A4006; Wernicke 1987; Wernicke 1988). Primary care versus secondary care subgroup analyses were possible for the depression symptoms endpoint, depression symptoms change score, and response outcomes.
  • Comparison 1c. SSRIs versus tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), with 10 RCTs included for primary care (Christiansen 1996; Freed 1999; Hutchinson 1992; Kyle 1998; Moon 1994; Moon 1996; PAR 29060/281; PAR MDUK 032; Rosenberg 1994; Serrano-Blanco 2006) and 47 RCTs included for secondary care (29060 07 001; 29060/299; Akhondzadeh 2003; Arminem 1992; Beasley 1993b; Bersani 1994; Bhargava 2012; Bremner 1984; Byerley 1988; Chiu 1996; Cohn 1984b; Cohn 1990b; Danish University Antidepressant Group 1986; Danish University Antidepressant Group 1990; De Ronchi 1998; Demyttenaere 1998; Deuschle 2003; Fabre 1991; Fabre 1992; Fawcett 1989; Feighner 1993; Forlenza 2001; Geretsegger 1995; GSK_29060/103; Hashemi 2012; Keegan 1991; Laakmann 1988; Laakmann 1991; Levine 1989; Marchesi 1998; MDF/29060/III/070/88/MC; Miura 2000; Moller 1993; Moller 1998; Mulsant 1999; Navarro 2001; Ontiveros Sanchez 1998; Peselow 1989a; Peselow 1989b; Peters 1990; Preskorn 1991; Reimherr 1990; Ropert 1989; SER 315 (FDA); Staner 1995; Stark 1985; Suleman 1997). Primary care versus secondary care subgroup analyses were possible for the depression symptoms endpoint, depression symptoms change score, remission and response outcomes.
  • Comparison 1d. TCAs versus placebo, with 6 RCTs included for primary care (Barge-Schaapveld 2002; Blashki 1971; Lecrubier 1997; Mynors-Wallis 1995; Philipp 1999; Schweizer 1998) and 30 RCTs included for secondary care (29060 07 001; Amsterdam 1986; Bakish 1992b; Bremner 1995; Byerley 1988; Cassano 1986; Elkin 1989/Imber 1990 [1 study reported across 2 papers]; Escobar 1980; Fabre 1992; Feiger 1996; Feighner 1982; Feighner 1989b; Fontaine 1994; Goldberg 1980; Kusalic 1993; McCallum 1975; MIR 003-020 (FDA); Peselow 1989a; Peselow 1989b; Reimherr 1990; Rickels 1982e; Rickels 1991; Rickels 1995_Study 006-1; Rickels 1995_Study 006-2; Schweizer 1994; SER 315 (FDA); Silverstone 1994; Smith 1990; Stark 1985; White 1984). Primary care versus secondary care subgroup analyses were possible for the depression symptoms endpoint, depression symptoms change score, and response outcomes.
  • Comparison 1e. Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) versus SSRIs, with 2 RCTs included for primary care (Montgomery 2004; Tylee 1997) and 29 RCTs included for secondary care (Allard 2004; Alves 1999; Bielski 2004; Clerc 1994; Costa 1998; DeNayer 2002; Detke 2004; Diaz-Martinez 1998; Dierick 1996; Eli Lilly HMAT-A; Goldstein 2002; Goldstein 2004; Hao 2014; Higuchi 2009; Hwang 2004; Jiang 2017; Khan 2007; Kornaat 2000; Mehtonen 2000; Nemeroff 2007; Nierenberg 2007; Perahia 2006; Rickels 2000; Rudolph 1999; Sheehan 2009b; Shelton 2006; Sir 2005; Study F1J-MC-HMAQ-Study Group B; Tzanakaki 2000). Primary care versus secondary care subgroup analyses were possible for the remission and response outcomes.

Comparison 2. Crisis resolution team care versus standard care (for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness)

No RCT evidence was identified that specifically addressed this comparison for adults with depression. The committee therefore agreed to consider a wider evidence base including non-psychotic severe mental illness. A systematic review (Murphy 2015; updated version of Joy 2003 used in 2009 guideline) was identified that examined crisis intervention for people with severe mental illness. This Cochrane review was used as a source of studies with inclusion criteria into this review of over 50% of the population having a non-psychotic disorder. Of the 8 RCTs included in Murphy 2015, 1 of these studies met the >50% non-psychotic disorder inclusion criterion (Johnson 2005).

Comparison 3. Inpatient versus outpatient settings

No randomised controlled trial (RCT) evidence was identified that specifically addressed this comparison. Therefore the committee considered indirect evidence in the form of sub-analyses of the NMA dataset (Evidence report B: Treatment of a new episode of depression). Differences between inpatient and outpatient settings were examined for critical outcomes that had more than 2 studies in each subgroup.

Subgroup analysis of inpatient versus outpatient settings was possible for 6 comparisons in the NMA dataset, and all 6 comparisons were for adults with more severe depression (corresponding to the categories of moderate and severe depression):

  • Comparison 3a. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) versus placebo, with 3 RCTs included for inpatient settings (29060 07 001; Katz 2004; Sheehan 2009b) and 74 RCTs included for outpatient settings (Baune 2018; Binnemann 2008; Bjerkenstedt 2005; Blumenthal 2007/Hoffman 2011 [1 study reported across 2 papers]; Bose 2008; Burke 2002; Byerley 1988; Claghorn 1992a; Claghorn 1992b; Clayton 2006_study 1; Clayton 2006_study 2; Detke 2004; Doogan 1994; Dube 2010; Dunbar 1993; Eli Lilly HMAT-A; Emsley 2018; Fabre 1992; Fava 1998a; Fava 2005; FDA 245 (EMD 68 843-010); Forest Laboratories 2000; Forest Research Institute 2005; Golden 2002_448; Golden 2002_449; Goldstein 2002; Goldstein 2004; Gual 2003; Hirayasu 2011a; Hirayasu 2011b; Hunter 2010_study 1; Hunter 2011; Jefferson 2000; Keller 2006_Study 062; Komulainen 2018; Kramer 1998; Kranzler 2006_Group A; Lam 2016; Lepola 2003; Macias-Cortes 2015; Mathews 2015; Mendels 1999; Miller 1989a; Mundt 2012; MY-1042/BRL-029060/CPMS-251; MY-1045/BRL-029060/1 (PAR 128); Nemeroff 2007; Nierenberg 2007; NKD20006 (NCT00048204); Olie 1997; PAR 01 001 (GSK & FDA); Perahia 2006; Peselow 1989a; Peselow 1989b; Rapaport 2009; Ratti 2011_study 096; Ravindran 1995; Reimherr 1990; Rickels 1992; Roose 2004; Rudolph 1999; SER 315 (FDA); Smith 1992; Stark 1985; Study 62b (FDA); Study F1J-MC-HMAQ – Study Group B; Tollefson 1993/1995 [1 study reported across 2 papers]; Valle-Cabrera 2018; VEN XR 367 (FDA); Wade 2002; Wang 2014c; WELL AK1A4006; Wernicke 1987; Wernicke 1988). Inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis was possible for the depression symptoms change score and response outcomes.
  • Comparison 3b. SSRIs versus tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), with 11 RCTs included for inpatient settings (29060/299; 29060 07 001; Arminen 1992; Danish University Antidepressant Group 1986; Danish University Antidepressant Group 1990; Deushle 2003; Geretsegger 1995; Laakmann 1991; Moller 1993; Moller 1998; Staner 1995), and 40 RCTs included for outpatient settings (Akhondzadeh 2003; Beasley 1993b; Bersani 1994; Bhargava 2012; Bremner 1984; Byerley 1988; Christiansen 1996; Cohn 1984b; Cohn 1990b; De Ronchi 1998; Demyttenaere 1998; Fabre 1991; Fabre 1992; Fawcett 1989; Feighner 1993; Forlenza 2001; Freed 1999; Hashemi 2012; Hutchinson 1992; Kyle 1998; Laakmann 1988; Marchesi 1998; MDF/29060/III/070/88/MC; Moller 2000; Moon 1994; Moon 1996; Ontiveros Sanchez 1998; PAR 29060/281; PAR MDUK 032; Peselow 1989a; Peselow 1989b; Peters 1990; Preskorn 1991; Reimherr 1990; Ropert 1989; Rosenberg 1994; SER 315 (FDA); Serrano-Blanco 2006; Stark 1985; Suleman 1997). Inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis was possible for the depression symptoms endpoint, depression symptoms change score, remission, and response outcomes.
  • Comparison 3c. Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) versus placebo, with 2 RCTs included for inpatient settings (Guelfi 1995; Sheehan 2009b), and 26 RCTs included for outpatient settings (Brannan 2005; Cutler 2009; Detke 2002a; Detke 2002b; Detke 2004; Eli Lilly HMAT-A; Goldstein 2002; Goldstein 2004; Hewett 2009; Hewett 2010; Higuchi 2016; Khan 1998; Levin 2013; Mendels 1993; Nemeroff 2007; Nierenberg 2007; Perahia 2006; Raskin 2007; Robinson 2014; Rudolph 1999; Schweizer 1994; Study F1J-MC-HMAQ-Study Group B; Thase 1997; VEN 600A-303 (FDA); VEN 600A-313 (FDA); VEN XR 367 (FDA)). Inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis was possible for the depression symptoms endpoint, depression symptoms change score, and remission outcomes.
  • Comparison 3d. SNRIs versus SSRIs, with 4 RCTs included for inpatient settings (Clerc 1994; Hwang 2004; Sheehan 2009b; Tzanakaki 2000), and 32 RCTs included for outpatient settings (Allard 2004; Alves 1999; Bielski 2004; Casabona 2004; Chang 2015; Costa 1998; DeNayer 2002; Detke 2004; Diaz-Martinez 1998; Dierick 1996; Eli Lilly HMAT-A; Goldstein 2002; Goldstein 2004; Hackett 1996; Heller 2009; Jiang 2017; Khan 2007; Kornaat 2000; Mehtonen 2000; Montgomery 2004; Mowla 2016; Nemeroff 2007; Nierenberg 2007; Perahia 2006; Rickels 2000; Rudolph 1999; Shelton 2006; Sir 2005; Study F1J-MC-HMAQ-Study Group B; Tylee 1997; VEN XR 367 (FDA); Wade 2007) . Inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis was possible for the depression symptoms endpoint, depression symptoms change score, remission, and response outcomes.
  • Comparison 3e. Mirtazapine versus TCAs, with 2 RCTs included for inpatient settings (Richou 1995; Zivkov 1995), and 4 RCTs included for outpatient settings (Bremner 1995; MIR 003-020 (FDA); MIR 003-021 (FDA); Smith 1990). Inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis was only possible for the response outcome.
  • Comparison 3f. Acupuncture + antidepressants versus antidepressants, with 2 RCTs included for inpatient settings (Wang 2014a; Zhang 2007a), and 2 RCTs included for outpatient settings (Qu 2013; Zhao 2019a). Inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis was only possible for the depression symptoms change score outcome.

Comparison 4. Acute psychiatric day hospital care versus inpatient care (for adults with depression and non-psychotic severe mental illness)

Acute psychiatric day hospitals are units that provide diagnostic and treatment services for acutely ill individuals who would otherwise be treated in traditional psychiatric inpatient units. 1 RCT (Dinger 2014) was identified that specifically addressed acute psychiatric day hospital care for adults with depression. The committee therefore agreed to consider a wider evidence base including non-psychotic severe mental illness. A systematic review (Marshall 2011) was identified that compared day hospital to inpatient care for people with acute psychiatric disorders. This Cochrane review was used as a source of studies with inclusion criteria into this review of over 50% of the population having a non-psychotic disorder.

Of the 10 RCTs included in Marshall 2011, 5 of these studies met the >50% non-psychotic disorder inclusion criterion (Creed 1990; Creed 1997; Dick 1985; Kallert 2007; Schene 1993).

Comparison 5. Non-acute day hospital care versus outpatient care (for adults with depression and non-psychotic severe mental illness)

No RCT evidence was identified that specifically addressed this setting for adults with depression. The committee therefore agreed to consider a wider evidence base including non-psychotic severe mental illness. A systematic review (Marshall 2001) was identified that examined the use of day hospitals as an alternative to outpatient care for people with psychiatric disorders. This Cochrane review was used as a source of studies with inclusion criteria into this review of over 50% of the population having a non-psychotic disorder.

Of the 8 studies included in Marshall 2001, 3 of these studies met the >50% non-psychotic disorder inclusion criterion (Dick 1991; Glick 1986; Tyrer 1979).

Comparison 6. Community mental health teams versus standard care (for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness)

No RCT evidence was identified that specifically addressed this setting for adults with depression. The committee therefore agreed to consider a wider evidence base including non-psychotic severe mental illness. A systematic review (Malone 2007) was identified that examined community mental health teams (CMHTs) for people with severe mental illnesses and disordered personality. This Cochrane review was used as a source of studies with inclusion criteria into this review of over 50% of the population having a non-psychotic disorder.

Of the 3 studies included in Malone 2007, 1 of these studies met the >50% non-psychotic disorder inclusion criterion (Merson 1992).

See the literature search strategy in appendix B and study selection flow chart in appendix C.

Excluded studies

Studies not included in this review with reasons for their exclusions are provided in appendix K.

Summary of clinical studies included in the evidence review

Comparison 1. Primary care versus secondary care

Summaries of the studies included in the primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis of the cognitive and cognitive behavioural therapies individual + antidepressant versus antidepressant comparison are presented in Table 12.

There were no significant subgroup differences between primary care and secondary care for the comparison cognitive and cognitive behavioural therapies individual + antidepressant versus antidepressant on: depression symptoms endpoint (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.27, df = 1, p = 0.60).

Table 12. Summary of included studies for primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for comparison 1a Cognitive and cognitive behavioural therapies individual + antidepressant versus antidepressant.

Table 12

Summary of included studies for primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for comparison 1a Cognitive and cognitive behavioural therapies individual + antidepressant versus antidepressant.

Summaries of the studies included in the primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) versus placebo comparison are presented in Table 13.

There were no significant subgroup differences between primary care and secondary care for the comparison SSRIs versus placebo on: depression symptoms endpoint (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.01, df = 1, p = 0.91); depression symptoms change score (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.26, df = 1, p = 0.61); response (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.75, df = 1, p = 0.19).

Table 13. Summary of included studies for primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for comparison 1b Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) versus placebo.

Table 13

Summary of included studies for primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for comparison 1b Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) versus placebo.

Summaries of the studies included in the primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis of the SSRIs versus tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) comparison are presented in Table 14.

There were no significant subgroup differences between primary care and secondary care for the comparison SSRIs versus TCAs on: depression symptoms endpoint (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.09, df = 1, p = 0.76); depression symptoms change score (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.46, df = 1, p = 0.23); remission (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 2.19, df = 1, p = 0.14); response (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 2.22, df = 1, p = 0.14).

Table 14. Summary of included studies for primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for comparison 1c SSRIs versus tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs).

Table 14

Summary of included studies for primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for comparison 1c SSRIs versus tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs).

Summaries of the studies included in the primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis of the TCAs versus placebo comparison are presented in Table 15.

There were no significant subgroup differences between primary care and secondary care for the comparison TCAs versus placebo on: depression symptoms endpoint (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.49, df = 1, p = 0.49); depression symptoms change score (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.32, df = 1, p = 0.57); response (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 2.87, df = 1, p = 0.09).

Table 15. Summary of included studies for primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for comparison 1d TCAs versus placebo.

Table 15

Summary of included studies for primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for comparison 1d TCAs versus placebo.

Summaries of the studies included in the primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis of the serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) versus SSRIs comparison are presented in Table 16.

There were no significant subgroup differences between primary care and secondary care for the comparison SNRIs versus SSRIs on: remission (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.55, df = 1, p = 0.21); response (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.62, df = 1, p = 0.43).

Table 16. Summary of included studies for primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for comparison 1e Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) versus SSRIs.

Table 16

Summary of included studies for primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for comparison 1e Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) versus SSRIs.

Comparison 2. Crisis resolution team care versus standard care (for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness)

Summary of the study included in the crisis resolution team care and standard care comparison is presented in Table 17.

Table 17. Summary of included studies for comparison 2 Crisis resolution versus standard care.

Table 17

Summary of included studies for comparison 2 Crisis resolution versus standard care.

Comparison 3. Inpatient versus outpatient settings

Summaries of the studies included in the inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) versus placebo comparison are presented in Table 18Table 38.

There were no significant subgroup differences between inpatient and outpatient settings for the comparison SSRIs versus placebo on: depression symptoms change score (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 2.47, df = 1, p = 0.12); response (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.11, df = 1, p = 0.74).

Table 18. Summary of included studies for inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for comparison 3a Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) versus placebo.

Table 18

Summary of included studies for inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for comparison 3a Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) versus placebo.

Summaries of the studies included in the inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis of the SSRIs versus tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) comparison are presented in Table 19.

There were no significant subgroup differences between inpatient and outpatient settings for the comparison SSRIs versus TCAs on: depression symptoms endpoint (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.08, df = 1, p = 0.30); remission (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 2.11, df = 1, p = 0.15); response (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.03, df = 1, p = 0.31). There was a statistically significant subgroup difference between inpatient and outpatient settings for depression change score (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 7.03, df = 1, p = 0.008). In inpatient settings TCAs showed a small benefit over SSRIs (SMD 0.27 [0.08, 0.47]), whereas in outpatient settings SSRIs showed a small benefit over TCAs (SMD −0.05 [−0.19, 0.09]), however, in both inpatient and outpatient settings the difference between TCAs and SSRIs was non-significant.

Table 19. Summary of included studies for inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for comparison 3b SSRIs versus tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs).

Table 19

Summary of included studies for inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for comparison 3b SSRIs versus tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs).

Summaries of the studies included in the inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis of the serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) versus placebo comparison are presented in Table 20.

There were no significant subgroup differences between inpatient and outpatient settings for the comparison SNRIs versus placebo on: depression symptoms endpoint (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.03, df = 1, p = 0.87); depression symptoms change score (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 3.12, df = 1, p = 0.08); remission (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.25, df = 1, p = 0.62).

Table 20. Summary of included studies for inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for comparison 3c Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) versus placebo.

Table 20

Summary of included studies for inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for comparison 3c Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) versus placebo.

Summaries of the studies included in the inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis of the SNRIs versus SSRIs comparison are presented in Table 21.

There were no significant subgroup differences between inpatient and outpatient settings for the comparison SNRIs versus SSRIs on: depression symptoms endpoint (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 2.03, df = 1, p = 0.15); remission (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.08, df = 1, p = 0.30); response (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.49, df = 1, p = 0.48). There was a statistically significant subgroup difference between inpatient and outpatient settings for depression change score (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 8.03, df = 1, p = 0.005). SNRIs showed a benefit over SSRIs in both settings, although this effect was larger in inpatient settings (SMD −0.48 [−0.73, −0.23]) relative to outpatient settings (SMD −0.09 [−0.19, 0.01]), however, this was a difference in magnitude rather than direction and even in inpatient settings the difference was not clinically important.

Table 21. Summary of included studies for inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for comparison 3d SNRIs versus SSRIs.

Table 21

Summary of included studies for inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for comparison 3d SNRIs versus SSRIs.

Summaries of the studies included in the inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis of the mirtazapine versus TCAs comparison are presented in Table 22Table 38.

There was not a significant subgroup difference between inpatient and outpatient settings for the comparison mirtazapine versus TCAs on response (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 0.19, df = 1, p = 0.66).

Table 22. Summary of included studies for inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for comparison 3e Mirtazapine versus TCAs.

Table 22

Summary of included studies for inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for comparison 3e Mirtazapine versus TCAs.

Summaries of the studies included in the inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis of the acupuncture + antidepressants versus antidepressants comparison are presented in Table 23Table 38.

There was not a significant subgroup difference between inpatient and outpatient settings for the comparison acupuncture + antidepressants versus antidepressants on depression symptoms change score (Test for subgroup differences: Chi² = 1.18, df = 1, p = 0.28).

Table 23. Summary of included studies for inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for comparison 3f Acupuncture + antidepressants versus antidepressants.

Table 23

Summary of included studies for inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for comparison 3f Acupuncture + antidepressants versus antidepressants.

Comparison 4. Acute psychiatric day hospital care versus inpatient care (for adults with depression and non-psychotic severe mental illness)
Table 24. Summary of included studies for comparison 4 acute psychiatric day hospital versus inpatient care.

Table 24

Summary of included studies for comparison 4 acute psychiatric day hospital versus inpatient care.

Comparison 5. Non-acute day hospital care versus outpatient care (for adults with depression and non-psychotic severe mental illness)
Table 25. Summary of included studies for comparison 5 non-acute day hospital versus outpatient care.

Table 25

Summary of included studies for comparison 5 non-acute day hospital versus outpatient care.

Comparison 6. Community mental health teams versus standard care (for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness)
Table 26. Summary of included studies for comparison 6 community mental health teams versus standard care.

Table 26

Summary of included studies for comparison 6 community mental health teams versus standard care.

See the full evidence tables in appendix D and the forest plots in appendix E.

Quality assessment of clinical outcomes included in the evidence review

See the clinical evidence profiles in appendix F.

Economic evidence

Included studies

A single economic search was undertaken for all topics included in the scope of this guideline but no economic studies were identified which were applicable to this review question. See the literature search strategy in appendix B and economic study selection flow chart in appendix G.

Excluded studies

A list of excluded economic and utility studies, with reasons for exclusion, is provided in supplement 3 - Health economic included & excluded studies.

Economic model

No economic modelling was undertaken for this review because the committee agreed that other topics were higher priorities for economic evaluation.

Evidence statements

Clinical evidence statements
Comparison 1. Primary care versus secondary care
Primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for Comparison 1a Cognitive and cognitive behavioural therapies individual + antidepressant versus antidepressant
Critical outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Subgroup analysis of primary care and secondary care, for the comparison of combined individual CBT and antidepressant versus antidepressant-only, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in depression symptomatology at endpoint for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for Comparison 1b. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) versus placebo
Critical outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Subgroup analysis of primary care and secondary care, for the comparison of SSRIs versus placebo, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in depression symptomatology at endpoint, or change from baseline to endpoint, for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Response
  • Subgroup analysis of primary care and secondary care, for the comparison of SSRIs versus placebo, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of response for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for Comparison 1c. SSRIs versus tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs)
Critical outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Subgroup analysis of primary care and secondary care, for the comparison of SSRIs versus TCAs, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in depression symptomatology at endpoint, or change from baseline to endpoint, for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Remission
  • Subgroup analysis of primary care and secondary care, for the comparison of SSRIs versus TCAs, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of remission for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Response
  • Subgroup analysis of primary care and secondary care, for the comparison of SSRIs versus TCAs, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of response for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for Comparison 1d. TCAs versus placebo
Critical outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Subgroup analysis of primary care and secondary care, for the comparison of TCAs versus placebo, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in depression symptomatology at endpoint, or change from baseline to endpoint, for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Response
  • Subgroup analysis of primary care and secondary care, for the comparison of TCAs versus placebo, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of response for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Primary care versus secondary care subgroup analysis for Comparison 1e. Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) versus SSRIs
Critical outcomes
Remission
  • Subgroup analysis of primary care and secondary care, for the comparison of SNRIs versus SSRIs, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of remission for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Response
  • Subgroup analysis of primary care and secondary care, for the comparison of SNRIs versus SSRIs, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of response for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Comparison 2. Crisis resolution team care versus standard care (for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness)
Critical outcomes
Psychiatric symptom severity
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=211) shows a statistically significant but not clinically important benefit of crisis resolution team care relative to standard care on psychiatric symptom severity 8 weeks after crisis, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Important outcomes
Service utilisation
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=258) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of crisis resolution team care relative to standard care on the rate of inpatient admission 6 months after crisis, for adults with nonpsychotic severe mental illness.
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=257) shows a statistically significant but not clinically important benefit of crisis resolution team care relative to standard care on the number of bed days in hospital 6 months after crisis, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Psychological functioning
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=217) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant difference between crisis resolution team care and standard care on quality of life 8 weeks after crisis, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Social functioning
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=255-257) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant difference between crisis resolution team care and standard care on social functioning at 8 weeks or 6 months after crisis, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Satisfaction
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=226) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant difference between crisis resolution team care relative and standard care on patient satisfaction ratings 8 weeks after crisis, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Comparison 3. Inpatient versus outpatient settings
Inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for Comparison 3a Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) versus placebo
Critical Outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SSRIs versus placebo, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in depression symptomatology change score for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Response
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SSRIs versus placebo, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of response for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for Comparison 3b SSRIs versus Tricyclic Antidepressants (TCAs)
Critical Outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SSRIs versus TCAs, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in depression symptomatology at endpoint for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SSRIs versus TCAs, shows a statistically significant subgroup difference in depression symptomatology change score for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression. In inpatient settings TCAs show a small benefit over SSRIs, and in outpatient settings SSRIs show a small benefit over TCAs, however, in both inpatient and outpatient settings the difference between TCAs and SSRIs is non-significant.
Remission
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SSRIs versus TCAs, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of remission for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Response
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SSRIs versus TCAs, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of response for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for Comparison 3c Serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) versus placebo
Critical Outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SNRIs versus placebo, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in depression symptomatology at endpoint for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SNRIs versus placebo, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in depression symptomatology change scores for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Remission
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SNRIs versus placebo, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of remission for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for Comparison 3d SNRIs versus SSRIs
Critical Outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SNRIs versus SSRIs, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in depression symptomatology at endpoint for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SNRIs versus SSRIs, shows a statistically significant subgroup difference in depression symptomatology change score for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression. In both inpatient and outpatient settings SNRIs show a benefit over SSRIs however this effect is larger in inpatient relative to outpatient settings, although this is a difference in magnitude rather than direction and even in inpatient settings the difference is not clinically important.
Remission
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SNRIs versus SSRIs, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of remission for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Response
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of SNRIs versus SSRIs, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of response for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for Comparison 3e Mirtazapine versus TCAs
Critical Outcomes
Response
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of mirtazapine versus TCAs, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in the rate of response for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Inpatient versus outpatient subgroup analysis for Comparison 3f Acupuncture + antidepressants versus antidepressants
Critical Outcomes
Depression symptomatology
  • Subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient settings, for the comparison of combined acupuncture and antidepressant versus antidepressants-only, shows no statistically significant subgroup difference in depression symptomatology change score for adults receiving first-line treatment for depression.
Comparison 4. Acute psychiatric day hospital care versus inpatient care (for adults with depression and non-psychotic severe mental illness)
Critical outcomes
Psychiatric symptom severity
  • Very low quality evidence from 2-3 RCTs (N=1249-1281) shows neither clinically important nor statistically significant differences between acute day hospital care compared to inpatient care on psychiatric symptom severity at 2-3 months or 12-14 months post-admission, for adults with depression or non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Remission
  • Very low quality evidence from 2 RCTs (N=151) shows neither clinically important nor statistically significant effects differences between acute day hospital care compared to inpatient care on the rate of remission at 3 or 13 months post-admission, for adults with depression or non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Response
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=44) including only adults with depression shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of inpatient care relative to acute day hospital care on the rate of response at 3 months post-admission.
Important outcomes
Service utilisation
  • Very low quality evidence from 4 RCTs (N=1535) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of inpatient care, relative to acute day hospital care, on the duration of index admission for adults with depression or non-psychotic severe mental illness.
  • Very low quality evidence from 3 RCTs (N=372) shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of acute day hospital care relative to inpatient care on readmission at 4 months or 12 months post-admission, for adults with depression or non-psychotic severe mental illness.
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=83) shows clinically important but not statistically significant benefits of inpatient care relative to acute day hospital care on the number of emergency contacts and the number of outpatient contacts, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Psychological functioning
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N= 1117) shows neither clinically important nor statistically significant differences between acute day hospital care compared to inpatient care on quality of life at 2 or 14 months post-admission, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Social functioning
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N= 1117) shows a statistically significant but not clinically important benefit of acute day hospital care relative to inpatient care on social functioning impairment at 2 and 14 months post-admission, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
  • Very low quality evidence from 2 RCTs (N=181) shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of acute day hospital care relative to inpatient care on the number of people achieving significant improvement in social functioning at 12-13 months post-admission, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Satisfaction
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N= 83) shows a clinically important and statistically significant benefit of acute day hospital care relative to inpatient care in the number of people who are satisfied or very satisfied with their treatment, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=1117) shows neither clinically important nor statistically significant differences between acute day hospital care compared to inpatient care on patient satisfaction ratings at 2 months post-admission, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Carer distress
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=55-77) shows neither clinically important nor statistically significant differences between acute day hospital care compared to inpatient care on carer distress at 3 or 12 months post-admission, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Comparison 5. Non-acute day hospital care versus outpatient care (for adults with depression and non-psychotic severe mental illness)
Critical outcomes
Psychiatric symptom severity
  • Low to very low quality evidence from 2 RCTs (N=139-144) shows neither clinically important nor statistically significant differences between non-acute day hospital care compared to outpatient care on psychiatric symptom severity at 4-6 months and 8-12 months post-admission, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Important outcomes
Service utilisation
  • Very low quality evidence from 3 RCTs (N=281) shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of outpatient care relative to non-acute day hospital care on the number of people admitted as an inpatient at 6-12 months post-admission, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Social functioning
  • Very low quality evidence from 2 RCTs (N=141) shows neither clinically important nor statistically significant differences between non-acute day hospital care compared to outpatient care on social functioning at 4-6 or 8-12 months post-admission, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=51-52) shows neither clinically important nor statistically significant differences between non-acute day hospital care compared to outpatient care on global functioning at 6 and 12 months post-admission, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Satisfaction
  • Very low quality evidence from 2 RCTs (N=198) shows neither clinically important nor statistically significant differences between non-acute day hospital care compared to outpatient care on the number of people satisfied or very satisfied with their treatment at 4-6 months post-admission, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Comparison 6. Community mental health teams versus standard care (for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness)
Critical outcomes
Psychiatric symptom severity
  • Low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=100) shows neither a clinically important nor statistically significant difference between community mental health team care compared to standard care on psychiatric symptom severity at 3 months post-entry, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Important outcomes
Service utilisation
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=100) shows a clinically important but not statistically significant benefit of community mental health team care relative to standard care on the number of people admitted to inpatient care, and a clinically important and statistically significant benefit on the number of people admitted to inpatient care for longer than 10 days, for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Satisfaction
  • Very low quality evidence from 1 RCT (N=87) shows clinically important and statistically significant benefits of community mental health team care, relative to standard care, on both continuous and dichotomous measures of satisfaction for adults with non-psychotic severe mental illness.
Economic evidence statements

No economic evidence was identified which was applicable to this review question.

The committee’s discussion of the evidence

Interpreting the evidence
The outcomes that matter most

The aim of this review was to determine if different settings for the delivery of care improved outcomes for people with depression so the committee identified depression symptomatology, response, remission and relapse to be the critical outcomes for this question. If the evidence specific to depression was limited, it was pre-defined in the protocol that the inclusion criteria would be expanded to include those with non-psychotic severe mental illness, and for these populations psychiatric symptom severity was a critical outcome. Service utilisation and resource use were identified as important outcomes, as a measure of uptake and persistence with treatment. Psychological functioning, social functioning, satisfaction, and carer distress were also considered important outcomes, in order to assess the broader impact of setting on the person with depression and their family or carer.

For all comparisons there was evidence for at least one critical outcome – most commonly symptom severity – and at least one important outcome. Carer distress was rarely reported and this outcome was only available for comparison 4.

The quality of the evidence

The committee noted that all outcomes had been assessed as either very low or low in GRADE. Most outcomes were downgraded due to imprecision and/or risk of bias. A number of the comparisons also included people with non-psychotic severe mental illness, and so were not specific to the population of people with depression, and these comparisons were downgraded again due to indirectness.

Benefits and harms

The comparisons included in this review included a number of different settings such as the primary care setting (where people are living in their own home and are cared for by their GPs), and a number of different secondary care or specialist services, where care is provided to people in their own homes, as outpatients, or as inpatients.

During the protocol development, the committee had noted that the best evidence to examine the benefits and harms associated with settings would require randomised controlled trials (RCTs) that randomised the same population to different settings for the delivery of care. However, trials of interventions delivered in certain settings will recruit populations considered to be relevant to that setting. Evidence is particularly limited where the comparison includes inpatient care, as the large majority of people with depression are never admitted to hospital. The committee therefore agreed to consider a wider evidence base for settings where there was limited direct RCT evidence by including evidence on the care of people with severe, non-psychotic mental illness as well as or instead of, those with depression. The committee also agreed that where specific RCT evidence was limited for particular comparisons, indirect evidence in the form of subgroup analyses of the NMA dataset (Evidence report B: Treatment of a new episode of depression) may be informative.

For crisis resolution team care, no RCT evidence was identified that specifically addressed this setting for adults with depression, and only 1 RCT was identified that included people with severe non-psychotic mental illness. The evidence showed a small but statistically significant benefit of crisis resolution team care (relative to standard care) on psychiatric symptom severity, and benefits in terms of service utilisation (on the number of people admitted as an inpatient, and bed days in hospital). Based on their experience, the committee recognised the potential benefits that crisis resolution team care may bring to adults with severe depression (particularly those at significant risk of harming themselves through suicide attempts or self-neglect) in providing an alternative to inpatient treatment and thus potentially avoiding the stigma and costs associated with hospital admission. They also recognised that crisis resolution and home treatment team care may have an important role in supporting people at home after an inpatient stay and so facilitate an early discharge, reducing the likelihood of a readmission to hospital. The committee therefore included in their recommendations some guidance on the type of people with depression who should be seen by crisis resolution teams, and what that care should involve. However, given the limited and indirect evidence base, the committee agreed that a ‘consider’ rather than ‘offer’ recommendation was appropriate.

There was no specific RCT evidence for inpatient settings. Therefore the committee considered indirect evidence in the form of subgroup analyses of the NMA dataset (acute treatment of depressive episodes). Differences between delivery in inpatient and outpatient settings were explored for depression symptomatology, remission, and response for all treatment comparisons with at least 2 studies in each subgroup (SSRIs versus placebo; SSRIs versus TCAs; SNRIs versus placebo; SNRIs versus SSRIs; mirtazapine versus TCAs; acupuncture + antidepressant versus antidepressant). Most subgroup differences were non-significant. There was, however, a statistically significant subgroup difference between inpatient and outpatient settings for depression change score for the SSRIs versus TCAs comparison, with TCAs showing a small benefit over SSRIs in inpatient settings and SSRIs showing a small benefit over TCAs in outpatient settings, however, the difference between TCAs and SSRIs was non-significant in both inpatient and outpatient settings. There was also a statistically significant subgroup difference between inpatient and outpatient settings for depression change score for the SNRIs versus SSRIs comparison, however, this was a difference in magnitude rather than direction with a benefit of SNRIs relative to SSRIs shown in both inpatient and outpatient settings but larger effects shown in inpatient settings. Despite the lack of evidence for clear clinical benefits associated with inpatient care, the committee drew on their clinical knowledge and expertise, and recognised that inpatient care may be necessary for people with more severe depression who could not be adequately supported by a crisis resolution and home treatment team, particularly if they were socially isolated, and so they made a recommendation to this effect.

For primary care compared to secondary care, no RCT evidence was identified that specifically addressed this setting. Therefore the committee considered indirect evidence in the form of subgroup analyses of the NMA dataset (acute treatment of depressive episodes). For all valid treatment comparisons (at least 2 studies per subgroup), subgroup analyses compared whether different outcomes were associated with delivery of treatment in primary compared to secondary care. For all comparisons (combined individual CBT and antidepressant versus antidepressant-only; SSRIs versus placebo; SSRIs versus TCAs; TCAs versus placebo; SNRIs versus SSRIs) there was no good evidence to show any difference between delivery in primary care or secondary care on depression symptomatology, response, or remission. Based on this evidence and their knowledge and experience, the committee agreed that there was no need to add a recommendation that specified whether interventions should be delivered in primary or secondary care, except where there were safety concerns for certain pharmacological interventions but this was captured in the specific treatment recommendations.

For all other comparisons, very few RCTs were identified that included only adults with depression (only 2 RCTs across 2 separate comparisons of non-acute day hospital versus outpatient care, and acute psychiatric day hospital versus inpatient care), and a wider evidence base including those with non-psychotic severe mental illness was considered. For acute psychiatric day hospital care (relative to inpatient care), non-acute day hospital care (relative to outpatient care), and community mental health team care (relative to standard care) no significant (both clinically important and statistically significant) differences were shown for the critical outcomes of psychiatric symptom severity, remission or response. No eligible evidence was identified for specialist tertiary affective disorders settings or residential settings. On the basis of the limited evidence base, the committee agreed that there were no grounds (including their clinical knowledge and experience) on which to base a recommendation that care for people with depression should be delivered in these specific settings.

The committee raised the importance of equity of access to interventions in inpatient care that is equivalent to those available in community settings. They therefore recommended that the full range of psychological interventions available in community settings should also be available in inpatient settings. They also recognised that the intensity and/or duration of these interventions may need to be altered commensurate with the level of severity and need in inpatient settings.

Cost effectiveness and resource use

No evidence on the cost-effectiveness of different settings for the delivery of care for adults with depression was identified and no further economic analysis was undertaken. The committee considered the costs associated with crisis resolution and home treatment and estimated that these are higher than routine primary care but significantly lower than inpatient care. The committee expressed the opinion that, compared with routine primary care, crisis resolution treatment is often more appropriate for people with more severe depression who are at significant risk of suicide, harm to self or to others, self-neglect or complications in response to their treatment, leading to better outcomes and reduced need for more costly inpatient care.

The committee took into account the high costs associated with inpatient care, and decided to recommend inpatient treatment only for people with more severe depression who cannot be adequately supported by a crisis resolution and home treatment team.

Considering the benefits and costs of crisis resolution and home treatment teams (CRHT teams) relative to other care settings, the committee expressed the opinion that CRHT comprises an effective and likely cost-effective model of care for people with depression who would benefit from early discharge from hospital after a period of inpatient care.

The committee took into account the cost effectiveness of psychological treatments in the acute treatment of people with depression based on the results of the economic analysis undertaken for this guideline (Evidence report B: Treatment of a new episode of depression), and expressed the view that the full range of such treatments should also be available in inpatient settings, to allow provision of clinically and cost-effective care in populations treated in such settings. The committee acknowledged the fact that increasing the intensity and duration of psychological interventions for people with depression in inpatient settings has resource implications, but expressed the view that the benefits of more intensive treatment in this group would outweigh the additional intervention costs. Moreover, if improved outcomes result in earlier discharge, then cost-savings may outweigh the intervention costs of more intensive psychological treatment.

Recommendations supported by this evidence review

This evidence review supports recommendations 1.16.11 to 1.16.14 in the NICE guideline.

References

    This reference list does not include studies analysed as a sub-set of the NMA data for comparisons 1 and 3. Please see evidence review B.

  • Creed 1990

    Creed F, Black D, Anthony P, Osborn M, Thomas P, Tomenson B. Randomised controlled trial of day patient versus inpatient psychiatric treatment. Br Med J. 1990 Apr 21;300(6731):1033–7. [PMC free article: PMC1662770] [PubMed: 2188696]
  • Creed 1997

    Creed F, Mbaya P, Lancashire S, Tomenson B, Williams B, Holme S. Cost effectiveness of day and inpatient psychiatric treatment: results of a randomised controlled trial. Br Med J. 1997 May 10;314(7091):1381. [PMC free article: PMC2126667] [PubMed: 9161310]
  • Dick 1985

    Dick P, Cameron L, Cohen D, Barlow M, Ince AN. Day and full time psychiatric treatment: a controlled comparison. The British Journal of Psychiatry. 1985 Sep 1;147(3):246–9. [PubMed: 4063589]
  • Dick 1991

    Dick PH, Sweeney ML, Crombie IK. Controlled comparison of day-patient and out-patient treatment for persistent anxiety and depression. The BritishJjournal of Psychiatry. 1991 Jan 1;158(1):24–7. [PubMed: 2015447]
  • Dinger 2014

    Dinger U, Klipsch O, Köhling J, Ehrenthal JC, Nikendei C, Herzog W, Schauenburg H. Day-clinic and inpatient psychotherapy for depression (DIP-D): a randomized controlled pilot study in routine clinical care. Psychotherapy andPpsychosomatics. 2014 Apr 17;83(3):194–5. [PubMed: 24752281]
  • Glick 1986

    Glick ID, Fleming L, DeChillo N, Meyerkopf N, Jackson C, Muscara D, Good-Ellis M. A controlled study of transitional day care for non-chronically ill patients. American Journal of Psychiatry. 1986 Dec 1;143(12):1551–6. [PubMed: 3789208]
  • Johnson 2005

    Johnson S, Nolan F, Pilling S, Sandor A, Hoult J, McKenzie N, White IR, Thompson M, Bebbington P. Randomised controlled trial of acute mental health care by a crisis resolution team: the north Islington crisis study. Br Med J. 2005 Sep 15;331(7517):599. [PMC free article: PMC1215550] [PubMed: 16103032]
  • Kallert 2007

    Kallert TW, Priebe S, McCabe R, Kiejna A, Rymaszewska J, Nawka P, Ocvár L, Raboch J, Stárková-Kalisová L, Koch R, Schutzwohl M. Are Day Hospitals Effective for Acutely III Psychiatric Patients? A European Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. 2007 Feb 15;68(2):278–87. [PubMed: 17335327]
  • Merson 1992

    Merson S, Tyrer P, Lack S, Birkett P, Lynch S, Onyett S, Johnson T. Early intervention in psychiatric emergencies: a controlled clinical trial. The Lancet. 1992 May 30;339(8805):1311–4. [PubMed: 1349990]
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    Schene AH, Wijngaarden BV, Poelijoe NW, Gersons BP. The Utrecht comparative study on psychiatric day treatment and inpatient treatment. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica. 1993 Jun 1;87(6):427–36. [PubMed: 8356895]
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Appendices

Appendix D. Clinical evidence tables

Clinical evidence tables for review question 1.1 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different models for the coordination and delivery of services?

Please refer to the clinical evidence tables in supplement A1 – Clinical evidence tables for review 1.1

Clinical evidence tables for review question 1.2 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different settings for the delivery of care?

Please refer to the clinical evidence tables in supplement A2 – Clinical evidence tables for review 1.2

Appendix H. Economic evidence tables

Economic evidence tables for review question 1.1 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different models for the coordination and delivery of services?

Download PDF (364K)

Economic evidence tables for review question 1.2 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different settings for the delivery of care?

No economic evidence was identified which was applicable to this review question.

Appendix I. Economic evidence profiles

Economic evidence profiles for review question 1.1 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different models for the coordination and delivery of services?

Download PDF (294K)

Economic evidence profiles for review question 1.2 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different settings for the delivery of care?

No economic evidence was identified which was applicable to this review question.

Appendix J. Economic analysis

Economic evidence analysis for review question 1.1 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different models for the coordination and delivery of services?

No economic analysis was conducted for this review question.

Economic evidence analysis for review question 1.2 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different settings for the delivery of care?

No economic analysis was conducted for this review question.

Appendix K. Excluded studies

Excluded clinical and economic studies for review question 1.1 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different models for the coordination and delivery of services?

Clinical studies

Please refer to the excluded studies in supplement A1 – Clinical evidence tables for review 1.1

Economic studies

Please refer to supplement 3 - Economic evidence included & excluded studies.

Excluded clinical and economic studies for review question 1.2 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different settings for the delivery of care?

Clinical studies

Please refer to the excluded studies in supplement A2 – Clinical evidence tables for review 1.2

Economic studies

Please refer to supplement 3 - Economic evidence included & excluded studies.

Appendix L. Research recommendations

Research recommendations for review question 1.1 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different models for the coordination and delivery of services?

No research recommendations were made for this review question.

Research recommendations for review question 1.2 For adults with depression, what are the relative benefits and harms associated with different settings for the delivery of care?

No research recommendations were made for this review question.

Final

Evidence reviews underpinning recommendations 1.16.7 to 1.16.14 in the NICE guideline

Disclaimer: The recommendations in this guideline represent the view of NICE, arrived at after careful consideration of the evidence available. When exercising their judgement, professionals are expected to take this guideline fully into account, alongside the individual needs, preferences and values of their patients or service users. The recommendations in this guideline are not mandatory and the guideline does not override the responsibility of healthcare professionals to make decisions appropriate to the circumstances of the individual patient, in consultation with the patient and/or their carer or guardian.

Local commissioners and/or providers have a responsibility to enable the guideline to be applied when individual health professionals and their patients or service users wish to use it. They should do so in the context of local and national priorities for funding and developing services, and in light of their duties to have due regard to the need to eliminate unlawful discrimination, to advance equality of opportunity and to reduce health inequalities. Nothing in this guideline should be interpreted in a way that would be inconsistent with compliance with those duties.

NICE guidelines cover health and care in England. Decisions on how they apply in other UK countries are made by ministers in the Welsh Government, Scottish Government, and Northern Ireland Executive. All NICE guidance is subject to regular review and may be updated or withdrawn.

Copyright © NICE 2022.
Bookshelf ID: NBK583072PMID: 35977062

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