STAR*D

STAR*D
Study typeCollaborative study on the treatment of depression
Dates2006
Locations23 psychiatric and
18 primary care sites
FundingNational Institute of Mental Health

Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) was a collaborative study on the treatment of depression, funded by the National Institute of Mental Health. Its main focus was on the treatment of depression in patients where the first prescribed antidepressant proved inadequate. A key feature of the study was its aim to be more generalizable to real clinical situations; this was done through the use of minimal exclusion criteria, incorporating patient preference, and not blinding the treatments (i.e. the patient and clinician both knew what treatment the patient was receiving).[1] The STAR*D trial included remission (the near-absence of symptoms, rather than simply a reduction in symptoms) as an outcome measure, as there is evidence that patients with depression who achieve remission function better and are less prone to relapse than those who achieve only partial improvement in symptoms[1]

This report had profound impact on the promotion of antidepressants but later accused of having been subjected to multiple levels of fraud.[2]

  1. ^ a b Sinyor M, Schaffer A, Levitt A (2010). "The Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) Trial: A Review". The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. 55 (3): 126–135. doi:10.1177/070674371005500303. PMID 20370962. S2CID 19442084.
  2. ^ Pigott, H Edmund; Kim, Thomas; Xu, Colin; Kirsch, Irving; Amsterdam, Jay (2023). "What are the treatment remission, response and extent of improvement rates after up to four trials of antidepressant therapies in real-world depressed patients? A reanalysis of the STAR*D study's patient-level data with fidelity to the original research protocol". BMJ Open. 13 (7): e063095. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2022-063095. PMC 10373710. PMID 37491091.