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Dive into the research topics where Trisha L. Houser is active.

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Featured researches published by Trisha L. Houser.


Clinical Therapeutics | 2002

Effect on body weight of bupropion sustained-release in patients with major depression treated for 52 weeks

Harry Croft; Trisha L. Houser; Robert Leadbetter; Carolyn Bolden-Watson; Rafe M. J. Donahue; Alan Metz

BACKGROUND Short-term studies have demonstrated a modest weight-reducing to weight-neutral effect among patients receiving bupropion sustained-release (SR) for the treatment of depression. OBJECTIVE This study was conducted to evaluate the long-term effects of bupropion SR on body weight in patients with depression. METHODS This analysis was conducted within a long-term relapse-prevention study in patients with major depression. Those whose depression had responded to open-label treatment with bupropion SR were randomized to 44 weeks of double-blind treatment with bupropion SR 300 mg/d or placebo. Patients were categorized by body mass index (BMI) as follows: BMI < 22, BMI 22 to 26, BMI > or = 27, and BMI > or = 30. RESULTS Four hundred twenty-three patients were enrolled in the double-blind phase of the study, 210 receiving bupropion SR and 213 receiving placebo. At the end of the open-label phase, the following mean weight losses were seen in the 4 BMI groups: BMI < 22, 0.5 kg; BMI 22 to 26, 1.1 kg; and BMI > or = 27 and BMI > or = 30, 1.8 kg each. At the end of double-blind treatment, mean change-from-baseline weights were as follows: BMI < 22, -0.1 kg; BMI 22 to 26, -0.6 kg; BMI > or = 27, -1.4 kg; and BMI > or = 30, -2.4 kg. The rate of change in body weight during the double-blind phase was statistically significant compared with baseline BMI (P < 0.001, analysis of covariance). CONCLUSIONS Modest mean weight losses that increased with increasing baseline body weight were observed with long-term bupropion SR treatment. The findings of this analysis suggest that bupropion SR may be an appropriate therapeutic option in normal-weight or overweight patients with depression who are concerned about weight gain.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2001

Response in Relation to Baseline Anxiety Levels in Major Depressive Disorder Treated with Bupropion Sustained Release or Sertraline

A. John Rush; Madhukar H. Trivedi; Thomas Carmody; Rafe M. J. Donahue; Trisha L. Houser; Carolyn Bolden-Watson; Sharyn R. Batey; John Ascher; Alan Metz

Our objective was to determine if pretreatment anxiety levels were associated with preferential response to bupropion sustained release (n = 122) or sertraline (n = 126) during a 16-week randomized acute phase treatment study. Both agents had comparable antidepressant activity, and comparable anxiolytic effects using the intent-to-treat sample. Baseline anxiety levels were not related to antidepressant efficacy, and they did not differentiate responders to each agent. Time to clinically significant anxiolysis did not differentiate between treatment groups or between responders to each agent. These results contradict the commonly held, but unsubstantiated, belief that in clinically depressed anxious patients, serotonergic antidepressants are especially anxiolytic and that such patients preferentially benefit from the antidepressant or anxiolytic effects of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. Thus, the clinical decision to select between these two agents when treating depressed outpatients cannot rest on either levels of pretreatment anxiety or on anticipation of more rapid or more complete anxiolysis.


Biological Psychiatry | 2002

Continuation phase treatment with bupropion SR effectively decreases the risk for relapse of depression

Karen L. Weihs; Trisha L. Houser; Sharyn R. Batey; John Ascher; Carolyn Bolden-Watson; Rafe M. J. Donahue; Alan Metz

BACKGROUND This was the first controlled continuation phase study (up to 1-year total treatment) to evaluate the safety and efficacy of bupropion SR for decreasing the risk for relapse of depression in patients who responded to bupropion SR. METHODS Patients with recurrent major depression were treated with bupropion SR 300 mg/day during an 8-week open-label phase. Responders (based on Clinical Global Impressions Scale for Improvement of Illness scores) entered a randomized, double-blind phase where they received bupropion SR 300 mg/day or placebo for up to 44 weeks. After randomization, relapse was defined as the point at which the investigator intervened by withdrawing the patient from the study to treat depression. RESULTS Four hundred twenty-three patients were randomized. A statistically significant difference in favor of bupropion SR over placebo was seen in the time to treatment intervention for depression when survival curves were compared (log-rank test, p =.003). Statistically significant separation between bupropion SR and placebo began at double-blind week 12 (p <.05). Adverse events in bupropion SR-treated patients accounted for 9% and 4% of discontinuations from the open-label and double-blind phases, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Bupropion SR was shown to be effective and well tolerated in decreasing the risk for relapse of depression for up to 44 weeks.


Clinical Therapeutics | 1999

A placebo-controlled comparison of the antidepressant efficacy and effects on sexual functioning of sustained-release bupropion and sertraline

Harry Croft; Edmund Settle; Trisha L. Houser; Sharyn R. Batey; Rafe M. J. Donahue; John Ascher


Annals of Clinical Psychiatry | 1999

Sexual dysfunction associated with the treatment of depression: a placebo-controlled comparison of bupropion sustained release and sertraline treatment.

Charles C. Coleman; Lynn A. Cunningham; Vicki J. Foster; Sharyn R. Batey; Rafe M. J. Donahue; Trisha L. Houser; John Ascher


The Primary Care Companion To The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2001

Improved Health-Related Quality of Life and Reduced Productivity Loss After Treatment With Bupropion Sustained Release: A Study in Patients With Major Depression.

David L. Dunner; W. Jacqueline Kwong; Trisha L. Houser; Nathalie E. Richard; Rafe M. J. Donahue; Zeba M. Khan


European Neuropsychopharmacology | 2000

Anxiolysis associated with antidepressant response to bupropion sustained release or sertraline

A.J. Rush; M.H. Trivedi; Sharyn R. Batey; Rafe M. J. Donahue; T.J. Carmody; Trisha L. Houser; John Ascher; Carolyn Bolden-Watson; G. Evoniuk; Alan Metz


European Neuropsychopharmacology | 1998

Comparison of the safety and efficacy of bupropion sustained release and paroxetine in elderly depressed outpatients

Sharyn R. Batey; John Ascher; Rafe M. J. Donahue; Trisha L. Houser


The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2001

Reply to "Dr. Weihs and Colleagues Reply"

Karen L. Weihs; Sharyn R. Batey; Trisha L. Houser; Rafe M. J. Donahue; John Ascher


The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2001

Reply to Letter to the Editor “Type II Error and Antidepressants”

Karen L. Weihs; Sharyn R. Batey; Trisha L. Houser; John Ascher

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John Ascher

Research Triangle Park

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Alan Metz

Research Triangle Park

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Karen L. Weihs

George Washington University

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G. Evoniuk

Research Triangle Park

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A. John Rush

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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A.J. Rush

Research Triangle Park

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Edmund Settle

Charleston Area Medical Center

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