Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a serious psychiatric illness with an estimated prevalence of 1% to 2% in the general U.S. population
+1 and 15% to 25% in Vietnam combat veterans.
+2 Studies have shown that PTSD in Vietnam combat veterans is associated with a wide range of social and psychological problems, including alcohol and drug abuse, suicidal ideation, depression, unemployment, marital and familial conflicts, suspiciousness, and a reduced social support system.
+3,+4 Current treatments for PTSD include medications, cognitive-behavioral techniques, and group therapy. Antidepressants have been the most intensively studied medications for treatment of PTSD, but their efficacy is variable and they are probably not as effective for combat PTSD as for noncombat PTSD.
+5 For example, amitriptyline, a tricyclic antidepressant, was superior to placebo in reducing depression, anxiety, and PTSD symptoms in a controlled study of 46 veterans with combat PTSD.
+6 However, a comparable controlled study with desipramine showed no difference between active drug and placebo.
+7 Fluoxetine, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, significantly reduced PTSD symptoms and improved depressed mood in patients with noncombat PTSD in a controlled study of 64 patients.
+5 However, patients with combat PTSD improved only in mood, not in avoidance symptoms. There are comparable studies showing only moderate efficacy for paroxetine and fluvoxamine,
+8—+11 as well as for nefazodone,
+12—+14 bupropion,
+15 and the monoamine oxidase inhibitor moclobemide.
+16 Sertraline, another SSRI, is the only medication that is FDA-approved for treatment of PTSD on the basis of a placebo-controlled, multicenter study with 186 subjects.
+17 This study demonstrated improvement in both mood and PTSD symptoms, but included very few combat PTSD subjects (6%). In an interesting "real world" study, Dow and Kline
+18studied 72 combat PTSD patients in a real-world clinical setting but with standard PTSD and mood measures. They found that the probability of clinical response to each individual trial of antidepressant was only 20%, considerably less than in the controlled studies referred to above. These results reflect the experience of many clinicians that combat PTSD patients often have limited symptom response to antidepressant medications.