Depression, Adolescent
Basics
- Primary mood disorder marked by sadness and/or irritability, impaired functioning.
- Incidence: 6β12% adolescents; female > male (2:1).
- Cumulative risk during adolescence 5β20%.
Etiology and Pathophysiology
- Neurobiologic factors: HPA axis overactivity, serotonergic and dopaminergic dysfunction.
- External contributors: substance use, adverse childhood events, poor social support.
- Genetics: 3β4Γ increased risk if parent has depression; childhood anxiety often precedes adolescent depression.
Risk Factors
- Prior depression episodes
- Insomnia, anxiety, ADHD, body dysmorphic disorder, chronic illness, learning disabilities
- Female gender, increased screen time
- Stressors: peer problems, bereavement, academic difficulty, abuse, tobacco use, low SES
- LGBTQ identification
Diagnosis
History
- Symptoms present β₯2 weeks; β₯5 symptoms including depressed/irritable mood or anhedonia:
- Sadness or irritability
- Loss of interest or pleasure
- Unintentional >5% weight loss in 1 month
- Insomnia or hypersomnia
- Psychomotor changes
- Fatigue
- Feelings of worthlessness or guilt
- Impaired concentration
- Recurrent suicidal ideation or plan
- Symptoms cause significant functional impairment.
- Exclude substance-induced or other medical/psychiatric causes.
Physical Exam
- Assess concentration, speech, affect, psychomotor activity.
- Screen for self-injury signs and abuse.
Differential Diagnosis
- Normal bereavement
- Bipolar disorder
- Adjustment disorder
- Medical causes: thyroid disorders, anemia, vitamin deficiencies, infections
- PTSD, eating disorders, ADHD, anxiety, sleep disorders
Diagnostic Tests
- Labs to rule out medical causes: CBC, TSH, glucose, B12, folate, mono spot, urine drug screen.
- Diagnosis primarily by clinical interview with caregiver/teacher input.
- Screening tools:
- Beck Depression Inventory II (ages 13β18)
- Child Depression Inventory 2 (ages 7β17)
- CES-DC (ages 6β17)
- PHQ-9 (ages 11β17)
- Assess suicidality using structured tools.
Treatment
General Measures
- Education on depression and its impact.
- Psychotherapy and/or pharmacotherapy based on severity, comorbidities, and social context.
- Incorporate family and school environments in management.
- Safety planning if suicidality risk exists.
Medications
- First Line:
- Fluoxetine (>8 years): start 10 mg/day, effective 10β60 mg/day.
- Escitalopram (>12 years): start 5 mg/day, effective 10β20 mg/day.
- Citalopram, sertraline also FDA-approved (>12 years).
- Dose titration every 1β2 weeks as tolerated.
- Monitor for headaches, GI upset, insomnia, agitation, suicidal thoughts.
- Black box warning for increased suicidality risk; close follow-up recommended.
- Adolescents may require twice-daily dosing to mitigate withdrawal.
- Paroxetine and TCAs not recommended.
Referral
- For complex or treatment-resistant depression, child psychiatry referral advised.
Surgery/Other
- Electroconvulsive therapy effective in refractory cases.
Complementary Medicine
- Physical exercise and light therapy may have mild to moderate benefits.
- Insufficient evidence for St. Johnβs wort, acupuncture, S-adenosylmethionine, 5-HTP.
Inpatient Care
- Indicated for severe depression, psychosis, suicidality, or homicidality.
Ongoing Care
- Continue antidepressants 6β12 months post symptom resolution.
- Monitor monthly for 6 months, then regularly for 18 months.
- Track symptoms and functioning in home, school, peer contexts.
- Reassess if no improvement after 6β8 weeks.
Prognosis
- 60β90% remission within 1 year.
- Adolescent depression predicts adult mental health challenges, psychosocial difficulties.
Complications
- Treatment-induced mania/aggression.
- School failure or refusal.
- One-third with suicidal ideation attempt suicide.
ICD10 Codes:
- F32.9 Major depressive disorder, single episode, unspecified
- F33.9 Major depressive disorder, recurrent, unspecified
- F32.8 Other recurrent depressive disorders
Clinical Pearls:
- Adolescent depression often underdiagnosed; irritability and anhedonia common presentations.
- Fluoxetine is the most studied and FDA-approved for adolescents.
- Escitalopram, citalopram, and sertraline are additional FDA-approved SSRIs.
- CBT combined with fluoxetine shows high efficacy.
- Avoid paroxetine and TCAs in adolescents.
- Close monitoring for suicidality essential, especially during first treatment month.