Study design: Prospective cohort.
Objectives: (1) To determine the trajectory of depressive symptoms over the course of physical therapy, (2) to identify variables that best predict the resolution of depressive symptoms, and (3) to explore the relationship between recovery from depressive symptoms and long-term outcomes.
Background: Twenty-five percent to 50% of patients referred to physical therapy for orthopaedic injuries suffer from symptoms of depression. Depressive symptoms have been identified as an influential risk factor for problematic response to physical therapy. Despite these findings, there is a dearth of research specifically exploring the trajectory and determinants of patients' depressive symptoms over the course of physical therapy, which has impeded the evidence-based management of patients with depressive symptoms.
Methods: One hundred six patients with work-related musculoskeletal injuries and symptoms of depression received 7 weeks of physical therapy and were followed 1 year after treatment onset. Pain intensity, depressive symptoms, and other psychosocial factors were evaluated throughout treatment, and data were collected at 1-year follow-up.
Results: Depressive symptoms resolved in 40% of patients, and resolution was linked to pain and disability at 1-year follow-up. Persistence of depressive symptoms at treatment completion was predicted by elevated levels of depressive symptoms and pain catastrophizing at pretreatment, and by lack of improvement in levels of depressive symptoms and pain self-efficacy at midtreatment.
Conclusion: For many patients, depressive symptoms resolve over the course of physical therapy, and resolution is associated with long-term improvements in pain and disability. These findings will help identify patients whose depressive symptoms are least likely to respond to physical therapy and may therefore warrant additional treatment.