Background: Adjunctive antidepressant therapy is commonly used to treat acute bipolar depression but few studies have examined this strategy.
Aims: To examine the efficacy of agomelatine v. placebo as adjuncts to lithium or valproate in bipolar depression.
Method: Patients who were currently depressed despite taking lithium or valproate for at least 6 weeks were randomised to treatment with agomelatine (n = 172) or placebo (n = 172) for 8 weeks of acute therapy and 44 weeks of continuation therapy (trial registration: ISRCTN28588282).
Results: No significant differences in improvement of depressive symptoms were observed between the two groups either at 8 weeks or 52 weeks on the primary efficacy measure of change in Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale scores from baseline to end-point. Adverse events including switches into mania/hypomania were low and similar in both groups.
Conclusions: Agomelatine adjunctive therapy was not superior to placebo adjunctive therapy for acute bipolar depression.
© The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2016.