Case
Max was a 17-year-old boy and avid video gamer who, predating COVID-19, was within a major depressive episode and continued to meet criteria through the duration of COVID-19 quarantine. He lives with his mother, who is a single mom and is working hard in a variety of jobs through the pandemic. Max had little motivation to engage in sports or other activities, and despite doing well enough in school, he spent much of his days escaping into video games and social media, where his friends communicated and bonded the most. He has had very little response to complete trials of two different selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), and the off-label attempts at a serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor and bupropion augmentation of an SSRI, as extrapolated by his pediatrician from adult data on treatment-resistant depression. He had ongoing supportive psychotherapy and his mother and pediatrician were wary of changing that relationship, as they were just happy he would engage at all. His shy nature made him very wary of attending any programs or groups. He had no other diagnosis including anxiety, substance abuse disorder, or learning disorder.
Case discussion
As a child and adolescent psychiatrist embedded in primary care practices, I (like you) am seeing more and more parents, children, and families struggling with depression through the course of this unprecedented and challenging year.
Max presented to me with his mother at the request of his primary care physician because within the course of many medication trials, it had been over 6 months of persistent symptoms without an end in sight for him, his family, or his primary care provider (PCP).
His diagnosis was treatment-resistant depression and his PCP was grasping at adult strategies to manage this all with additional psychopharmacology. As a consulting child-and-adolescent psychiatrist in primary care, how could I help the PCP? I too worry if there is anything that I can do to shift depression once standard treatments fail, and when the idea of engaging in behavioral activation or other pro-health activities is just too much for a depressed adolescent to bear. I weigh that with what is known about the evidence, and the good data driving us beyond medication solutions. I often find that it can be helpful to reiterate the following points to providers and families.
First, what to know about depression in kids
Depression looks different at different ages in children. In school-aged children, it’s widely known that irritability or psychosomatic symptoms (frequent headaches and stomach aches) can be the first preverbal signs of an emerging anxiety and depressive disorder in children. In adolescents, one would maybe expect more typical melancholic adult-like symptoms of depression; however, there is mounting evidence that adolescents actually present with more classically “atypical symptoms” of depression (low motivation, weight gain, escapism to sleep or video games, as with Max) with less persistence across setting (home, work, school) compared with adults (“Diagnosing Depression in Children and Adolescents” by Glen R. Elliott, PhD, MD, from The Carlat Child Psychiatry Report, November 2015, Antidepressant Use in Children).In addition, major life stressors (the breakup of a romantic relationship, failing a class, bullying) can be perceived as more permanent, and suicidal thinking can be acute and lethal in these contexts. With Max, it was accepted by all who were supporting him that he was struggling with depression, which is the first step in managing this well.