2020 MIPS Measure #009: Anti-Depressant Medication Management

Quality ID 009
eMeasure ID CMS128v8
High Priority Measure No
Specifications EHR
Measure Type Process
Specialty Family Medicine Internal Medicine Mental/Behavioral Health

Measure description

Percentage of patients 18 years of age and older who were treated with antidepressant medication, had a diagnosis of major depression, and who remained on an antidepressant medication treatment. Two rates are reported:

  1. Percentage of patients who remained on an antidepressant medication for at least 84 days (12 weeks)
  2. Percentage of patients who remained on an antidepressant medication for at least 180 days (6 months)

Instructions

This measure is an electronic clinical quality measure (eCQM) that is expressed and formatted to use data from electronic health records (EHR) to measure healthcare quality.

Denominator

Patients 18 years of age and older who were dispensed antidepressant medications within 245 days (8 months) prior to the measurement period through the first 120 days (4 months) of the measurement period, and were diagnosed with major depression 60 days prior to, or 60 days after the dispensing event and had a visit 60 days prior to, or 60 days after the dispensing event

Numerator

Numerator 1: Patients who have received antidepressant medication for at least 84 days (12 weeks) of continuous treatment during the 114-day period following the Index Prescription Start Date.

Numerator 2: Patients who have received antidepressant medications for at least 180 days (6 months) of continuous treatment during the 231-day period following the Index Prescription Start Date.

Rationale

In 2013, over 15 million adults in the United States had at least one major depressive episode in the past 12 months (National Institute of Mental Health, 2013), and depression is estimated to affect nearly a quarter of adults in their lifetime (Burcusa & Iacono, 2007). Depression is associated with other chronic diseases, as it adversely affects the course, complications and management of other chronic medical illnesses such as diabetes, cancer, cardiovascular disease and asthma (Katon & Guico-Pabia, 2011).

Symptoms of depression include appetite and sleep disturbances, anxiety, irritability and decreased concentration (Charbonneau et al., 2005). The American Psychiatric Association recommends use of antidepressant medication and behavioral therapies, such as psychotherapy, to treat depression (American Psychiatric Association, 2010).

For the past 50 years, antidepressant medication has proven to be effective especially for patients with more severe symptoms (Fournier et al., 2010). Among patients who initiate antidepressant treatment, one in three discontinues treatment within one month, before the effect of medication can be assessed, and nearly one in two discontinues treatment within three months (Simon, 2002).

Aligning depression quality improvement with methods used in managing other chronic illnesses has been an important step in depression care. Depression management systems have demonstrated improved short- and long-term outcomes of depression severity and persistence, employment retention, functional status and patient satisfaction (Katon et al., 2002; Rost et al., 2001).

Clinical Recommendation Statement

American Psychiatric Association (2010): An antidepressant medication is recommended as an initial treatment choice for patients with mild to moderate major depressive disorder [I: Recommended with substantial clinical confidence] and definitely should be provided for those with severe major depressive disorder unless electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is planned [I: Recommended with substantial clinical confidence].-”Patients should be given a realistic notion of what can be expected during the different phases of treatment, including the likely time course of symptom response and the importance of adherence for successful treatment and prophylaxis”

”During the acute phase of treatment, patients should be carefully and systematically monitored on a regular basis to assess their response to pharmacotherapy, identify the emergence of side effects (eg, gastrointestinal symptoms, sedation, insomnia, activation, changes in weight, and cardiovascular, neurological, anticholinergic, or sexual side effects), and assess patient safety.”

“During the continuation phase of treatment, the patient should be carefully monitored for signs of possible relapse [I: Recommended with substantial clinical confidence]. Systematic assessment of symptoms, side effects, adherence, and functional status is essential [I: Recommended with substantial clinical confidence], and may be facilitated through the use of clinician- and/or patient-administered rating scales [II: Recommended with moderate clinical confidence]. To reduce the risk of relapse, patients who have been treated successfully with antidepressant medications in the acute phase should continue treatment with these agents for 4–9 months [I: Recommended with substantial clinical confidence].”

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