Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Efficacy of 17Beta-Estradiol in Postpartum-Related Depressive Illness
This study evaluates the efficacy of estrogen treatment in women with postpartum depression
(PPD).
PPD causes significant distress to a large number of women; the demand for effective
therapies to treat PPD is considerable. Estradiol therapy has a prophylactic effect in women
at high risk for developing PPD. The prevention of a decline in estradiol levels may prevent
the onset of PPD. Studies also suggest that estradiol has antidepressant effects in women and
may provide a safe and effective alternative to traditional antidepressants in women with
PPD.
Participants will be screened with a medical history, physical examination, blood and urine
tests, psychological tests, genetic studies, and self-rating scales and questionnaires. Upon
study entry, women will be randomly assigned to wear skin patches containing either estradiol
or placebo (a patch with no active ingredient) for 6 weeks. Women who receive estradiol and
do not menstruate during the last week of the study will receive progesterone for 7 days to
initiate menstruation. Women who receive placebo and do not menstruate during the last week
of the study will continue to receive placebo at the end of the study. Every week,
participants will have blood taken and will be asked to complete symptom self-rating scales.
A urine sample and blood samples will be collected at different time points through out of
the study. Participants who receive placebo and those whose symptoms do not improve with
estradiol therapy will be offered treatment with standard antidepressant medications for 8
weeks at the end of the study.
Postpartum-related mood disorders cause significant distress to a potentially large number of
women. The demand for effective therapies for treating these mood disorders is considerable,
as is the need to define clinical or biologic markers that may predict successful response of
these mood disturbances to estradiol. Despite the prevalence of postpartum depressions, only
a few double-blind, controlled trials of antidepressant agents have been performed in this
condition (1-4)- only two of which were placebo-controlled. A recent large multicenter trial
failed to confirm the initially promising but anecdotal reports of the protective role of
fish oil in PPD (5). Similarly, despite evidence of estradiol s therapeutic efficacy in
trials
that were both open (monotherapy) (6) and controlled (combined with traditional
antidepressant agents (7)), the potential of estradiol to be an effective alternative to
traditional psychotropics in postpartum depression has not been examined under controlled
conditions.
Postpartum depressions occur by definition after delivery when women are relatively
hypogonadal. Indeed, plasma estradiol and progesterone levels are low and comparable to those
seen during the peri and postmenopause. However, there is no evidence that postpartum
depression represents a simple hormone deficiency, and women with postpartum depression are
not distinguished from women without postpartum depression on the basis of any abnormality of
basal reproductive hormones. Nonetheless, a role for declining estradiol secretion has been
suggested by the following observations: 1) estradiol therapy has been reported to have a
prophylactic effect in women at high risk for developing postpartum depression (8),
suggesting that the prevention of a decline in estradiol levels (threshold or rate of
decline) may prevent the onset of postpartum depression in some women; and (2) declining
ovarian steroids trigger the onset of mood disturbances in women with but not women without a
history of postpartum depression during a scaled down model of pregnancy in the puerperium
(9). Thus, as with depressions occurring during the perimenopause, when ovarian hormone
secretion is also declining, postpartum depression may also be responsive to estradiol
therapy. In fact, open trials of estradiol therapy in postpartum depression (6) as well as a
trial of estradiol in combination with traditional antidepressants (7) have suggested that
estradiol does have antidepressant-like effects that are observed within a three week time
period in women with postpartum onset major depression. Thus, estradiol treatment may not
only provide a safe and effective alternative to traditional antidepressants in women with
postpartum depression, but it may also suggest the relevant hormonal trigger for the
development of this condition.
In this protocol we wish to investigate the effects of estradiol on mood in women with
moderately severe postpartum depression under placebo controlled conditions. This protocol
will address the following question: 1) Does estradiol improve mood in postpartum depressed
women?
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