Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Methylphenidate for Depressed Cancer Patients in Hospice
The purpose of this study is to determine whether methylphenidate is an effective treatment for depression and to document the safety and tolerability of methylphenidate in combination with an Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor (SSRI) in SSRI treated, terminally ill, hospice and palliative care cancer patients. The investigators hypothesize that depressed hospice and palliative care patients will be more likely to have a 50% reduction in scores on a clinical measure of depression after treatment with Methylphenidate plus an SSRI compared to those patients who are taking a placebo plus an SSRI.
Background: Major depressive disorder can be diagnosed in between 5% and 26% of terminally
ill patients. This disorder causes suffering, and is associated with suicidality, increased
pain, and increased caregiver burden and caregiver depression. Treatment of depression in
cancer patients in hospice and palliative care is complicated by shortened life expectancy.
Currently-approved antidepressants take several weeks to be effective. Methylphenidate has
been reported in case series and very small randomized trials in patients without cancer as
a rapidly effective treatment for depression in medically ill patients. There are no
randomized controlled trials to test this agent in terminally ill cancer patients.
Objectives: (1) To determine the effectiveness and safety of methylphenidate for depression
treatment in cancer patients receiving hospice and palliative care, (2) to explore whether
successful treatment of depression is associated with improved quality of life, and (3) to
explore whether effective treatment of depression influences caregiver depression and
caregiver burden.
Methods: We will conduct an 18-day randomized, double-blind, fixed-dose (10 mg bid),
placebo-controlled clinical trial of methylphenidate for depression in eligible veteran and
non-veteran cancer patients with advanced cancer in the following settings: inpatient and
outpatient hospice, inpatient and outpatient palliative care, and inpatient and outpatient
cancer clinics. We will determine whether improvement in depression is mediated by decreased
pain and document the safety and tolerability of methylphenidate in these patients. We will
explore whether improvement in depression results in improved quality of life for these
patients, and decreases caregiver depression and burden.
Eligible patients who answer yes to the question "are you sad or depressed" will be invited
to participate. They will complete measures of depression [Structured Clinical Interview for
Diagnosis (SCID), Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) as primary outcome,
Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) as secondary outcome], quality of life, pain,
and cognition at baseline. MADRS scores must be greater than 19 and SCID positive for
depression at study entry. Subjects will be randomized to either methylphenidate plus an
SSRI, or placebo plus an SSRI. Subjects may continue any previously prescribed SSRI, or will
be prescribed citalopram if untreated. Participants will be evaluated with the same measures
as baseline on days 3, 6, 12 and 18 of the study. In an open label portion of the study,
methylphenidate-treated patients whose depression has improved will be followed up to 2
months. Cox proportional hazard analysis will be used to analyze the primary outcome. An
estimated 104 subjects will be entered over five years. Caregivers will complete measures of
depression and caregiver burden at days 0 and 18.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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