View clinical trials related to Depressive Disorder.
Filter by:The investigators aim to evaluate a peer-to-peer patient self-management program targeting symptoms of anxiety and depression in a randomized trial. A total of 234 cancer patients recently having completed primary treatment with curative intent in central Region Denmark will be included. The intervention is a lay-led, group-based transdiagnostic patient education program consisting of seven 2 ½ hour weekly sessions focusing on increasing patient self-efficacy in symptom management of anxiety and depression. The intervention is highly structured and manualized.
Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) with theta bursts (i.e. TBS) of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) is an innovative treatment for major depressive disorder (MDD). Indeed, the U. S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has only recently approved TBS (in August 2018). However, fewer than 50% of patients show sufficient response to this treatment; markers for response prediction are urgently needed. Moreover, there is a lack of knowledge of the mechanism of action of TBS of the DLPFC. This is due to difficulties of directly measuring prefrontal stimulation effects, as compared to the stimulation of motor cortex and utilizing motor evoked potentials as direct readout. However, knowledge of immediate DLPFC modulation by TBS is necessary to extrapolate downstream effects on the neural and symptoms level. Thus, there is a need for research that aims to quantify the direct and immediate after-effects of TBS on DLPFC function. Most importantly, with regard to precision medicine, there is a need for research that explores the utility of immediate DLPFC reactivity to TBS for the prediction of antidepressant treatment response. There is common agreement that certain forms of rTMS inhibit or excite brain activity, respectively. However, evidence indicates that there is considerable individual variability in the brain responses to rTMS. Whether differences in individual DLPFC modulation by rTMS can be utilized as a predictive marker for treatment response remains to be investigated. This research program will exploit the combination of functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) with brain stimulation. Concurrent TBS/fNIRS measurements will allow us to systematically investigate TBS-induced modulation of blood oxygenation as a proxy for induced brain activity changes. The findings from this study will (1) elucidate the immediate effects of excitatory and inhibitory TBS on prefrontal activity in TBS treatment-naïve patients with MDD and (2) validate the potential utility of TBS-induced brain modulation at baseline for the prediction of antidepressant response to four weeks of daily TBS treatment. Major depression is a severe mental disorder and is associated with considerable economic costs but adequate treatments are poorly explored. This research program will pave the way towards an affordable and easy-to-implement method for response prediction before treatment commencement. Thus, our research proposal has high potential to inform tailored treatment strategies, as envisaged in precision medicine.
The overall aim of this study is to employ Community Health Workers (CHWs) to screen for depression in 30 Black churches and compare the effectiveness of Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) (Intervention arm) to Referral As Usual (Control arm) on treatment engagement for depression. The investigators will assess patient-level outcomes (Mental-Health Related Quality of Life and depressive symptoms) at 3- and 6-months post-screening and conduct a mixed-methods process evaluation to assess multi-level facilitators and barriers of screening uptake.
In this proposal, the investigators aim to explore the clinical subtypes and biological markers to personalize the use of antidepressants in MDD. By stratifying the subjects with (versus without) remission and treatment response, the biological markers are expected to have important prediction effects in future clinical practice.
The aim of this study is find out how CBT-based weight loss program affects on eating behavior, weight loss, mood symptoms and risk for coronary heart diseases and type 2 diabetes and applicability of the program to obesity treatment among patients with comorbid depression. Our hypothesis is that the CBT-based intervention improves long-term weight management results and supports positively the change in eating behavior and the risk for CHD on type 2 DM. The study is randomized controlled one-year intervention study with 1 year follow-up. Study subjects are adult obese (BMI>35) subjects with comorbid depression. Number of randomized study subjects will be 80, 40 in intervention group, 40 in control group. Intervention group will proceed through a 52-week CBT-based weight loss group intervention. The aim of the intervention is to modify eating behavior and lifestyle factors affecting weight and weight maintenance. There will be 22 group counselling of 90 minutes divided in five modules and also three individual person-centered counselling visit, during which participants had an opportunity to discuss their personal concerns about diet and weight loss plan. Control group will receive the usual care of obesity in Kuopio University hospital. (4-8 individual 45-minute visit conducted by dieticians) Study visits are at baseline and one and 2 years after baseline. For example eating behavior, health behavior, motivation and depression are studied with questionnaires. Weight, waist circumference, height and blood pressure are measured. Laboratory tests (lipid, glucose etc) are taken.
The purpose of this study is to gather information regarding the use of a new type of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) called theta burst stimulation (TBS) for suicidal ideation in adolescents with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). The investigators hope to learn if this TMS treatment improves suicidal ideation over 10 days and clinical outcomes over 1 year of follow-up.
According to the survey of the World Health Organization, the number of patients with depression in the world has reached 350 million, has becoming the primary cause of disability and the main disease burden worldwide. In order to better dealing with adverse reactions, improving the doctor-patient relationship and optimizing the treatment cost, FIBSER, STAR-P and HEA Health Economics Follow-up Evaluation Scale are selected as simple and quick evaluation scales to evaluate the influence, doctor-patient relationship and social and economic benefits after drug treatment in clinical treatment. At present, the reliability and validity of FIBSER, STAR-P and HEA scales will be verified the reliability and validity of the above three scales in depressive disorder, aiming at enriching the treatment of depressive patients based on assessment, thus improving the compliance of medication for depressive disorder, improving the doctor-patient relationship and reducing the total burden of social diseases.
This is a randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, multicenter study. A total of 128 subjects will be randomly assigned to a test group or placebo group in a 1:1 ratio. Subjects will receive vortioxetine (or placebo) and acamprosate for 6 weeks according to the treatment group. Four visits will be made (weeks 0, 2, 4, 8), and on visit 2-4 (weeks 2, 4, 8) compliance, depression symptoms, and alcohol craving will be assessed.
The aim of this study is to assess the efficacy of Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) as an Add-on Treatment for the drug-naïve Major depressive disorder. Meanwhile, evaluate the effect of tDCS on cognitive function of drug-naïve MDD patients. Furthermore, the investigators will examine the changes in cortisol, gut microbiome and some biomarkers. The hypothesis of this study is that tDCS alleviate the depressive symptoms and improve the cognitive function of drug-naïve Major depressive disorder patients with regulating inflammatory response.
The study is a Hybrid Implementation-Effectiveness study that will primarily test the implementation strategies on provider adoption and implementation quality in three Vietnam provinces. Secondarily, the effectiveness of the multicomponent collaborative care model for depression intervention on patient outcomes will be tested. A cluster randomized control trial design, with a mixed-methods approach, will be used to assess the effectiveness of the three implementation strategies on both organizational and provider implementation outcomes and patient effectiveness outcomes.