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Depressive Disorder clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03329391 Completed - Clinical trials for Treatment-resistant Depression

Psychosocial Characteristics and Non-pharmacological Intervention of Patients With Treatment-resistant Depression

Start date: January 9, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy, effective management strategies for treatment-resistant depression are limited and yet to be developed. However, nursing interventions focusing on adherence enhancement, symptom reduction, and stress management may be strategic for a better disease management. This study aimed to define the rarely-studied concept of TRD under the cultural context of Taiwan and to identify new feasible and complementary treatment model from nursing perspectives. The project had established important basis on the descriptions of psychosocial features and need assessment of people with TRD over psychiatrist's validation. The findings also built up a cultural-specific non-pharmacological intervention module for effective TRD management in Taiwan. The nursing model of TRD management will further promote the development of integrative depression care in the future and complement current modalities, while providing important evidence-based information for future research and services.

NCT ID: NCT03321526 Completed - Clinical trials for Depressive Disorder, Major

A Study to Compare the Efficacy, Safety, and Tolerability of JNJ-42847922 Versus Quetiapine Extended-Release as Adjunctive Therapy to Antidepressants in Adult Participants With Major Depressive Disorder Who Have Responded Inadequately to Antidepressant Therapy

Start date: December 12, 2017
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy of flexibly dosed JNJ-42847922 (20 milligram [mg] or 40 mg) compared to flexibly dosed quetiapine extended-release (XR) (150 mg or 300 mg) as adjunctive therapy to an antidepressant drug in delaying time to all-cause discontinuation of study drug over a 6-months (24 weeks) treatment period, in participants with major depressive disorder (MDD) who have had an inadequate response to current antidepressant therapy with a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) or serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (SNRI).

NCT ID: NCT03321006 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Treating Hearing Loss to Improve Mood and Cognition in Older Adults

Start date: May 30, 2018
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Age-related hearing loss (ARHL) is the third most common health condition affecting older adults after heart disease and arthritis and is the fifth leading cause of years lived with disability worldwide. Many hearing-impaired older adults avoid or withdraw from social contexts in which background noise will make it difficult to communicate, resulting in social isolation and reduced communication with family and friends.Social isolation and loneliness have been linked to numerous adverse physical and mental health outcomes, including dementia, depression, and mortality, and they may also lead to declining physical activity and the development of the syndrome of frailty. In this project it is hypothesized that untreated ARHL represents a distinct route to developing Late-life Depression (LLD) and that individuals with comorbid ARHL/LLD are unlikely to respond to treatments (i.e., antidepressant medication) that do not treat the underlying hearing problem. Initial studies suggest remediation of hearing loss using hearing aids or cochlear implantation may decrease depressive symptoms acutely and over the course of 6 to 12 months follow-up. However, the clinical significance of these findings is obscured by lack of rigorous control groups, failure to objectively document hearing aid compliance, and enrollment of study populations lacking syndromal depression or even a threshold symptom score.

NCT ID: NCT03317678 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Fermented Milk Product With Probiotic and Its Impact on Mood of Patients With Treatment Resistant Depression

Start date: February 10, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to assess the impact of a chronic dietary intervention (8 weeks) with probiotics, specifically Fermented Milk Product with Probiotic (FMPP), on the mood of individuals with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) refractory to standard antidepressant therapy, and its association with changes in intestinal microbiota and markers of inflammation.

NCT ID: NCT03317262 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Prospective Study of the Evaluation of Disease contRol and the Quality of Life of Patients With depressiOn and With or Without aNxiety disOrders in the Greek populatIon

PRONOI
Start date: March 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Depression is a psychiatric disorder that affects mood, thoughts and is usually accompanied by physical annoyances. It affects the person's eating habits, his sleep, the way he sees himself and the way he thinks and understands. Depressed emotion has great tension, lasts longer and leads to a reduction in the person's functioning in many areas of his life. Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) is the psychiatric disorder characterized by a multitude of diverse organic responses as well as a generalized, persistent and indeterminate anxiety that covers almost all of the individual's activities. It is a diffuse and intense negative mood and anxiety that is present for most of the day and whose exact causes are often undetectable.

NCT ID: NCT03315897 Completed - Bipolar Disorder Clinical Trials

Effects of Erythropoietin on Cognition and Neural Activity in Mood Disorders

PreTEC-EPO
Start date: July 5, 2017
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The present trial consists of 2 sub-studies that investigate important novel aspects of treatment with erythropoietin (EPO) on cognitive dysfunction in bipolar disorder (BD) and recurrent unipolar depressive disorder (UD) (defined as minimum 2 treatment-requiring depressive episodes). The aims of the trial are three-fold. We aim to investigate the effects of 12 weekly recombinant human EPO infusions on cognition in (i) healthy people with cognitive impairment (substudy 1) and (ii) patients with remitted BD or recurrent UD (substudy 2), and (iii) explore early treatment-associated neural activity changes that may predict subsequent cognitive improvement. It is hypothesized that: i. 12 weekly EPO infusions improve cognition in healthy first-degree relatives and remitted BD patients in comparison with saline. ii. EPO vs. saline-treated participants will display early cognition-related neural activity in the frontal lobes, which will correlate with cognitive improvement.

NCT ID: NCT03315793 Completed - Depressive Disorder Clinical Trials

A Study of Duloxetine (LY248686) in Japanese Children and Adolescents With Depressive Disorder

Start date: December 4, 2017
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy of duloxetine hydrochloride versus placebo in the treatment of Japanese children and adolescents with depressive disorder.

NCT ID: NCT03313674 Completed - Clinical trials for Major Depressive Disorder

Investigation of Seasonal Variations of Brain Structure and Connectivity in SAD

Start date: November 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) is a subtype of Major Depressive Disorder, characterized by a recurrent temporal relationship between the season of year, the onset and the remission of a major depressive episode. Estimates of the annual prevalence state that 1-6% of the population will develop SAD with the larger prevalences found at greater extremes in latitude. SAD is most likely triggered by the shortening photoperiod experienced in the winter months leading to a deterioration of mood. Recent cross-sectional neuroimaging studies have found cellular and neurotransmitter changes in response to seasonality, ultimately having an impact on the affect of patients. Conversly, this study aims to investigate the changes in neurocircuitry related to depression and euthymic states. Patients with SAD offer a unique ability to study these changes since they have predictable triggers for the onset of depression (i.e. the winter months) and remission (i.e. the summer months).

NCT ID: NCT03311529 Completed - Anxiety Disorders Clinical Trials

Effectiveness and Underlying Mechanisms of Applied Relaxation as Indicated Preventive Intervention

EASY
Start date: September 1, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

As mental disorders constitute a core health care challenge of the 21th century, increased research efforts on preventive interventions are indispensable. In the field of clinical psychology, indicated preventive interventions targeted to those with initial symptomatology appear particularly promising. Applied relaxation (AR) is a well-established intervention technique proven to effectively reduce tension/distress, anxiety and depressive symptoms in the context of treatment of a wide variety of manifest mental disorders as well as somatic illnesses. However, it has not been studied so far whether AR as indicated preventive intervention in subjects with initial symptomatology but no full-threshold mental disorder yet is capable to prevent a further symptom escalation. This randomized controlled trial in subjects with elevated tension/distress, anxiety or depressive symptomatology aims to investigate whether an AR intervention (10 sessions à 60 min) can (a) effectively reduce present psychopathological symptoms as well as (b) prevent a further symptom progression to full-threshold DSM-5 mental disorders. Putative mediators (physiological, emotional, cognitive and behavioral changes including heart rate and heart rate variability, hair and salivary cortisol secretion, affectivity, self-efficacy, internal locus of control and cognitive / behavioral coping) and moderators (sex, age, symptom severity at baseline and homework adherence during the intervention course) of the intervention/preventive efficacy will be additionally studied. Predictor and outcome measures will be assessed both conventionally (via personal interview, questionnaires and physiological measures during the respective main assessment) and with ecological momentary assessments (EMA, applied via smart phone over a 1-week interval following the respective main assessment) in everyday life.

NCT ID: NCT03310398 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Negative-Positive Valence Domains in Anxiety and Depression

RDoC
Start date: September 1, 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Anxiety and depression are highly prevalent and disabling conditions that frequently co-occur, and are costly to the individual and society. Despite important advances in our understanding of these disorders, there is a significant unmet need to identify reliable and clinically useful tests that can predict prognosis, inform treatment choice for a given individual, and improve treatment outcomes. The aim of this project is to fill this critical gap by validating a battery of measures including brain imaging, psychophysiology, behavior, and self-report that will reliably assess positive and negative affect, or valence, system functioning in a broad sample of individuals screened for anxiety and depression as part of their routine primary care visits.