Major Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Comparison Study of Combined ECT and Risperidone Versus ECT Alone for Treatment Resistant Depression.
The purpose of this study is to determine if the combination of risperidone and ECT improves a patient's response in depression compared to ECT alone.
Medication resistance to antidepressant therapy, or Treatment-Resistant Depression (TRD), is
the main reason, if not main indication, for which patients are presently referred for
electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) in hopes of a rapid, definitive response (APA 2001 ECT Task
Force Report). While the causes of TRD remain unclear, this category of patients includes
those who have incomplete remission, those who relapse rapidly and frequently, those who
have psychotic depression, those who develop chronic depression, and those who often have
comorbid medical and psychiatric illness (Sackeim 2001, Sharma 2001, Fava and Davidson 1996,
Thase 1995). Moreover, while increased age per se is not a barrier to antidepressant
response, many elderly, especially those with comorbid medical or neurological illness, are
unable to tolerate courses of aggressive pharmacotherapy or seem to have a less robust
response to pharmacotherapy, and possibly to ECT alone, with significant residual functional
and cognitive impairment (Reynolds 1998, Stoudemire 1998, Lebowitz 1997, Gurland 1991).
Compared to patients who are not medication resistant, who generally retain the highest
likelihood of response to ECT alone, patients with TRD have a lower response rate to ECT
with average estimates of response to ECT alone between 50-60% (APA 2001 ECT Task Force).
Additionally, while ECT for most patients may provide acute remission, those patients with
TRD remain at high risk for rapid relapse (Sackeim 2001, Petrides 2001, Sackeim 1990,
Aronson 1987). Consequently, ECT alone may be insufficient to achieve remission or to
prevent relapse. Interestingly, resistance to some types of medication was found also to
predict resistance to ECT alone, i.e., resistance to tricyclic antidepressants correlated
with a less likely response to ECT, though the same prediction did not hold for serotonin
reuptake inhibitors (Prudic 1996, Prudic 1990).
In general, for some patients with TRD, studies support the use of combined medication
approaches, and specifically, have demonstrated the safety, tolerability and effectiveness
of an antidepressant with an antipsychotic medication, though usually for patients with
comorbid psychosis (Wheeler 2000, Shelton 1999, Barak 1999). Case reports exist in the ECT
literature about the safety and tolerability of ECT and antipsychotics, and improved
efficacy, albeit generally for patients with psychotic depression or other treatment
resistant psychoses (Kupchik 2000, Bhatia 1998, Ranjan 1996, Farah, Beale, and Kellner 1995,
Minter 1979). However, no studies systematically, or prospectively, investigate whether the
specific combination of ECT plus an atypical antipsychotic offers a true treatment
alternative to improved efficacy of ECT for patients with TRD.
This study reviews the experience and outcome of combining ECT and an atypical antipsychotic
medication, risperidone, for TRD in various populations in an academic, university-based
setting, and furthermore, explores in a pilot randomized open-label study whether ECT plus
risperidone bears closer scrutiny in more rigorous study designs as a novel treatment
approach.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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