View clinical trials related to Major Depressive Disorder.
Filter by:Major depressive disorder is a common mental disorder and the leading cause of disability worldwide. According to the Canadian Network for Mood and Anxiety Treatment, early improvement following an antidepressant treatment is correlated with response and remission. Escalation of an antidepressant dose after 2 weeks, as opposed to 4 to 8 weeks, is proposed to favor early improvement. However, this has never been tested systematically in a controlled study involving major depressive disorder patients that are non-responders to their antidepressant treatment.
Previous research has suggested that probiotics can improve depressive symptoms in patients with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), particularly when used in addition to antidepressants. The aim of this exploratory pilot study is to improve the investigator's understanding of the mechanisms underlying these effects. This study will assess the effects of an 8-week double-blind placebo-controlled probiotic intervention on the gut microbiome, inflammatory marker levels, brain activity and neurotransmitter levels in patients with MDD and their relationship to changes in mood. This study will also recruit a group of demographically-matched healthy controls for gut microbiome comparison with the MDD group (non-interventional).
Investigate the clinical subtypes and the biological markers to personalize the use n-3 PUFAs (EPA, DHA, and EPA/DHA) in MDD.
Background: Major Depressive Disorder is one of the most prevalent mental illnesses, leading to substantial personal distress and economical consequences. Pharmacological Treatment is limited and relapse is frequent. Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) was extensively investigated in humans in the 1950s and 1960s and was shown to attenuate depressive symptoms. Clinical research with LSD ended in the 1970s due to regulatory restrictions but its use for personal and recreational purposes continued. In recent years, there has been a renewed interest in the use of hallucinogens in psychiatric research and practices, reconsidering LSD's antidepressant potential. Larger, well-designed and placebo-controlled studies are warranted. This study will evaluate the potential benefits of LSD-assisted psychotherapy in patients suffering from Major Depressive Disorder. Objective: To test the efficacy of LSD in patients with Major Depressive Disorder. Design: Randomised, double-blind, active-placebo-controlled trial using either two moderate to high doses of LSD (100 µg and 100 µg or 100 µg and 200 µg) as intervention and two low doses of LSD (25 µg and 25 µg) as active-placebo control. Participants: 60 patients aged > 25 years with Major Depressive Disorder (according to DSM-V). Main outcome measures: Change in depressive symptomatology (IDS, BDI), anxiety (STAI), and general psychopathology (SCL-90) compared with active-placebo-assisted psychotherapy.
This is a Phase 3, open-label, 1-year study of the safety, tolerability, and need for re-treatment with SAGE-217 in adult participants with MDD.
This study evaluates whether ketamine, given as part of an anesthetic, improves depression symptoms in depressed patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery. Half of participants will receive a ketamine infusion during surgery, while the other half will receive a placebo (normal saline) during surgery.
The study will evaluate effectiveness of flexible dose vortioxetine 10-20 mg/day on emotional functioning in patients with MDD with an inadequate response to SSRIs/SNRIs.
This is a smoking cessation study that will enroll smokers who have been diagnosed with a severe mental illness. The study will use a combination of intensive tobacco treatment counseling and nicotine replacement therapy to assist smokers in cutting back on and quitting smoking over the course of six months.
The objective if this study is to assess the relative bio-availability of single oral doses of 80 mg LY03005 tablets administered to healthy subjects under fed versus fasted conditions in a 2-period, crossover trial.
Background: despite developments a substantial part of patients with depression will only recover slowly. Light therapy from light boxes has shown antidepressant effects but have several limitations: time consuming, only allowing a fixed spectral distribution, only delivered at a specific time-point, and often with inadequate light intensity delivered at the retina. Therefore, we developed a new dynamic lighting system using light fixtures that are built into the room and can change intensity and spectral distribution of light during the 24-hour day. Objectives: the objective of this trial is to assess the beneficial and harmful effects of a newly developed dynamic lighting system using Light Emitting Diodes (LED) -light armatures aiming to mimic sunlight, when installed in the patient rooms of a psychiatric inpatient ward, compared with usual care. Design: the design is a randomised controlled trial with two arms: an active dynamic light trial arm and a usual care arm with blinding of depression outcome, and data analyses. Randomisation will be 1:1. Inclusion criteria: a current episode of a major depressive episode as part of a unipolar or bipolar disorder. Patients with bipolar depression should be in current and recent (minimum two months before admission) mood stabilising treatment, age > 18 years, informed consent. Exclusion criteria: severe suicidality, abuse of alcohol and / or drugs, actual psychotic state, Young Mania Rating score above 7 or fulfilling diagnostic criteria for a current hypomanic or manic episode. Interventions: the experimental intervention is a dynamic LED-light system in 10 separate patient single rooms with three dynamic lamps: a window jamb built-in light panel, two ceiling mounted lamps, and a wall mounted lamp. The usual care is constant standard LED-light. Primary outcome: score on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale 6 item version (HAM-D6) scale at week 3 Secondary outcomes: score on the Suicidal Ideation Attribution Scale (SIDAS ) scale at week 3, and score in the Hamilton. Depression Rating Scale 17 item version (HAM-D17) scale at week 3, and score on the World Health Organisation Quality Of Life questionaire abbreviated version (WHOQOL-BREF) at week 3. Trial size: in total, 150 patients. Time schedule: the trial will be submitted for regulatory approvals January 2019, the first participant will be included April 2019, the expected last follow-up of the last participant will be December 2020, the expected last follow-up after 6 months will be June 2021, data will be analysed from June 2021 till September 2021, manuscripts will be prepared from December 2020, and we expect to submit first manuscript December 2021.