View clinical trials related to Major Depressive Disorder.
Filter by:The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy, safety and tolerability of cariprazine as an adjunctive treatment to antidepressant therapy (ADT) in patients with MDD who have had an inadequate response to antidepressants alone.
This trial is a 52-week study to assess the safety of long-term use of brexpiprazole as adjunctive therapy in combination with an antidepressant.
This study addresses the unmet medical problem of insufficient treatment of late life depression (LLD). Compared with depression in early adulthood, treatment options of LLD are limited. This trial is the first confirmatory multicentre study to test the efficacy of an LLD-adapted cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) program. It will test the hypothesis, that LLD-specific cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is superior to unspecific supportive intervention (SUI) with regard to reducing symptoms of depression over the course of 6 months. Secondary goals are to test the efficacy of LLD-CBT in comparison with SUI on patient reported outcome in major depressive disorders (PRO-MDD), anxiety, cognition, quality of life, overall health status, sleep and global clinical impression.
The objective of this study is to evaluate relative bioavailability between 80 mg LY03005 oral tablets and 50 mg Pristiq® oral tablets after a single dose of each drug in a cross-over 2-period design under fasting condition in healthy subjects between 18 and 50 years of age.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of AGN-241751 in participants with Major Depressive Disorder
The study examines the effects of the combined use of two different non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) techniques targeting the DLPFC on stress reactivity and recovery.
The purpose of this study is to examine the efficacy and safety of accelerated transcranial magnetic stimulation with H1-coil (deep TMS) for treatment of patients diagnosed with major depressive disorder (MDD). Subjects will be randomized into two groups: experimental (treated with accelerated deep TMS: twice a day (6-8 hours between two applications), during 2 weeks) and control group (standard deep TMS treatment: once a day, during 4 weeks). Participants and designated clinicians will complete a battery of instruments that measure relevant symptoms (HAM-D17 and BDI-II scales), global functioning (CGI and PHQ-9 scales), quality of life (EQ-5D-5L questionnaire), and cognitive functions (MoCA test). Measurements will be done in 4 time points: after the inclusion, after the first week of treatment, after the second week (the end of treatment for experimental group), after the fourth week (the end of treatment for control group), and after 1 month (follow-up for both groups). Interim data analysis is planned at the time when at least 30 participants are involved in both groups. Patients whose baseline score on HAM-D17 is equal or greater than 24 (very severe depression) will be included in another study; they will be treated with accelerated deep TMS twice a day during 4 weeks.
The primary goal of the proposed study is to compare the effectiveness of universal school based screening for adolescent major depressive disorder to the current school process of targeted screening based on concerning behavior.
This is a double-blind, multi-site, randomized controlled trial (RCT) that will recruit 200 participants.The purpose of the RCT will be to evaluate the efficacy of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in combination with mindfulness meditation compared to sham tDCS to maintain wellness following an acute course of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) for up to 6 months.
The purpose of this 14 week, randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled study is to assess the safety and efficacy of brexipiprazole to placebo as adjunctive treatment to an assigned open-label marketed antidepressant therapy (ADT) in patients with Major Depressive Disorder.