Major Depressive Disorder Clinical Trial
According to the 2005 National Comorbidity Survey-Replication study, approximately 20.9 million American adults, or 9.5 percent of the population over the age of 18 suffer from mood disorders including major depressive disorder, chronic, mild depression and bipolar disorder. Major depressive disorder (MDD) is predicted to be the second leading cause of disability worldwide by the year 2020; sub-clinical mood disturbances impact many additional people and are a major reason people seek psychotherapy services. The economic burden of depression in the United States is significant: $83.1 billion in 2000 and increasing. Much of this burden comes from the high rate of sub-optimal treatment outcomes associated with the disorder. Indeed, only 50% of MDD patients recover in less than 12 weeks with adequate treatment, and up to 20% of patients will fail to adequately respond to all currently available interventions. Moreover, current treatments come at the cost of significant central nervous system (CNS) side effects, further highlighting the need for more effective treatments with fewer side effects. To address these pressing clinical issues, the investigators will conduct a placebo controlled, clinical trial to determine if Whole Body Hyperthermia (WBH) enhances the effects of psychotherapy compared to psychotherapy alone in medically healthy patients with moderate to severe mood disorders. The investigators plan to recruit a sample of 24 medically healthy individuals with mood problems who will be randomized to examine whether WBH enhances the effects of psychotherapy. To determine acute and sustained effects of WBH +psychotherapy on mood disorders, the study will include basic psychiatric questionnaire-based assessments at three therapy sessions prior to a single session conducted while receiving one of two intensities of WBH treatment. Subjects who elect not to conduct a therapy session in the WBH chamber will still be able to complete study questionnaires at all therapy sessions. This study challenges the existing paradigm by determining if peripheral afferent sensory pathways can be accessed to enhance the treatment of mood disorders and thus avoid problems of exposing all of the brain to non-selective drugs.
Our research group has observed in an open trial that a single session of whole body
hyperthermia (WBH) induced rapid antidepressant effects that persisted for at least a week
in patients with major depression (MDD) severe enough to warrant inpatient hospitalization.
In addition to reducing depression, the single session of WBH induced a prolonged reduction
in mean core body temperature, consistent with basic science data from our group suggesting
that hyperthermia activates a skin-to-brain pathway that targets specific serotonergic
nuclei in the raphe. In animal models, these nuclei have been shown to be important for mood
and body temperature regulation. Consistent with this known anatomy in our preliminary study
in depressed patients, reductions in core body temperature were highly correlated with
reductions in depressive symptoms over the same time period (one week post WBH). Moreover,
patients with higher mean core body temperature prior to treatment had enhanced
antidepressant effects. Because increased body temperature is an outcome of poor functioning
in the skin-to-brain pathway activated by WBH our data suggests that WBH may actually
sensitize this pathway in ways that promote changes in brain functioning known to promote
emotional well-being. The results of our first open trial have encouraged us to conduct a
larger, more rigorous placebo-controlled, double blind study of WBH for MDD, which is
currently underway at the University of Arizona Medical School.
In addition to impacting depressive symptoms and body temperature, The investigators have
observed that WBH induces striking increases in prosocial and self-disclosing behavior in
many individuals. This effect initiates in the heating phase of the treatment and culminates
at maximum body temperature. Importantly, our observations thus far suggest that this
prosociality only occurs when the person in the hyperthermia box is accompanied by someone
he/she knows to at least some degree. For example, a recent subject was silent during his
initial WBH treatment in which he was attended by one of our staff that he had never met. He
elected to get a repeat WBH session. The same "attendant" was present for this second WBH
session, and during this session the patient became strikingly talkative and without
prompting self-disclosed a range of very intimate personal issues related to his depression,
such as a previously undisclosed history of childhood sexual abuse.
The goal of the current proposal is to conduct a pilot study to evaluate whether this
observed prosocial effect of WBH might be employed to accelerate and deepen the formation of
therapeutic alliance in patients undergoing an 8-12 session course of cognitive behavioral
psychotherapy (CBT). Our study design will also more rigorously test our clinical
observation about the prosocial effects of WBH. In addition to potentially enhancing
psychotherapeutic outcomes, the current study may provide data relevant to larger issues
related to the near universal use of hyperthermia in indigenous cultures around the world
for spiritual and health purposes.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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