Major Depressive Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Can the Affects Conveyed by Baroque Music and Its Rhetoric Reduce Anxiety in Patients With Major Depressive Disorder Associated With Anxiety Symptoms?
Major depressive disorder, or characterized depressive episode, is a common illness that limits psychosocial functioning and impairs quality of life. The initial goal of treatment for a major depressive episode is complete remission of depressive symptoms. The most commonly used treatments are antidepressants, psychotherapy or a combination of medication and psychotherapy. Music therapy can be considered as one of the complementary therapies in the treatment of the characterized depressive episode and many studies have shown a beneficial effect of musical interventions, even of short duration, on depression and anxiety. In depressive disorders, therapies such as hypnosis or phenomenological psychotherapies lead to modifications of consciousness during which the subject finds the means, notably non-reflexive and in the realm of the imaginary, to overcome anxiety. Generally speaking, in the field of musical cognition, it is considered that music affects the emotions. Unfortunately this approach is often insufficiently refined in cognitive psychology since it is most generally interested in the 6 fundamental emotions: joy, anger, fear, sadness, surprise, disgust. However, during the Baroque period (end of the 16th and 17th centuries), various philosophers and musicians analyzed with great finesse not these fundamental emotions, but more precisely the passions, or "shocks of the soul", that is to say the affects in their great diversity. These affects or passions are thus at the center of Baroque musical composition. In the Barhepsy project, it is suggested that listening to Baroque music, thanks to the rhetoric of the passions included in it, would allow the mobilization of the patients' affects and thus reduce their state of anxiety. During a follow-up consultation, the effects of a 30-minute "musical path" of baroque pieces will be evaluated, exemplifying the reduction of anxiety and the subsequent appeasement, on the conscious experience of subjects suffering from a characterized depressive state associated with anxious symptoms.
Major depressive disorder or characterized depressive episode is a common illness that limits psychosocial functioning and impairs quality of life. In 2008, the WHO ranked major depression as the third leading cause of disease burden worldwide and predicts that the disease will become the leading cause by 2030. The 5th edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-V) defines a depressive episode as the presence of a sad mood and/or anhedonia (loss of interest or pleasure) lasting at least 15 days, variably associated with other symptoms (appetite disturbance, sleep disturbance, feelings of guilt and worthlessness...). It also defines as an additional characteristic of this illness, anxiety and more precisely anxiety distress, i.e. the presence of the feeling of being tense, the feeling of unusual agitation and the difficulty to concentrate due to worry or fear. When treating a major depressive episode, the initial goal is complete remission of depressive symptoms. The most commonly used treatments are antidepressants, psychotherapy or a combination of medication and psychotherapy. Although these treatments are effective, some studies show a high rate of discontinuation and poor remission and the use of complementary and alternative medicine is increasing. Music therapy can be considered as one of the complementary therapies in the treatment of the characterized depressive episode and many studies have shown a beneficial effect of musical interventions, even of short duration, on depression and anxiety. However, the nature of the effects of music remains mysterious, and even if psychometric scales are used, the body of research lacks explanations of what happens in these improvement processes. To seek an explanation, there are two strategies: either one focuses on using a psychophysiological approach (with physiological or biological measures), or one tries to approach the problem through the changes in mental processes (i.e., the content and structure of consciousness) associated with this enhancement. This is the choice made in the Barhepsy protocol. The Barhepsy project is part of the research program "Sounds, Music, Therapies: SoMuThé" developed at the CNRS (UMR 7061 PRISM, Marseille). It is part of the current trend of non-medicinal therapies by focusing on the beneficial effects of music and sound therapy. SoMuThé is a project inspired by a philosophical current called phenomenology. It is interested in the general problematic of the therapeutic effects of sound and music, not from the point of view of neurophysiological or cognitive processes evaluated by means of brain imaging or cognitive psychology experiments, but in what happens in the structure and contents of the consciousness of the subjects who benefit from such therapies. It is therefore more of a comprehension approach than an explanatory one, aiming at describing the conscious experience of these subjects in its reflexive and pre-reflexive component, and thus at understanding how their flow of consciousness is reconfigured. In depressive pathologies, therapies such as hypnosis or phenomenological psychotherapies lead to modifications of consciousness during which the subject finds means, notably non-reflexive and in the domain of the imaginary, to overcome anxiety. Generally speaking, in the field of musical cognition, it is considered that music affects the emotions. Unfortunately this approach is often insufficiently refined in cognitive psychology since it is most generally interested in the 6 fundamental emotions: joy, anger, fear, sadness, surprise, disgust. However, during the Baroque period (end of the 16th and 17th centuries), various philosophers and musicians analyzed with great finesse not these fundamental emotions, but more precisely the passions, or "shocks of the soul", that is to say the affects in their great diversity. These affects or passions are thus at the center of Baroque musical composition. In the Barhepsy project, it is suggested that listening to Baroque music, thanks to the rhetoric of the passions included in it, would allow to mobilize the patients' affects and thus reduce their state of anxiety. During a follow-up consultation, the effects of a 30-minute "musical path" of baroque pieces will be evaluated, exemplifying the reduction of anxiety and the subsequent appeasement, on the conscious experience of subjects suffering from a characterized depressive state associated with anxious symptoms. To study the structure and metamorphoses of consciousness during the experience of listening to music, will be assessed in these patients : - anxiety by means of the STAI (State-Trait Anxiety Inventory) scale of Spielberger et al., 1983 , and depression by the BDI (Beck Depression Inventory-II) scale of Beck et al., 1996. These two questionnaires will make it possible to qualify (and quantify) these two clinical signs; - the fluidity of consciousness by means of the EQFC scale. Indeed, consciousness is made more "fluid", less rigid after certain psychotherapies such as hypnosis. - the reflexive and pre-reflexive contents of consciousness that can be obtained through experiential phenomenological interviews (EPE), which are based on guided introspection and allow the description of background experiences of consciousness. ;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Recruiting |
NCT05537558 -
Precision Medicine for the Prediction of Treatment (PROMPT) Response (PROMPT)
|
||
Terminated |
NCT02192099 -
Open Label Extension for GLYX13-C-202, NCT01684163
|
Phase 2 | |
Completed |
NCT03142919 -
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) Challenge in Depression
|
Phase 2 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05547035 -
Identification of Physiological Data by a Wearable Monitor in Subjects Suffering From Major Depression Disorders
|
N/A | |
Terminated |
NCT02940769 -
Neurobiological Effects of Light on MDD
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05892744 -
Establishing Multimodal Brain Biomarkers for Treatment Selection in Depression
|
Phase 4 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05537584 -
SMART Trial to Predict Anhedonia Response to Antidepressant Treatment
|
Phase 4 | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT05061706 -
Multicenter Study of Lumateperone as Adjunctive Therapy in the Treatment of Patients With Major Depressive Disorder
|
Phase 3 | |
Completed |
NCT04479852 -
A Study of the Safety and Efficacy of SP-624 in the Treatment of Adults With Major Depressive Disorder
|
Phase 2 | |
Recruiting |
NCT04032301 -
Repeated Ketamine Infusions for Comorbid PTSD and MDD in Veterans
|
Phase 1 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05527951 -
Enhanced Measurement-Based Care Effectiveness for Depression (EMBED) Study
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03511599 -
Cycloserine rTMS Plasticity Augmentation in Depression
|
Phase 1 | |
Recruiting |
NCT04392947 -
Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder With Bilateral Theta Burst Stimulation
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05895747 -
5-HTP and Creatine for Depression R33 Phase
|
Phase 2 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05273996 -
Predictors of Cognitive Outcomes in Geriatric Depression
|
Phase 4 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05813093 -
Interleaved TMS-fMRI in Ultra-treatment Resistant Depression
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05135897 -
The Neurobiological Fundaments of Depression and Its Relief Through Neurostimulation Treatments
|
||
Enrolling by invitation |
NCT04509102 -
Psychostimulant Augmentation of Repetitive TMS for the Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder
|
Early Phase 1 | |
Recruiting |
NCT06145594 -
EMA-Guided Maintenance TMS for Depression
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06026917 -
Assessing Dopamine Transporter Occupancy in the Patients With Depression Brain With Toludesvenlafaxine Hydrochloride Extended-Release Tablets Using 11C-CFT Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
|
Phase 4 |