Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT01714050 |
Other study ID # |
R01MH078982 |
Secondary ID |
R01MH078982 |
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
July 2008 |
Est. completion date |
February 2014 |
Study information
Verified date |
May 2023 |
Source |
University of Vermont |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Major depression is a highly prevalent, chronic, and debilitating mental health problem with
significant social cost that poses a tremendous economic burden. Winter seasonal affective
disorder (SAD) is a subtype of recurrent major depression involving substantial depressive
symptoms that adversely affect the family and workplace for about 5 months of each year
during most years, beginning in young adulthood. This clinical trial is relevant to this
public health challenge in seeking to develop and test a time-limited (i.e., acute treatment
completed in a discrete period vs. daily treatment every fall/winter indefinitely), palatable
cognitive-behavioral treatment with effects that endure beyond the cessation of acute
treatment to prevent the annual recurrence of depression in SAD.
Aim (1) To compare the long-term efficacy of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and light
therapy on depression recurrence status, symptom severity, and remission status during the
next winter season (i.e., the next wholly new winter season after the initial winter of
treatment completion), which we argue to be the most important time point for evaluating
clinical outcomes following SAD intervention.
Hypothesis: CBT will be associated with a smaller proportion of depression recurrences, less
severe symptoms, and a higher proportion of remissions than light therapy in the next winter.
The study is designed to detect a clinically important difference between CBT and light
therapy in depressive episode recurrences during the next winter, the primary endpoint, in an
intent-to-treat analysis.
Aim (2) To compare the efficacy of CBT and light therapy on symptom severity and remission
status at post-treatment (treatment endpoint).
Hypothesis: CBT and light therapy will not differ significantly on post-treatment outcomes.
Description:
Seasonal affective disorder (SAD) is a subtype of recurrent depression involving major
depressive episodes during the fall and/or winter months that remit in the spring. SAD
affects an estimated 5% of the U. S. population, over 14.5 million Americans. The central
public health challenge in the management of SAD is prevention of winter depression
recurrence. The established and best available treatment, light therapy, remits acute
symptoms in 53% of SAD cases. However, long-term compliance with clinical practice guidelines
recommending daily use of a light box from onset of first symptom through spontaneous
springtime remission during every fall/winter season is poor. Time-limited alternative
treatments with durable effects are needed to prevent the annual recurrence of these
disabling symptoms. Our preliminary studies suggest that a novel, SAD-tailored
cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) may be as efficacious as light therapy alone for acute SAD
treatment and that CBT may have superior outcomes to light therapy during the next winter.
During the next wholly new winter season following the initial winter of study treatment, the
proportion of depression recurrences was significantly smaller in participants randomized to
CBT (5.8%) or to CBT combined with light therapy (5.2%) than in participants randomized to
light therapy alone (39.2%). As the next step in this programmatic line of intervention
studies, the primary aim of the proposed project is to further test the efficacy of our CBT
for SAD intervention against light therapy in a larger, more definitive randomized
head-to-head comparison on next winter outcomes in an intent-to-treat (ITT) analysis using
all randomized participants. This project is seeking to test for a clinically meaningful
difference between CBT and light therapy on depression recurrence in the next winter (the
primary outcome), thereby having the potential to impact clinical practice. The proposed work
will go beyond our pilot studies in four ways: (1) This study will augment the
generalizability of our prior pilot study data by relaxing the inclusion/exclusion criteria
to allow for comorbid diagnoses and stable antidepressant medication use and by demonstrating
the feasibility of training experienced community therapists to facilitate the CBT groups.
(2) We will prospectively track recurrences and potential intervening variables that could
affect outcome (e.g., new treatments, summer remission status) in the interim between
treatment endpoint and the following winter. (3) This study includes a second annual winter
followup to obtain preliminary data on the comparative effects of CBT vs. LT two winters
after the initial winter of study treatment. (4) We will examine how potential modifiers
influence the effects of CBT vs. LT, including demographic variables; baseline
characteristics (e.g., depression severity, comorbidity, baseline medication status); and
complete or incomplete summer remission status in the interim. If successful, this work will
develop a novel treatment with important public health implications for winter depression
prevention.