Postpartum Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Early Dyadic Psychotherapeutic Intervention for Mothers Suffering From PPD on Oxytocin Level and on Childrens' Emotional and Behavioral Development
Background: Postpartum depression follows approximately 10-15% of deliveries. Maternal
functional disability, particularly in the relationship with the infant, a hallmark of PPD,
causes impairment in the mother's ability to bond with her infant. Subsequently, this
impairment leads to deleterious long-term consequences for infant cognitive, neurological,
and social-emotional growth, and is associated with psychiatric disorders in later life.
Therefore, the development of effective short-term treatment in such a highly prevalent
phenomenon is of a high clinical priority. While pharmacological and psychological treatments
are effective in treating PPD , these interventions have failed to show a significant
improvement in mother-child interaction quality and infant development.
The Oxytocin System: Oxytocin (OXT) is a nine amino acid neuro-peptide, found exclusively in
mammals and is released during labor and lactation. Among the central influences of OXT on
human social behavior are increased trust, empathy and eye contact. Brain imaging found that
maternal attachment activates regions in the brain's reward systems that are rich with
oxytocin and vasopressin receptors . Such findings led researchers to speculate that OXT may
be involved in linking and maintaining the connection between social recognition systems and
feelings of pleasure . According to this speculation, pair bonding is a form of conditioned
reward learning, whereby OXT promotes the reward in social encounters, thus enhancing the
motivation to engage in such interaction .
Disruptions to the oxytocin system in depression have been repeatedly observed, and woman
suffering from PPD have lower plasma OXT concentrations in comparison to the control group .
A recent small treatment study of OXT in women suffering from PPD did not show a positive
effect on mood; however, it did show improved mother-child interactions.
Studies suggest a bio-behavioral feedback loop of OXT, parenting, and infant social
competence. Rationale and Hypotheses of the Current Research: We speculate that mothers
suffering from PPD exhibit high levels of depression and low levels of OXT, hence
experiencing the interaction with their child as less rewarding, which in turn promote
further depressive symptoms and interfere with child development.
The aims of this study are:
1. To assess the relationship between levels of oxytocin in mothers suffering from
postpartum depression and their babies, before and after psychological dyadic treatment
compered to supportive treatment.
2. To study the added value of dyadic treatment over conventional supportive treatment for
PPD that does not focus specifically on the mother's relationship with her baby.
3. To show the effects of dyadic treatment for PPD mothers and their children on the
child's emotional and behavioral development.
Methods: Subjects: 50 Mothers will be interviewed and diagnosed as suffering from PPD
according to DSM-IV-TR, will be enrolled within 2-8 months postpartum.
Background: Postpartum depression follows approximately 10-15% of deliveries. Maternal
functional disability, particularly in the relationship with the infant, a hallmark of PPD,
causes impairment in the mother's ability to bond with her infant. Subsequently, this
impairment leads to deleterious long-term consequences for infant cognitive, neurological,
and social-emotional growth, and is associated with psychiatric disorders in later life.
Recently, biological correlates of maternal deprivation and maternal depression on the
infant's brain in both animal and human studies have been found . Therefore, the development
of effective short-term treatment in such a highly prevalent phenomenon is of a high clinical
priority. While pharmacological and psychological treatments are effective in treating PPD,
these interventions have failed to show a significant improvement in mother-child interaction
quality and infant development.
The Oxytocin System: Oxytocin (OXT) is a nine amino acid neuro-peptide, found exclusively in
mammals and is released during labor and lactation. The effects of OXT on the anterior
cingulate, OFC and vmPFC, suggesting its effect on 'social brain' areas have been reported in
the past , including modulation of maternal behaviors and paternal behaviors including
positive affect, social gaze, touch, and vocal synchrony with the infant . Among the central
influences of OXT on human social behavior are increased trust , empathy and eye contact .
Brain imaging found that maternal attachment activates regions in the brain's reward systems
that are rich with oxytocin and vasopressin receptors . Such findings led researchers to
speculate that OXT may be involved in linking and maintaining the connection between social
recognition systems and feelings of pleasure . According to this speculation, pair bonding is
a form of conditioned reward learning, whereby OXT promotes the reward in social encounters,
thus enhancing the motivation to engage in such interaction .
Disruptions to the oxytocin system in depression have been repeatedly observed, and woman
suffering from PPD have lower plasma OXT concentrations in comparison to the control group .
Recent studies investigated the therapeutic potential of OXT in psychopathologies involving
impaired social functioning such as autism spectrum disorders where OXT was found to
facilitate social information processing and retention of social information, in social
anxiety disorder , and schizophrenia where OXT administration resulted in a significant
improvement in several social cognition measures and symptom reduction. Furthermore, a recent
small treatment study of OXT in women suffering from PPD did not show a positive effect on
mood; however, it did show improved mother-child interactions.
Studies suggest a bio-behavioral feedback loop of OXT, parenting, and infant social
competence. The mechanisms of cross-generation transmission in the OXT system have been
observed in human parents and infants in the first months of the infant's life and showed
that parent and child's OXT levels are highly correlated and higher parental OXT was
associated with higher infant OXT. Studies in non-human primates have shown long-term
consequences on the development of social competence and infant's ultimate parental skills.
Rationale and Hypotheses of the Current Research: We speculate that mothers suffering from
PPD exhibit high levels of depression and low levels of OXT, hence experiencing the
interaction with their child as less rewarding, which in turn promote further depressive
symptoms and interfere with child development.
The aims of this study are:
1. To assess the relationship between levels of oxytocin in mothers suffering from
postpartum depression and their babies, before and after psychological dyadic treatment
compered to supportive treatment.
2. To study the added value of dyadic treatment over conventional supportive treatment for
PPD that does not focus specifically on the mother's relationship with her baby.
3. To show the effects of dyadic treatment for PPD mothers and their children on the
child's emotional and behavioral development.
Methods: Subjects: 50 Mothers will be interviewed and diagnosed as suffering from PPD
according to DSM-IV-TR, will be enrolled within 2-8 months postpartum.
Procedure:
An informed consent will be obtained, inclusion and exclusion criteria will be examined,
demographic information, psychiatric and medical history will be obtained, and MADRS, CGI-S,
and GAD7 questionnaires will be performed.
The baseline assessment will be conducted at the infant's home, at that time, a mother
-infant interaction will be videotaped, and the YIPTA, BDI, EPDS, STAI, PSI, NMR, ERC, IOS,
PBI, EQ and IRI questionnaires will be administered. Salivary OXT samples will be collected
from the infants and salivary OXTsamples will be collected from the parent .
Women with PPD will be invited for a mid-point clinical evaluation at the outpatient
Psychiatric Department, Haemek Medical Center. The evaluation will include a psychiatric
evaluation using MADRS, CGI-S, and GAD-7 questionnaires.
the women in the PPD group will participate in 8 weeks of dyadic psychotherapy (DP) combining
video feedback. The treatment will be conducted at the subject's home. Additional 25 PPD
women will receive only supportive treatment at their home. The supportive treatment will
include psychoeducation regarding the development of the infant. During the 8-week treatment,
salivary OXT,Estradiol, Progesterone, SIGA and Vasopressin samples will be collected from the
mother and infant at the beginning and the end of each session.
Four weeks into DP, women with PPD will undergo another clinical evaluation at the outpatient
Psychiatric Department, Haemek Medical Center.
A final end-of-study clinical evaluation, for all women in the groups, will be conducted at
the end of 12 weeks. Another assessment will be conducted at the infant's home, including
mother -infant interaction. Mother-infant interaction will be filmed and assessed using the
CIB Manual and the NOLDOS coding system. Salivary OXT, Estradiol, Progesterone, SIGA and
Vasopressin samples will be collected from the mother and from the infant. PPD and control
mothers. For PPD mothers, the evaluation will include a psychiatric evaluation (MADRS, CGI-S,
and GAD-7 the MADRS) and the emotional conflict task at the outpatient Psychiatric
Department, Haemek Medical Center.
Study duration: The study is expected to proceed for approximately 2 years. First year:
setting up study infrastructure, preparation of collaborations, beginning of patient
recruitment and treatment. Second year: patient recruitment and treatment according to
protocol and data analysis.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Recruiting |
NCT06348316 -
Early Half Swaddling and Kangaroo Care Practices on Maternal Sleep Quality and Postpartum Depression in Term Babies
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05322161 -
Yoga in the NICU for Parents Study
|
N/A | |
Withdrawn |
NCT03709004 -
Pacifiers and Breastfeeding Among Mothers at Risk for Postpartum Depression
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT06305325 -
Coparenting Intervention to Prevent Postpartum Depression
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05055674 -
The Effects of Motherly on Postpartum Depression
|
N/A | |
Enrolling by invitation |
NCT02323152 -
PREVENTION OF POSTPARTUM DEPRESSION DEVELOPMENT IN WOMEN WITH VERY HIGH RISK
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT01658098 -
Prevalence of Postpartum Depression in Hospital Jose E. Gonzalez
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT00961402 -
The Effect of Exercise on Preventing PostPartum Depression
|
Phase 2 | |
Completed |
NCT01312883 -
Mothers Avoiding Depression Through Empowerment Intervention Trial
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT00360204 -
Improving Health Outcomes for New Mothers and Babies
|
Phase 3 | |
Unknown status |
NCT00548743 -
Translating Research Into Practice for Postpartum Depression
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04146025 -
Nurtured in Nature
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT06442774 -
MamaConecta: Digital Tool for Maternal Mental Health
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05137925 -
Mindful Moms: Mechanisms of Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy During Pregnancy and Postpartum
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05299398 -
Prevention of Postpartum Depression: A Pilot Placebo-controlled Trial of Trazodone
|
Phase 1 | |
Completed |
NCT04925765 -
Virtual Reality Biofeedback for Postpartum Anxiety and Depression
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06053515 -
Rosie the Chatbot: Leveraging Automated and Personalized Health Information Communication
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04037085 -
Ketamine to Improve Recovery After Cesarean Delivery - Part 1
|
Phase 2 | |
Completed |
NCT05059600 -
A Study To Assess The Safe-Use Conditions For Administration of ZULRESSO® in a Home Setting
|
Phase 4 | |
Completed |
NCT06136520 -
The Effect of Baby Massage Training Given to Pregnant Women on Maternal Attachment and Postpartum Depression
|
N/A |