Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Treatment of Depression Occurring in the Setting of Cerebrovascular Risk -- A Pilot Study
This study will examine whether combined use of an antidepressant medication and the medication nimodipine reduces risk of depression relapse in patients with vascular depression.
Depressed elderly patients often show signs of cerebrovascular disease, commonly known as a
stroke. Some scientists theorize that having cerebrovascular disease may affect depression
in older adults in one of three ways: by causing depression, by making it more likely that
people who have been depressed have a relapse, or by maintaining certain depressive symptoms
in those already depressed. The combination of depression and cerebrovascular disease in
older adults is referred to as vascular depression and is associated with psychomotor
slowing, functional impairment, and cognitive impairment. Additionally, the likelihood of
improvement or remission is lower in vascular depression and is more difficult to treat over
time.
Nimodipine (NIM) is FDA approved to reduce incidence and severity of problems with blood
flow resulting from a particular type of stroke. In addition to improving blood flow in the
brain following a stroke, NIM also protects neurons from injury or degeneration and has
cognitive and functional benefits. These positive effects of NIM may make it useful for
treatment of vascular depression. In a previous study of people with vascular depression,
pairing NIM with the antidepressant fluoxetine showed greater improvements in depression
treatment outcomes, higher likelihood of full remission, and less incidence of depression
recurrence than using fluoxetine alone. This study will examine whether pairing NIM with
other antidepressants will reduce recurrence of vascular depression.
Participation in this study will last 56 weeks and will be divided into two phases. Before
the first phase, participants will undergo a 2-hour psychiatric evaluation and a 1.5-hour
medical examination that will involve a physical examination, blood test, electrocardiogram
(EKG), and urine analysis. In the first phase, participants will receive antidepressant
medication without NIM. Participants will begin taking escitalopram but may be switched to
duloxetine or have lorazepam added to their regimen, depending on individual treatment
effectiveness and side effects. The first phase will last between 6 and 24 weeks, ending
when the individual participant either responds to medication or experiences 24 weeks of
nonresponse. During the first phase, participants will attend weekly study visits, during
which researchers will assess medication effectiveness and monitor side effects.
Before the second phase, participants will undergo a half-hour medical examination and a
1.5-hour test of cognitive and physical abilities. At the beginning of the second phase,
participants will be randomly assigned to receive either NIM or a placebo in addition to
continuing with the antidepressant medication already helping them. Participants will take
NIM or the placebo for 8 months, undergoing weekly study visits for the first month and
monthly study visits for the last 7 months. During these visits, researchers will monitor
the participants' health and reactions to their medications. After 4, 16, and 32 weeks, an
EKG test will be performed, and after 16 and 32 weeks, cognitive and physical tests will be
performed again. After the 8 months, participants will attend three weekly study visits
while their use of medication is lowered and then ended.
For information on a related study, please follow this link:
http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT00177424
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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