View clinical trials related to Depressive Disorder, Major.
Filter by:This study will evaluate the effectiveness of valbenazine on patient- and clinician-reported outcomes assessing health-related quality of life, functioning, and treatment effect in participants with tardive dyskinesia (TD) who are receiving valbenazine for up to 24 weeks.
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled parallel-group, fixed-dose study in patients with a primary diagnosis of MDD according to criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) who have an inadequate response to ongoing ADT.
The investigators aim to find the optimal dosage of the pBFS-guided rTMS treatment for patients with moderate to severe depression.
The purpose of this study is to assess the socio-demographic, disease-related and treatment-related characteristics, and the standard of care (SOC) treatment patterns of participants with major depressive disorder (MDD) with anhedonia with inadequate response to their current antidepressant treatments and treated according to the standard of care treatment.
Evidence suggests that mGLUR5 availability may play a key role in the biology of mood disorders. This study aimed to investigate the changes in metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGLUR5) availability and clinical symptoms in patients with MDD and bipolar disorder(BD) after two months of vortioxetine treatment. The investigators hypothesized that patients with MDD and BP have abnormal mGluR5 availability in certain brain regions, and baseline mGLUR5 availability can predict prognosis the prognosis of MDD and BD. fMRI and NODDI are also used to evaluate the function or neurite condition at baseline and 8 week
This study examines the feasibility and acceptability of a virtual tumor board for cancer and mental illness for patients with serious mental illness and a new cancer diagnosis. The study also examines the impact on patient care, psychiatric symptoms, and clinician self-efficacy in managing this population.
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a prevalent mental illness characterised by influencing the health and quality of life of patients,often manifesting in individuals under the age of 18. It has been wildly confirmed that acupuncture alone or in combination with the applicable adjuvant therapy for MDD can not only relieve patients' physical symptoms, but also enhance sleep quality. Intradermal acupuncture, as an acceptable and long-lasting treatment modality, is the focus of this research. This study was conducted to investigate the efficacy of intradermal acupuncture in the treatment of MDD.
The goal of this observational study is to demonstrate effectiveness in the treatment of Major Depressive Disorder The primary objective is to assess the effectiveness in the treatment of Major Depressive Disorder using the CGI-I at the end of the treatment Participants will receive 10 treatments per day for 5 days (M-F) of SAINT®
This project aims to improve the health care provided to people with major depressive disorder (MDD), a disease which is a top cause of disability worldwide. One of the main obstacles to a more effective health care in these patients is represented by clinical heterogeneity, which has not completely elucidated biological correlates. Using a large sample of people with MDD already recruited (n=29,400), the investigators develop a clustering algorithm based on genetic-environmental and brain imaging predictors aimed at identifying homogeneous MDD subgroups. The researchers will then link these subgroups with relevant health outcomes, such as disease recurrency and severity, well-being and functioning, risk of psychiatric and medical comorbidities (e.g. cardiovascular disorders). Replication in independent samples already recruited(n=1380) will prove the validity of the subgroups and expand their clinical characterization. The investigators will develop a classification tool to link the individual's characteristics to the relevant health outcomes and provide corresponding clinical recommendations. The prognostic support tool will be applied to newly recruited samples, feasibility and usefulness according to clinicians's opinion will be assessed (n=120, ongoing recruitment).
This is a study that will recruit patients from the neurosurgery clinic and the regular TMS clinic. It's a smaller study designed to collect brain imaging pre-treatment and then use image guided TMS to treat patient with a one week "accelerated" rTMS protocol using the research TMS machine that is housed in Dr. Sean Nestor's lab. The idea is to examine whether severe treatment resistant depression has a different brain signature than less severe/TRD and whether we can get a therapeutic response from patients that would otherwise undergo neurosurgery or will ultimately undergo neurosurgery.