Major Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy and Cost-Effectiveness of 18-Months of Antidepressive Medication Plus Either Cognitive-Behavior Therapy or Dynamic Psychotherapy Compared to Supportive Clinical Management for Recurrent Major Depression: a Pilot Study
Major Depressive Disorder affects approximately 16% of the adult population over the
lifetime. Controlled studies indicate that short-term antidepressive medications or
psychotherapy produce full remission in only about 46% of patients. Furthermore, about 80%
of patients will continue to have subsequent recurrences after remission of the first
episode, with each episode increasing the probability of future recurrences. This pilot
study will examine whether antidepressive medications plus one of three commonly available
types of psychotherapy used in the short-term treatment of depression can protect against
the recurrence of depression if active treatment is extended to 18-months duration. Results
will aid designing a more complete study.
Adults with an acute episode of major depressive disorder with at least one prior episode
will be randomized to Antidepressive medications (ADM) plus 18-months of either
Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) or Dynamic psychotherapy (DYN), or to a standard control
therapy, Supportive Clinical Management (SUP-CM). We will determine whether a higher
percentage of those receiving either CBT or DYN remain well after three years of follow-up,
compared to those receiving the standard control treatment. We will also examine the
reduction in psychological risk factors as well as potential economic benefits of the three
approaches.
Major Depressive Disorder affects approximately 15% of the adult population over a lifetime.
Controlled studies indicate that short-term antidepressive medications or psychotherapy
produce full remission in only about 46% of patients. Furthermore, about 80% of patients
will continue to have subsequent recurrences after remission of the first episode, with each
episode increasing the probability of future recurrences. The World Health Organization
estimates that by the year 2020 depression will be the second largest cause of medical
disability worldwide. As a result, there is a need to validate treatments that produce
remission and prevent recurrences upon long-term follow-up. Furthermore, since several
treatment types are currently widely practiced, there is a need to demonstrate both their
efficacies and cost effectiveness.
We propose to conduct a pilot study to determine the feasibility and provide estimates for a
randomized controlled study of combined antidepressive medications plus one of three forms
of psychotherapy in common use for adults with an acute episode of recurrent major
depression. Two treatments of interest, Cognitive-behavioural (CBT) and psychodynamic (DYN)
psychotherpy, will be compared to Supportive Clinical Management (SUP-CM), which will serve
as the control. Overall, the study will compare each active psychotherapy to the control
treatment for retention-attrition, and efficacy in producing remission, preventing
recurrence after up to 18-months of treatment, and improving functioning. Secondary aims
will explore whether putative psychological risk factors for depression improve more in the
active psychotherapies than in the control condition, and determine whether this improvement
predicts or mediates staying well. Finally, we will develop preliminary estimates of the
cost-effectiveness and cost-offset of the three treatment conditions at termination and 3
year post-treatment follow-up. If either or both active treatments give estimates of
superior prevention of recurrences or residual symptoms and impairment, these estimates will
be used to plan a subsequent more definitive study, including their relative
cost-effectiveness and cost-offset.
Adults (N=30, 10 per condition) meeting DSM-IV-TR criteria for an acute episode of major
depressive disorder with at least one prior episode will be randomized to 18-months of
either (1) Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) or (2) Psychodynamic psychotherapy (DYN), to a
standard control treatment (3) Supportive Clinical Management. All patients will receive
antidepressive medications (ADM), which will be prescribed according to a pre-defined
protocol similar to the CANMAT guidelines. Once remission has been achieved, continuation of
ADM will follow the same guidelines in all three therapy conditions. Assessments will
include the LIFE-method to code the course of depressive episodes and dysthymia, the HRSD-17
and BDI-2, role functioning and impulse symptom measures, and theoretically based measures
of both cognitive, affective and dynamic psychological risk factors, and health care costs
and economic productivity. Patients will be assessed at intake and six month intervals for
the treatment period and three year subsequent follow-up, totaling up to 54 months for each
patient. The HRSD-17 and economic data will be collected more frequently. Intent-to-treat
analyses will compare each active treatment to the control treatment. If 18-months of either
of these two most commonly used psychotherapies provides estimates of reduced recurrence and
morbidity compared to standard treatment, these estimates will be used to design and power a
subsequent complete study including cost-effectiveness and cost-offset.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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