Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04504253 |
Other study ID # |
IRB_00129040 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
Phase 3
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
August 3, 2020 |
Est. completion date |
August 2, 2023 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2023 |
Source |
University of Utah |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
We propose to determine if augmentation of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) utilized for the
treatment of major depressive disorder (MDD) with daily oral creatine will lead to an
accelerated response to treatment, an overall increase in response rate, and will protect
against cognitive adverse effects associated with ECT. We propose to conduct a two-arm,
parallel, randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial, with a treatment group
receiving 20 g oral loading dose of creatine for 1 week starting the day before initiating
ECT, followed by 5 g oral creatine daily for roughly five weeks, including the approximately
three-week ECT treatment course and a two-week follow-up period. Response to treatment will
be assessed using the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS) at each treatment
and the 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D17) at the end of each week.
Description:
A. Prevalence and Impact of Depression
MDD has a lifetime prevalence of over 16% and is associated with significant personal and
social costs, including lost work productivity, disability, diminished quality of life,
increased mortality, increased rates of suicide attempts and completed suicides. The
financial impact of depression in the United States is significant, with an estimated
economic burden of individuals with MDD of approximately $210.5 billion dollars annually,
including direct costs, suicide-related costs, and workplace costs. Although MDD is often
regarded as a single disorder, it may encompass a variety of different etiologies with
overlapping symptoms and signs. An additional complication of MDD is the high risk of disease
recurrence; the presence of two or more chronic medical conditions, female gender, never
having been married, activity limitation, and less contact with family are all significant
predictors of MDD persistence.
MDD can be challenging to treat clinically, especially due to its propensity to be
treatment-resistant. Treatment-resistant Depression (TRD) is currently defined as failure to
achieve remission after two or more adequate pharmacologic trials. Current literature
suggests that the majority of individuals with MDD do not reach and subsequently maintain a
fully remitted state. Furthermore, results from the STAR-D trial indicate that the overall
likelihood of failure to achieve remission is increased with increasing number of failed
medication trials. At this time, the adjunctive use of atypical antipsychotics has been
well-investigated, but less is known about alternative adjunctive agents.
Current clinical guidelines for the treatment of depression establish basic principles for
establishing a treatment plan, preparing for potential need for long-term treatment, and
assessment of remission. For moderate major depression, first line treatment includes
antidepressant monotherapy and psychotherapy. For severe major depression, antidepressant
therapy can be augmented with an antipsychotic or ECT. Due to the overall disease burden of
unmanaged MDD, the prevalence of treatment resistant depression, high rates of primary
treatment failure, the additional study of alterative adjunctive therapy is both appropriate
and potentially impactful.
B. Efficacy of ECT in Treatment of MDD
ECT is considered to be a first line treatment for depression with psychotic features, but it
is also often used to treat patients with treatment-resistant depression (TRD). According to
a 2015 metanalysis, approximately one third of patients with MDD do not respond to ECT, with
failed medication trials and longer depressive episodes being the strongest predictors of
poor response. For treatment-resistant depression, the overall response rate is approximately
58%, compared to a 70% response rate in patients without TRD. When assessing the overall
efficacy of ECT, both remission and response are used, although remission is more frequently
used in clinical practice. In general, response has been defined as a 50% decrease in
baseline depression screening scores, while remission is defined as a score <7 on the
HAM-D17, or <10 with the 24-item HAM-D.
Assessments of remission in MDD after ECT treatment suggest that chronic depression,
medication resistance, longer episode duration, and younger age are all statistically
significant predictors of non-remission. Remission rates in ECT tend to be robust; data from
the CORE trial suggested an overall remission rate of 87%, which further delineates into 95%
remission rate with the presence of psychotic features and 83% without. Again, however, rates
of response and remission with ECT are lower for patients with treatment-resistant
depression, who may make up the majority of patients receiving ECT in clinical samples.
Although ECT is an effective treatment for MDD, up to one third of patients experience
significant memory loss and other adverse cognitive effects after receiving ECT. Strategies
to limit ECT's effects on memory, such as altering electrode placement (e.g., from bitemporal
to bifrontal), ensuring days off between treatments, and modulating pulse width, amplitude,
and frequency, may all have some benefit. Still, cognitive complaints remain one of the most
significant side-effects of ECT, and concerns about these effects represent a major reason
that patients who could benefit from ECT choose not to pursue it. Nootropic agents, thyroid
hormone, and donepezil have all been studied to mitigate the cognitive side effects, but no
consistent benefit has been shown and no current adjunctive medication is recommended.
C. ECT Augmentation
In order to maximize the efficacy of ECT in the treatment of MDD, several studies have
analyzed the benefit of augmentation with a variety of antidepressants, anesthetic agents,
and nutritional supplements. The most thoroughly studied has been adjunctive ketamine
administration with ECT, although findings have been inconsistent. A metanalysis of RCTs
investigating adjunctive ketamine and ECT in 2019 did not find that ketamine improves the
efficacy of ECT when compared to other anesthetic agents, although it was suggested that
ketamine could lead to improvement of depressive symptoms in the acute phases of ECT when
used in combination. There was no improvement in depressive symptoms with ketamine
augmentation by the end of the ECT series. The effect of ketamine on the neurocognitive side
effects associated with ECT remains unclear, but no clear benefit has been shown. In
addition, the long-term efficacy and safety of ketamine use in ECT is unknown, particularly
in the setting of maintenance treatment.
Many secondary agents have been studied in conjunction with ECT therapy, including caffeine
sodium benzoate (CSB), hyperventilation, and methylxanthines. However, these agents have
primarily been studied for their potential to lower seizure threshold or increase overall
seizure duration during ECT, without clear effects on overall ECT efficacy or symptom
improvement apart from effects on seizure characteristics. Less is understood about the
effects of nutritional supplementation, such as folate, thyroid hormone, tryptophan, or
S-adenosylmethionine (SAM-e). A case study from 2015 demonstrated improvement in response to
ECT after folate supplementation.
There is some research that has demonstrated associations between response/remission in ECT
and serum levels of various vitamins and essential nutrients. A 1994 study examining the
association between serum 5-methyltetrahydrofolate (5-MeTHF) levels and ECT response did not
demonstrate any significant association between ECT response and serum 5-MeTHF levels,
although low serum 5-MeTHF levels were positively correlated with depression symptom
severity. A pilot study has further analyzed serum levels of vitamin B12, folate, S100B,
homocysteine, and procalcitonin in patients undergoing ECT, and found that decreased vitamin
B12 and folate levels in conjunction with elevated homocysteine and S100B levels lead to
increased sensitivity to ECT, as evidenced by increased remission rates. Thyroid hormone has
been studied in the setting of ECT therapy, both as an adjunctive treatment for depressive
symptoms and as an agent to reduce neurocognitive deficits associated with ECT and has been
demonstrated to reduce ECT associated amnesia and promote a decrease in depressive symptoms.
Still, thyroid hormone has not been widely used in clinical practice, possibly because of
concerns about adverse effects.
D. Creatine and Depression
There is a growing body of literature surrounding the use of standardized,
pharmaceutical-grade nutrients (nutraceuticals) as augmentation therapy in the setting of
treatment resistant depression. A 2016 metanalysis concluded that adjunctive use of SAM-e,
l-methylfolate, omega-3, and vitamin D with antidepressant therapy leads to a reduction in
depressive symptoms, while isolated studies showed a similar effect with the use of creatine,
folinic acid, and an amino acid combination.
Creatine is a naturally-occurring organic acid that is known to play a role in brain energy
homeostasis and is hypothesized to be involved in the pathophysiology of depression via
altered energy metabolism. Oral creatine supplementation has been shown to increase cerebral
phosphocreatine levels, which is hypothesized to shift cerebral creatine kinase activity,
leading to increased ATP production. Early literature suggests that creatine may have an
antidepressant effect when used as adjunctive therapy in MDD, due to its role in altering
brain bioenergetics. Creatine has been shown to lead to an earlier treatment response in
patients treated with escitalopram, with positive response to therapy as early as 2 weeks
after beginning treatment. To date, no studies have investigated the use of creatine as an
adjunctive therapy to ECT.
Inadequate tissue bioenergetic functioning is thought to be related to disease pathology that
affects predominately organs that are comparatively highly metabolically active, like the
brain, liver, heart, and skeletal muscle. Because creatine supplementation has the potential
to increase bioenergetic stores, it may produce an antidepressant response by enabling
synaptogenesis, increasing connectivity between frontal cortical regions and the amygdala, or
enhancing frontal cortical functioning. ECT is thought to produce an antidepressant effect
largely by promoting synaptogenesis in frontal cortical regions via alterations in the
activity of NMDA and AMPA receptors, leading to upregulations in BDNF. Accordingly, creatine
has the potential to augment the efficacy of ECT by increasing bioenergetic stores available
for synaptogenesis. There is also some evidence to suggest that creatine has activity at NMDA
receptors, functioning as a neuromodulator that is released in response to electrical
stimulation. Its activity at NMDA receptors is potentially another explanation for its
antidepressant effect.
In a mouse model study of hyperhomocystinemia, a condition that leads to impaired creatine
kinase activity, creatine supplementation was shown to have neuroprotective effects, with
suggestion of memory improvement. Other mouse model studies have shown that creatine can
generate improvement of spatial memory, when compared to a traditional diet, as well as
improve learning and mitochondrial function. Several human studies have also demonstrated
that creatine supplementation is associated with multiple cognitive improvements, including
effects on attention, mood, working and long-term memory, and mental fatigue. These data
suggest that creatine is a potential approach for addressing the cognitive side effects
associated with ECT therapy.
E. Creatine Safety and Toxicity
Retrospective and prospective studies in humans have found no evidence for long-term or
short-term significant side effects from creatine supplementation taken at recommended doses.
Most controlled studies of creatine report an absence of side effects or report no
differences in the incidence of side effects between creatine and placebo. Mihic and
colleagues have demonstrated that creatine loading increases fat-free mass, but does not
affect blood pressure or plasma creatinine in adult men and women.
Reports in the popular media of links between creatine use and muscle strains, muscle cramps,
heat intolerance, and other side effects are not supported by the medical literature. Studies
conducted in athletes and military personnel indicate a substantial safety level of both
short- and long-term creatine supplementation in healthy adults. Concerns about high-dose
creatine's association with renal toxicity are based exclusively on two published case
reports; in one of the cases the patient had a documented pre-existing kidney condition.
Literature reviews and expert consensus panels have concluded there is no evidence supporting
an association between creatine and renal disease.
Concern has been raised regarding creatine's potential for adverse effects on the kidneys and
renal system, in part because creatine supplementation can increase urinary creatine and
creatinine excretion. In response to the concerns regarding creatine and renal toxicity,
Poortman's conducted studies of the effect of creatine supplementation on renal function,
showing that short-term supplementation does not alter glomerular filtration rate, and that
chronic supplementation of up to five years' duration did not impair renal function in
healthy athletes. Other researchers conducted a retrospective study of participants who had
been taking oral creatine from 0.8 to 4 years, at an average dose of 9.7 grams per day. Data
was collected on 65 health-related variables. These included a complete blood count, 27 serum
chemistries, and anthropometric data including vital signs and % body fat. On all 65
variables, group means fell within the normal clinical range. The authors concluded that that
long-term creatine supplementation does not result in adverse health effects.
Evidence to date suggests that even aged, debilitated, medically fragile patients are able to
tolerate creatine supplementation. Bender and colleagues studied elderly patients with
Parkinson's Disease who had received either placebo or four grams/day of creatine for two
years. They found no differences between the creatine and placebo groups in laboratory
markers of renal dysfunction. Interestingly, the participants who received creatine performed
better on the depression subscale of the Unified Parkinson Disease Rating Scale.
No strong evidence exists linking creatine supplementation and gastrointestinal discomfort.
These reports remain anecdotal, as there are no documented reports of creatine over placebo
resulting in stomach concerns.
1. Overview
Study Timeline
Week Procedures
Visit 1 Eligibility screening: MINI, HAM-D17, MOCA, QIDS, Labs, CGI, BSS, ATRQ
Visit 2 QIDS
31P-MRS Scan 1
Start creatine 20g per day or placebo
Start ECT (treatments 1 up to 3) as per routine
Week 2 (Subjects may begin to complete ECT, moving to follow-up phase) Creatine 5g per day or
placebo
Continuing ECT (treatments 3 or 4 through 6 or 7) as per routine
QIDS before each ECT
HAM-D17 , CGI, BSS, MOCA at end of week
Week 3 (Most subjects will complete ECT, moving to follow-up phase) Creatine 5g per day or
placebo
Continuing ECT (treatments 3 or 4 through 6 or 7) as per routine
QIDS before each ECT
HAM-D17 , CGI, BSS, MOCA at end of week
31P-MRS Scan 2 (if ECT complete)
Week 4 (Almost all subjects will complete ECT, moving to follow-up phase) Creatine 5g per day
or placebo
Continuing ECT (treatments 3 or 4 through 6 or 7) as per routine
QIDS before each ECT
HAM-D17 , CGI, BSS, MOCA at end of week
31P-MRS Scan 2 (if ECT completed this week)
Follow-up phase: 2 weeks (to start after completion of ECT or after week 4, whichever comes
first) Creatine 5g per day or placebo (for two weeks)
HAM-D17, CGI, BSS, MOCA two weeks after completion of ECT series
31P-MRS Scan 2 (if not yet completed)
All procedures performed by study personnel are research-related, but will be performed in
addition to routine care (see Table 1). None of the study activities will be considered
standard of care. There will be no cost to study subjects for their participation.
Participants will be compensated for their time and travel. Study visits will be supervised
by a board-certified/board-eligible psychiatrist or psychiatry resident and will be conducted
either by a board-certified/board-eligible psychiatrist, psychiatry resident, or an at least
baccalaureate degree level research assistant with training in the specific measures used.
Laboratory and other study interpretation will be conducted by a
board-certified/board-eligible psychiatrist.
To determine if an individual is eligible for study participation, a screening visit will be
conducted. Initially, a HAM-D17 will be administered to determine if the patient exhibits
depressive symptoms that are sufficiently severe for inclusion in the study. Next, the Mini
International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) will be administered to confirm a diagnosis
of a current major depressive episode. Study subjects will receive a baseline basic metabolic
panel (BMP) to assess for renal insufficiency, and vitals (these may have been obtained in
the course of ongoing clinical care). The QIDS, Antidepressant Treatment Response
Questionnaire (ATRQ), Clinical Global Impression (CGI), Beck Suicide Scale (BSS), and a MoCA
will be administered. Each participant will be assessed for history of ECT therapy, current
medications, and any other medical history.
Once entered into the study, depressed subjects will be randomized to receive either creatine
or placebo using a random-digit method that is based on computer-generated numbers. Block
randomization created by Investigational Drug Services (IDS) will be used to ensure equal
treatment allocation within each block. 50% of the trial's clinical subjects will be
randomized to placebo and the other 50% to active treatment. The study will be conducted as a
double-blind trial, with neither participants nor research staff aware of participant
assignment. Except in cases of medical emergency, the double-blind will not be "broken" until
recruitment is closed and the final participant has completed 6 weeks of treatment and 4
weeks of follow-up. The blind will be broken following the culmination of the study or at the
request of a medical professional dealing with a medical emergency in a case in which it
would help a study participant.
2. Electroconvulsive Therapy
Participants will be recruited from a population of patients who have already been referred
for ECT and who have had initial clinical assessments to determine whether ECT is indicated.
As this study is an add-on to standard clinical care only, routine ECT procedures will be
followed, though the ECT service (attending psychiatrist, anesthesiologist) will be notified
of subject participation. In general, subjects will, after being medically cleared for ECT
(psychiatric exam, physical exam, EKG, laboratory studies if indicated), received bifrontal
ECT every other day for between 6 and up to roughly 14 treatments, with a total duration of
treatment lasting between two and four weeks. Anesthesia for ECT is provided by a
board-certified anesthesiologist and comprises the use of methohexital, midazolam, etomidate,
or ketamine, as indicated, and at the discretion of the anesthesiologist. Participants may
receive interventions designed to augment the likelihood of a seizure being achieved, such as
a caffeine infusion, hyperventilation, or other techniques, at the discretion of the treating
ECT psychiatrist and anesthesiologist. After ECT, participants are monitored for recurrent
seizure/status epilepticus and for vital sign abnormalities for roughly thirty minutes, then
released to home (if outpatient) with 24 hour per day supervision by adult family members, or
else escorted back to the inpatient unit, where they again receive 24 hour per day
supervision by unit staff. Prior to each treatment, subjects complete a Quick Inventory of
Depressive Symptoms (QIDS) to assess their overall burden of depressive symptoms. The exact
duration of treatment/number of treatments is determined by the treating ECT psychiatrist,
based on clinical response. The study will record all pertinent variables related to ECT as
noted in the clinical record, including number of treatments, QIDS score, number of seizures
per treatment session, seizure duration, adverse effects, augmentation strategies, anesthesia
type, and vitals.
2. Drug Dosing
Participants who have been assigned to the creatine arm of the trial will receive a 20g
loading dose daily for 1 week starting as soon as possible before ECT begins and after
completion of the 31P-MRS; this will be administered in 4 divided doses of 5g each.
Participants will then receive 5 g creatine daily throughout the course of ECT therapy (~3
weeks), with continuation for an additional 2 weeks after the completion of the acute series
of ECT, again at 5g daily (thus, up to 5 weeks total supplementation with creating 5g per
day, depending on the length of ECT) Placebo recipients will receive an inert, relatively
tasteless powder matched to creatine (e.g., glucose). Creatine doses are based on doses that
have previously been shown to be safe and efficacious.
3. Measures
We plan to use the following for determining participant baseline and data collection:
- Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D17) (at baseline, the end of week 1, the end of
week 2, the end of week 3, and two weeks after completion of the ECT series)
- Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS) (at baseline and prior to each ECT
session)
- Antidepressant Treatment Response Questionnaire (ATRQ) (at baseline)
- Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) (at baseline)
- Clinical Global Impressions Scale (CGI) illness improvement subscale (CGI-I) (at
baseline, week 1, week 2, week 3, and two weeks after completion of the ECT series)
- Beck Suicide Scale (BSS) at baseline, week 1, week 2, week 3, and two weeks after
completion of the ECT series)
- Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) at baseline, week 1, week 2, week 3, and two weeks
after completion of the ECT series)
4. Imaging
1. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (Siemens 3T MRI system)
MRI scans will be conducted twice: after the baseline visit and prior to initiating
ECT, and following completion of the ECT series (i.e., after ~3 weeks, and during
the 2 week post-ECT follow-up period). The 3.0 Tesla Siemens Prisma whole-body
clinical scanner (Siemens Medical Solutions, Erlangen, Germany) located within the
University Neuropsychiatric Institute (UNI) will be used to acquire this data.
Participants will first undergo a routine anatomic MRI protocol, which includes MRI
images acquired in the axial and coronal planes. Specifically, the anatomic scan
protocol consists of a T1 weighted structural scan (MP2RAGE), and double-echo T2
weighted scan, and a Fluid Attenuated Inversion Recovery scan (FLAIR). The purposes
of the MR anatomic screening session include screening subjects for gross
structural abnormalities and acquiring images for use in brain cortical thickness
measurements. Anatomic MRI examinations will be performed with Siemens 64 channel
head coil. After localization, anatomical imaging will be obtained using a
T1-weighted, sagittal oriented 3D-Magnetization Prepared Rapid Gradient Echo
(MPRAGE) sequence (TR/TE/TI 5000/2.93/700 ms, matrix 256x256, FOV 256x256 mm, flip
angle 4 degree, slice thickness 1.0 mm, slab 176 mm, bandwidth 240 Hz/pixel). Axial
proton-density and T2 weighted images will be acquired to screen for brain
structural abnormalities using 2D Double echo T2 weighted turbo spin echo (TSE)
sequence (TR 7110 ms, TE 28/84 ms, FOV 240x210, slice thickness 3 mm, flip 150°,
bandwidth 179 Hz/pixel). FLAIR sequence (TR/TE/TI 8000/90/2500 ms, slice thickness
5 mm, FOV 240x168, voxel size 0.8x0.6x5.0 mm, bandwidth 200 Hz/pixel, turbo factor
13) will be used to detect juxtacortical-cortical lesions. All anatomic MRI images
will be read by a board-certified, CAQ neuroradiologist to screen for structural
abnormalities.
2. Measurement of In-Vivo Brain Chemistry Using Phosphorus-31 Magnetic Resonance
Spectroscopy (31P-MRS)
Phosphorus spectroscopy data will be acquired on the same Siemens 3T system. We aim
to keep the duration of each MRSI examination at or under 25 minutes. A 3D-MRSI
sequence with elliptically weighted phase-encoding will be used to collect 31P-MRSI
data to minimize T2 signal decay. Acquisition parameters will be: data matrix size
16x16x8; TR 2000 ms; tip-angle 90 degree for hard RF pulse; Rx bandwidth ±1 kHz;
complex-points 1024; readout duration 256 ms; pre-acquisition delay 0.3ms; FOV
240x240 mm2 ; 16 NEX.
3. Spectral Analysis of 31P-MRS Data
Spectroscopy will be analyzed using Liner Combination of Model Spectra (LCModel), which
analyzes an in vivo spectrum as a linear combination of model in vitro spectra from
individual metabolite solutions. This model is fully automatic and user independent. A nearly
model-free constrained regularization method is used for convolution and baseline. For
quantification, absolute metabolite concentrations (institutional units) will be estimated
using the unsuppressed water signal as an internal concentration reference. Also, total
creatine levels will be used as a denominator for calculating the relative concentration for
the comparison with previous reports. The standard Siemens libraries of model metabolite
spectra provided with LCModel will be used in the basis set. The metabolites from the basis
set will include alanine, aspartate, creatine, gamma-amino butyric acid, glucose, glutamine,
glutamate, glycerophosphocholine, glutathione, myo-inositol, scyllo-inositol, lactate,
N-acetylaspartate, N-acetylaspartylglutamate, phosphocholine, phosphocreatine,
phosphoethanolamine, and taurine. For the reliability of detection, the Cramer-Rao lower
bounds (CRLB) will be determined: the acceptable upper limit of estimated standard deviations
will be set at 20%.
Post processing of 31P-MRS data will be conducted using jMRUI software (jMRUI v. 4.0,
European Community) with the AMARES algorithm (Advanced Method for Accurate, Robust and
Efficient Spectral fitting of MRS data with use of prior knowledge). Before fitting the FID
(Free-induction-decay) data, a Hamming filter will be applied to reduce signal contamination
from neighboring voxels, with apodization of 10 Hz line broadening. Fourier transformation,
frequency shifts correction, and zero-order/first order phase correction as well as baseline
correction will be applied. The structural image-processing tool FSL (FMRIB Software Library,
Release 4.1, University of Oxford) will be used to account for gray matter, white matter, and
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), in order to correct the partial volume effects on metabolite
concentrations. The MRS grid will be positioned over the images in an identical fashion
between baseline and treatment scans for each participant. The peak area for each 31P-MRS
metabolite will be calculated as a percentage of the total phosphorus signal.