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Clinical Trial Summary

Perinatal depression affects 10-15% of women postpartum and has a recurrence rate of 40%. Women who develop perinatal depression might be particularly susceptible to the rapid and large changes in sex steroid hormones, particularly estradiol, across pregnancy to postpartum. This trial aims 1) to evaluate the preventive effect of transdermal estradiol treatment in the immediate postpartum on depressive episodes in a subgroup of women at high-risk for perinatal depression, and 2) to determine if a set of biomarker gene transcripts can identify this subgroup and thus form the basis for future personalised prevention or treatment. The MAMA Trial is a double-blind, 1:1 randomised, placebo-controlled trial. The trial involves maternity wards at three university hospitals in the Capital Region of Denmark. Women who are singleton pregnant in the third trimester with a prior history of perinatal depression are eligible to participate. Participants will be randomised to either estradiol patches (200 μg per day) or placebo patches for three weeks starting immediately postpartum. The primary statistical analysis will be performed based on the intention-to-treat principle. A sample size of 220 will provide the trial with 80% power (alpha 0.05, beta 0.2) to detect a reduction in postpartum depression of 50% and to tolerate a drop-out of around 20%.


Clinical Trial Description

Major depressive disorder affects twice as many women as men. Women are at increased risk for depression in life phases, where endogenous sex steroid hormone milieu changes; such as in puberty, during late pregnancy to postpartum and across menopausal transition. This includes a subtype of MDD, perinatal depression (PND) that affects 10-15% of mothers postpartum and has a recurrence rate of 40% in subsequent pregnancies. PND is a disabling disorder that affects the entire family, including development and future health of the infant. The underlying risk and resilience mechanisms in MDD are far from clear, consequently, current treatment strategies are suboptimal. Women who develop PND might be particularly sensitive to the rapid and large changes in sex steroid hormone milieu, seen in the transition from high levels of sex steroid hormones, in particular estradiol, in pregnancy to low levels in the hormone withdrawal phase postpartum. Thus, PND is most likely has a distinct pathophysiology, which may provide a unique opportunity for protecting mental health by targeted short-term prevention in the immediate postpartum period. Intriguingly, recent human data has provided direct evidence for sex hormone manipulation to provoke subclinical depressive symptoms in about 12% of healthy volunteers. The phenomenon was linked to changes in estradiol, which were induced by the pharmacological manipulation with a Gonadotrophin Releasing Hormone agonist. Estradiol affects critical domains and key brain regions known to be dysfunctional in women with major depressive disorder. Estradiol sensitivity predisposes to PND, which can be demonstrated at the level of gene transcription in clinical cohorts, and is also directly supported by recent research results. Such peripheral markers of estradiol sensitivity may prove useful in identifying individuals at excess risk for PND, also in their first pregnancy, and thus may help direct preventive efforts for the women who can benefit the most. Transdermal estradiol emerges as a promising preventive treatment option for the postpartum onset of PND supported by epidemiological, preclinical, and clinical research, robust and rapid response to estradiol in some pilot postpartum depression (PPD) trials with few side effects and minimal breastmilk passage to the infant. Further, transdermal estradiol appears to be effective in preventing clinically significant depressive symptoms among perimenopausal women, which is another group of women in hormonal transition phase. Previously, a double-blind randomized, controlled trial (RCT) showed effect of treatment with transdermal estradiol on manifest PND. A recent pilot RCT with transdermal estradiol as a candidate treatment for postpartum depression failed to achieve its primary outcome, but notably, did reduce depressive symptoms postpartum compared to placebo. Rather than treating manifest depressive episodes postpartum, the investigators here propose a different approach: to target, and potentially prevent, early risk mechanisms in the first three weeks postpartum, and to direct this preventive strategy towards women in high risk. This immediate and early postpartum timing corresponds to the peak risk period and covers the peak of hormonal decline postpartum. This trial aims 1) to evaluate the preventive effect of transdermal estradiol treatment in the immediate postpartum on depressive episodes in a subgroup of women at high risk for Perinatal Depression with postpartum onset, and 2) to determine if a set of biomarker gene transcripts can identify this subgroup and thus form the basis for future personalized prevention or treatment. Methods The Maternal Mental Health (MAMA) Trial is designed as a double-blind, 1:1 randomized, placebo-controlled superiority trial setting involving maternity wards at three university hospitals in the Capital Region of Denmark. Women who are singleton pregnant in third trimester with a prior history of perinatal depression (onset before six months postpartum) and aged 18 to 45 years are eligible to participate. The women will be assessed for eligibility by the midwife or obstetrician when attending antenatal care at the outpatient clinic. Eligible participants who verbally consent to receive more information about the trial will subsequently be contacted by telephone. Written informed consent is obtained before inclusion in the MAMA Trial. The randomisation will be conducted by the capital region pharmacy. Trial participants, clinical care providers, research assistants, investigators, outcome assessors, and data analysists will all be blinded to allocation. The investigators calculated that a sample of 2*88 complete cases would provide the trial with 80% power (at a two-sided alpha level of 0.05) to detect a reduction in postpartum depression of 50%. Thus, with a study number of 2*110, the design is considered solid and can tolerate 22% dropouts. The primary statistical analysis will be performed on basis of the intention-to-treat principle. The investigators will compare data on the primary outcome for the two groups for the superiority of estradiol over placebo with Pearson's chi-squared test. Secondary outcomes with a continuous distribution will be compared between groups with respect to the mean (Student's t-test) if the distribution is unimodal and symmetric, or to the median if the distribution is unimodal but asymmetric, or otherwise to the ranks of the observations (Mann-Whitney test). A test on the difference in proportions will be used for binary secondary outcomes and a Pearson's chi-squared test will be used for categorical data. As a sensitivity analysis, we will use an instrumental variable approach to estimate causal treatment effect using randomisation as an instrument. Ethical considerations The short-term administration of estradiol transdermally is not expected to pose unacceptable or intolerable side-effects, disrupt breastfeeding or pass to the infant in any dosages that may pose a risk to the infant. Should un-expected side effects for mother or infant occur or be suspected, the treatment will be disrupted immediately. When removing the patch, serum concentrations of estradiol return to baseline levels within 24 hours. Participants who develop levels of mental distress or depressive symptoms that approach clinical thresholds will be referred to relevant and timely psychiatric care by a trained clinician. All potentially sensitive personal data will be anonymized. The trial will adhere closely to the Helsinki declaration. Prospect There is a pressing need to develop a preventive strategy to depressive episodes during pregnancy and childbirth, that is targeted, cheap, short-term, and easy to implement. Such work holds promise to positively affect women's mental health, their families, and importantly, if successful, may also improve long-term outcomes of the infant's physical and mental health. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04685148
Study type Interventional
Source Rigshospitalet, Denmark
Contact Vibe Gedsø Frøkjær, MD, PhD
Phone +45 35456714
Email vibe@nru.dk
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 1/Phase 2
Start date February 3, 2021
Completion date December 31, 2030

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