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Psychotic Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Psychotic Disorders.

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NCT ID: NCT04580134 Recruiting - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

CLOZAPINE Response in Biotype-1

Start date: March 1, 2022
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The CLOZAPINE study is designed as a multisite study across 5 sites and is a clinical trial, involving human participants who are prospectively assigned to an intervention. The study will utilize a stringent randomized, double-blinded, parallel group clinical trial design. B2 group will serve as psychosis control with risperidone as medication control. The study is designed to evaluate effect of clozapine on the B1 participants, and the effect that will be evaluated is a biomedical outcome. The study sample will be comprised of individuals with psychosis, including 1) schizophrenia, 2) schizoaffective disorder and 3) psychotic bipolar I disorder. The investigators plan to initially screen and recruit n=524 (from both the existing B-SNIP library and newly-identified psychosis cases, ~50% each) in order to enroll n=320 (B1 and B2) into the RCT.

NCT ID: NCT04579887 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Parkinson Disease Psychosis

Presence Hallucination in Parkinson's Disease

Start date: August 17, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Investigation on how robotically mediated sensorimotor stimulation induces and triggers presence hallucinations in patients with Parkinson disease

NCT ID: NCT04557124 Recruiting - Psychosis Clinical Trials

USS Training to Improve Social Function in People With Psychosis

Start date: December 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Psychotic spectrum disorders (PSD) are associated with poor social function. By doing this study, the investigators hope to learn which of two different types of 2-month long training courses is more effective in improving day-to-day interactions and quality of life.

NCT ID: NCT04497857 Recruiting - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Academic-Community EPINET (AC-EPINET)

AC-EPINET
Start date: March 16, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators propose to examine the effects of CSC services delivered via TH (CSC-TH) versus the standard clinic-based CSC model (CSC-SD) on engagement and outcomes in a 12-month, randomized trial.

NCT ID: NCT04452175 Recruiting - Smoking Clinical Trials

Cigarette Consumption After switchinG to High or Low Nicotine strENght E-cigaretteS In Smokers With Schizophrenia

GENESIS
Start date: October 30, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Smokers with schizophrenia spectrum disorders have high rates of morbidity and mortality from smoking-related diseases compared with the general population and current options for smoking cessation in this vulnerable group are unsatisfactory. Considering that most people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders continue smoking, it is urgent to consider alternative and more efficient interventions to reduce or prevent their morbidity and mortality. Switching to combustion-free technologies for nicotine delivery (I.e. e-cigarettes) could be a pragmatic and much less harmful alternative to tobacco smoking with the possibility of significant health gains. Emerging research is suggesting that ECs may be useful for smoking cessation and relapse prevention in people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders. In particular, a study conducted with JUUL e-cigarette with 5% nicotine strength showed that this product had sufficient nicotine delivery and product appeal to determine high success rates in heavy smokers with schizophrenia spectrum disorders. In consideration of these preliminary findings, we hypothesized that switching smokers with a schizophrenia spectrum disorder diagnosis to JUUL e-cigarette with 5% nicotine strength could result in higher success rates compared to JUUL e-cigarette with 1.7% nicotine strength. Recent work indicates that nicotine PK of the JUUL e-cigarette with 5% nicotine strength (a device that utilizes a nicotine salt formulation) approximates the nicotine delivery of combustible cigarettes and that the 5% nicotine strength product is far more efficient in delivering nicotine compared to the sister product with 1.7% nicotine strength. Both products are identical in their appearance, making them suitable for a double-blind study design.

NCT ID: NCT04414930 Recruiting - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Pharmacologic Augmentation of Targeted Cognitive Training in Schizophrenia

Start date: November 9, 2020
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

These studies look to conduct efficient pilot testing of a novel intervention strategy for chronic psychotic disorders - Pharmacologic Augmentation of Cognitive Therapy (PACT) - via an experimental medicine approach. Antipsychotics are the major therapeutic tool for chronic psychotic disorders, including schizophrenia, but do not significantly alter their course or real-life impact. Specific cognitive therapies achieve modest symptom reduction and improved function and cognition in psychosis patients, including "bottom-up" sensory-based targeted cognitive training (TCT). While benefits of TCT are evident at the group level, almost half of all patients demonstrate little or no cognitive gains after 30-40 hours (h) of TCT. For patients and clinicians, the costs and logistical complexities associated with these time- and resource-intensive interventions can be prohibitive. We propose and will test a novel "augmentation strategy" for using medications to specifically enhance the benefits of TCT in schizophrenia.

NCT ID: NCT04414215 Recruiting - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Cognitive Training for Emotion Regulation in Psychotic Disorders

Start date: June 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The current study examines the efficacy of a cognitive training intervention for improving emotion regulation in psychotic disorders. it is hypothesized that the cognitive training program will enhance prefrontal activation, leading to enhanced emotion regulation.

NCT ID: NCT04411225 Recruiting - Early Psychosis Clinical Trials

Effects of Cannabidiol (CBD) Versus Placebo as an Adjunct to Treatment in Early Psychosis

Start date: June 1, 2022
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This is an outpatient, single center, between-group, double blind, placebo controlled design. Approximately 120 adolescents and adult patients will be randomized to either have their treatment augmented with Cannabidiol Oral Solution (CBD) or with a matching CBD placebo for 8 weeks. The study will examine CBD as an augmentation strategy in early psychosis. It is hypothesized that CBD will improve symptoms, neurocognition, markers of inflammation and eating behaviors. Importantly, moderators and mediators of the CBD effects will be explored.

NCT ID: NCT04373317 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Parkinson's Disease Psychosis

Pimavanserin vs. Quetiapine for Treatment of Parkinson's Psychosis

C-SAPP
Start date: October 24, 2022
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) sometimes experience symptoms affecting their movement, such as slowness, tremor, stiffness, and balance or walking problems. Many patients also have other symptoms not related to movement, called non-motor symptoms, which may affect one's mood or emotions, memory or thinking, or cause one to see or hear things that aren't real (hallucinations) or believe things that aren't true (delusions). Hallucinations or delusions, together called psychosis, occur in up to 60% of PD patients at some point in time. Parkinson's disease psychosis can sometimes be associated with decreased quality of life, increased nursing home placement, increased rate of death, and greater caregiver burden. There are approximately 50,000 Veterans with Parkinson's disease receiving care in the VA, and up to 30,000 (60%) of them will experience psychosis at some point in time. Quetiapine is an antipsychotic drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that is the most commonly used medication to treat PD psychosis, but more studies are needed to determine if it works for this condition and is also well tolerated and safe. Pimavanserin is a newer antipsychotic drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) specifically to treat PD psychosis, but more studies are needed to determine if it works and its safety. The purpose of this research is to gather additional information on the safety and effectiveness of both Quetiapine and Pimavanserin. By doing this study, the investigators hope to learn which of these medications is the most effective course of treatment for people with PD psychosis.

NCT ID: NCT04370730 Recruiting - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Dimensional and Developmental Profiles of Psychosis in Children and Adolescents

PSYDEV
Start date: June 2, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Five collaborating sites in France will study the broad spectrum of schizophrenia in children and adolescents. Patients will be studied with diagnostic interviews, developmental histories, dimensional clinical ratings, comprehensive cognitive assessments, neuroimaging and DNA (copy number variant) analyses (in families and patients who agree), and follow-up of course of illness, cognitive status and treatment response to specific antipsychotic drugs. The goal of the study is to test a prior hypothesis about clinical subgroups in this population and to test whether these subgroups predict antipsychotic medication response.