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Schizoaffective Disorder clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Schizoaffective Disorder.

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NCT ID: NCT02417142 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Exenatide Weekly Injections as an Adjunctive Treatment in Patients With Schizophrenia

Start date: September 2014
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This is a 24-week, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of exenatide weekly injection (2mg per dose) as an adjunctive therapy in 70 schizophrenia subjects to examine exenatide's effects on negative symptoms and cognition.

NCT ID: NCT02415764 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

OnTrack>An Online Role-Playing Game: A Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Grant

Start date: June 2015
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Our team will develop a prototype game (OnTrack>The Game) in which users play the role of a person who has experienced First Episode Psychosis and move through animated role-playing scenarios, learning practical tips for engaging in care, playing mini-games to develop self- advocacy skills, and seeing stories of hope and recovery (brief video vignettes). The game is designed in an engaging comic book style in which the player is presented with realistic situations designed to promote engagement and the development of trusting relationships. Following development of the prototype, the investigators will conduct a pilot study to develop preliminary data to determine feasibility of a large-scale Phase 2 effectiveness study. This pilot study aims to demonstrate proof of concept for OnTrack>The Game. The investigators will recruit a sample of patients/consumers (n=25) from OnTrackNY sites that offer services for those experiencing their first psychotic episode. Quantitative data will be collected through baseline and follow up surveys that utilize instruments to measure knowledge and attitudes about recovery, perceptions of stigma, feelings of empowerment and sense of hopefulness. The investigators will also conduct semi-structured interviews with a subset of participants to explore engagement in treatment and attitudes toward the game.

NCT ID: NCT02411526 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Safety and PK Trial With Injectable ZX003 (Risperidone-SABER®) Compared to Risperdal® Consta® in Stable Schizophrenia

Start date: February 2015
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This is an open-label, multiple dose, PK and safety study in patients with chronic, stable schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder.

NCT ID: NCT02398279 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

L-arginine add-on Therapy in Patients With Schizophrenia

Start date: June 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates the addition of L-Arginine to the usual regimen in the treatment of schizophrenia in adults. As a requisite of crossover design, half of the participants started with L-Arginine and the other half with placebo and switched over after a three weeks use and one week of a washout period.

NCT ID: NCT02386605 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Motivational Negative Symptoms in Schizophrenia: Intervention and Biomarkers

Start date: March 28, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Negative symptoms significantly interfere with daily functioning among individuals with schizophrenia. They are strongly related to functional impairments [1] and contribute to the poor community outcomes of Veterans with schizophrenia. Motivational negative symptoms interfere with obtaining and maintaining employment [2], forming social relationships[3] and living independently [4]. Developing treatments to effectively reduce negative symptoms is important to achieve improvements in daily functioning. Recent empirical studies report that psychosocial interventions for negative symptoms can have a moderate to large effect size on community functioning and negative symptom severity. However, the treatments that have been utilized so far are either cognitive-behavioral therapy interventions that require over a year of weekly individual sessions and thus are very resource- and time-intensive, or they are skills-training groups that do not address any of the cognitive and motivational aspects of negative symptoms. Although group treatments are increasingly hailed as the gold standard for schizophrenia, there is currently no group intervention explicitly for motivational negative symptoms and functional deficits. Furthermore, treatment development and clinical trials are increasingly reliant on neurophysiological measures of clinical severity and treatment response and so far there are not identified negative symptom biomarkers. The current CDA proposal will test a group-based treatment based on established motivational enhancement (MI) techniques, augmented with cognitive-behavioral approaches, compared to an active control group treatment, for improving motivational negative symptoms in Veterans with schizophrenia. I will assess the efficacy of MI with measures from two outcome domains: 1) negative symptoms (clinical ratings) and 2) functional outcomes (real-world improvements in social, instrumental, and independent living). I will assess the relationship between these outcomes and neurophysiological biomarkers (pupillometry and electroencephalography (EEG)). Participants will be randomly assigned to the MI treatment or a control treatment for weekly 1-hour sessions for 12 weeks. The assessment battery will be administered at baseline, at completion of treatment, and at 6-month follow-up. The investigators will enroll 60 Veterans with schizophrenia that are low functioning and have high negative symptoms across the 4 years of the study. This proposal is designed to examine group-based MI for reducing negative symptoms and improving functioning in key domains (i.e., interpersonal, instrumental, and independent living skills). Moreover, it will thoroughly investigate biomarkers of negative symptoms with pupillometry and EEG. The development and evaluation of this recovery- oriented group MI treatment for Veterans with disabling negative symptoms will yield results that can inform larger treatment trials and neurophysiological measurement of negative symptoms in Veterans with schizophrenia.

NCT ID: NCT02364544 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Improving Care and Reducing Cost Study

ICRC
Start date: April 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of the Improving Care and Reducing Cost (ICRC) Program, is to improve disease management and the overall process of care in treating the chronic illness schizophrenia in order to reduce ER visits and hospital days while providing better care, better health and increased patient satisfaction. This will be done by fostering innovation in the use of technology and by training and deploying a new cadre of personnel in the behavioral health field: Mental Health/Health Technology (MH/HT) Case Managers.

NCT ID: NCT02360813 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Cognitive Remediation Therapy Within a Secure Forensic Setting

Start date: August 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This clinical trial tests the feasibility, effectiveness and patient satisfaction with cognitive remediation therapy for patients diagnosed with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder within a forensic hospital. It is hypothesised that patients receiving cognitive remediation therapy will have an improvement in cognitive performance, real world functioning, symptoms, violence risk and benefit more from additional psychosocial treatment programmes over time relative to patients receiving treatment as usual. Furthermore it is hypothesised that it will be feasible to carry out such a study and that patients will report high rates of satisfaction with cognitive remediation therapy. Finally it is hypothesised that differences on the effectiveness measures will be maintained at 6 month follow up after the end of treatment.

NCT ID: NCT02360228 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

STimulation to Improve Auditory haLLucinations

STILL 2
Start date: May 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Investigating the effects of non-invasive transcranial current stimulation as a treatment for auditory hallucinations in patients with schizophrenia.

NCT ID: NCT02354001 Completed - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators for Women of Child-bearing Age With Schizophrenia

Start date: April 2011
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the project is to investigate the use of Raloxifene (a new form of estrogen) in the treatment of young women with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder. Raloxifene is a Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulator (SERM),which means that it can affect the central nervous system (CNS) effects of estrogen (eg. improving emotional symptoms, memory, information processing and concentration), without adversely affecting reproductive tissue/organs such as breast, uterus and ovaries. The investigators are conducting a double-blind, placebo controlled, three month study comparing the psychotic symptom response of women with schizophrenia in both groups. One group will receive standard antipsychotic medication plus 120mg Raloxifene, while the second group will receive standard antipsychotic medication plus oral placebo.

NCT ID: NCT02337439 Active, not recruiting - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Perceptual Deficits in Schizophrenia

Start date: August 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In this study, participants with schizophrenia and schizoaffective are given computer exercises to complete. The goals of the study are to determine whether: 1) any of the computer exercises can improve information processing problems in schizophrenia, 2) improvements in information processing are related to other cognitive improvements, and 3) there are changes in brain activity associated with using the computer exercises. The study will involve clinical interviews, cognitive tests, and frequent computerized cognitive training over the course of 2 months. Some participants will also have electroencephalography, a non-invasive test that measures brain activity, to determine whether there are changes in brain activity with the computer training.