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RESET-psychotherapy: the Effectiveness of Trauma-focused Therapy in Patients With Depression and Childhood Trauma

REStoring Mood After Early Life Trauma: the Effectiveness of Trauma-focused Therapy in Patients With Depression and Childhood Trauma

Depression is a debilitating psychiatric disorder with a recurrent and progressive course. Around 25% of depressive patients has experienced moderate to severe levels of childhood trauma (CT), resulting in earlier onset and more severe and recurrent depressions. There is currently no targeted treatment for CT-related depression. This is problematic as patients with CT-related depression respond poorly to standard depression treatments. The RESET-psychotherapy study proposes an innovative, targeted disease-modifying treatment strategy for CT-related depression. The main objective is to investigate the effectiveness of trauma-focused therapy (TFT), as an addition to regular depression treatment ('treatment as usual'; TAU), in reducing depression symptom severity in patients with CT-related depression. 158 adult patients will be randomized to receive a 12-week treatment with 1) TAU or 2) TFT in combination with TAU. The primary outcome measure is defined as depression symptom severity after 12 weeks treatment (post-treatment), measured with the Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology - Self Rated (IDS-SR).

NCT05149352 — Major Depressive Disorder
Status: Recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/major-depressive-disorder/NCT05149352/

Digital Therapeutic for Depression After Head Injury in Current and Former US Military Personnel

A Single-Blind, Randomized, Controlled Trial of a Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Digital Therapeutic to Combat Symptoms of Depression in Service Members and Adults With a History of MildTraumatic Brain Injury

The Center for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine (CNRM) Clinical Trials Unit has developed the first cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) digital therapeutic (DTx) mobile application to counteract depressive symptoms in military service members and veterans with a history of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). This trial will assess the efficacy of the novel CBT-DTx for depression following mTBI compared to an educational comparison DTx.

NCT05147506 — Depressive Symptoms
Status: Active, not recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/depressive-symptoms/NCT05147506/

Low Intensity Focused Ultrasound: a New Paradigm for Depression and Anxiety - LIFU

Low Intensity Focused Ultrasound: a New Paradigm for Depression and Anxiety

Objective: Preliminary studies show that low intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU), a new type of non invasive brain stimulation (NIBS), may be able to reach deep structures of the brain involved with depression and anxiety, that remain inaccessible using current forms of NIBS with precision. In this study, the investigators will test if this technique can be used to change brain activity in areas that are connected to depression and anxiety symptoms. The primary objectives of this study are to test the safety and tolerability of LIFU, evaluate the feasibility of using LIFU to reduce brain activity, and evaluate the feasibility of simultaneous fMRI-LIFU. If the results of this study are positive, what the investigators learn will serve as a strong foundation for the future development of innovative treatments for a variety of psychiatric disorders. Research Procedures: 25 patient and 25 healthy veterans will be recruited. Visits will take place at the VA Providence Healthcare System. During some visits, healthy and patient participants may undergo clinical and research neuroimaging, neuropsychological testing, complete questionnaires, and participate in clinical/neurological assessments. Healthy veterans will not receive LIFU and will only attend 2 study visits. Patients are expected to attend up to 8 visits over 6 weeks. However, some may require up to 6 extended follow-ups after visits 5 or 8, in which case they would attend a total of 11 or 14 visits over 6 months. Two patient visits will include the LIFU application, following FDA safety guidelines. Patients will be assigned either to an experiment in which LIFU stimulation will be delivered immediately prior to a task or to an experiment in which stimulation will be delivered during the task. Within each experiment, patients will be assigned to first receive either LIFU stimulation to the study target or anatomical control. Study staff, but not participants will know which location is being targeted in case safety concerns arise. Safety assessments will be conducted at follow-up visits. A clinician will be available during LIFU administration /follow-up visits. Assuming no injury or other concerns are present, patients will then repeat this process again, receiving stimulation targeting other brain area not previously selected.

NCT05147142 — Depression
Status: Recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/depression/NCT05147142/

Personalized Therapeutic Neuromodulation for Anhedonic Depression

Personalized Therapeutic Neuromodulation for Anhedonic Depression

This study will investigate the anti-anhedonic efficacy of a novel neurostimulation strategy termed accelerated intermittent theta burst stimulation (aiTBS) in participants with treatment resistant depression (TRD).

NCT05144789 — Treatment Resistant Depression
Status: Recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/treatment-resistant-depression/NCT05144789/

Perception of Music and Facial and Vocal Emotions in a Population With and Without Depression - MusInDep

Perception of Music and Facial and Vocal Emotions in a Population With and Without Depression

Depressed subjects display a cognitive bias of information processing and emotional self-regulation, which reinforces negative experiences more than positive ones, known as the negativity bias. The link between depressive disorder and negativity bias has been much studied in terms of genetic, neurobiology, structural and functional neuroanatomy and cognitive sciences. It has been admitted that depressed subjects show impairment of facial expressions and prosody recognition, and of implicit memory. Induction of depressive or elated mood with musical excerpts listening in healthy subjects influences facial emotions perception, respectively by reducing or enhancing recognition skills. However, no study to date already explored the interest of music-induced positive mood for alleviating negativity bias in depressed elderly population. Main objective : to assess the impact of exposure to positive valence musical excerpts, on evaluation of facial emotions intensity, in a population of elderly patients hospitalized for depression, compared to neutral valence music listening. Secondary objectives : to assess the impact of exposure to positive valence musical excerpts, on facial and vocal emotions recognition, and on implicit memory of faces, compared to neutral valence music listening. The same methodology is also applied in a sample of control participants over 65 years to study the mood induction effect by music in elderlies.

NCT05143983 — Depression
Status: Recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/depression/NCT05143983/

Sleep Related Breathing Disorders, Anxiety, Depression and Quality of Life Assessment in Behcet's Disease

Sleep Related Breathing Disorders, Anxiety, Depression and Quality of Life Assessment in Behcet's Disease

Assessment of Sleep-related breathing disorders, anxiety, depression and quality of life in Behcet's disease.

NCT05142995 — Behcet Syndrome
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/behcet-syndrome/NCT05142995/

Effectiveness of an Integrated Care Pathway for Depression: Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial - CARIBOU-2

Effectiveness of an Integrated Care Pathway for Adolescent Depression: A Quasi-experimental, Multi-site, Cluster Controlled Trial (Edited on March 7th, 2024)

This a stepped wedged cluster RCT with two intervention arms--Treatment As Usual (TAU) and an Integrated Care Pathway (ICP). Eligible participants are between the ages of 13 and 18, who present to community mental health agencies with depressive symptoms as the primary concern. The primary objective is to establish the clinical effectiveness of the ICP intervention in the community setting relative to TAU, with respect to reducing evaluator-rated depressive symptoms. The secondary objectives are to explore changes in clinician-rated function and caregiver-rated symptoms for youth receiving the ICP intervention relative to TAU. The third objective is to explore the implementation effectiveness of the ICP intervention, namely investigating: feasibility, fidelity, cost and acceptability. Edited on March 7th, 2024: This is a quasi-experimental, multi-site cluster controlled clinical trial design with two intervention arms--Treatment As Usual (TAU) and an Integrated Care Pathway (ICP). Eligible participants are between the ages of 13 and 18, who present to community mental health agencies with depressive symptoms as the primary concern. The primary objective is to establish the clinical effectiveness of the ICP intervention in the community setting relative to TAU, with respect to reducing evaluator-rated depressive symptoms. The secondary objectives are to explore changes in clinician-rated function and caregiver-rated symptoms for youth receiving the ICP intervention relative to TAU. The third objective is to explore the implementation effectiveness of the ICP intervention in the community setting, namely investigating: feasibility, fidelity, cost and acceptability.

NCT05142683 — Major Depressive Disorder
Status: Recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/major-depressive-disorder/NCT05142683/

ICBT (Internet Based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) for Maternal Depression: Community Implementation in Head Start

ICBT for Maternal Depression: Community Implementation in Head Start

Low income women of childbearing age are at increased risk for depression and often do not receive needed treatment. Investigators developed Mom-Net, an on-line cognitive behavioral treatment (CBT) for depression to address the needs of low income women of childbearing age. The intervention program also includes live coaching to help the mothers engage and learn the CBT material. Mom-Net has been shown to be highly effective in reducing depressive symptoms and improving parenting behavior and child adjustment, in earlier controlled trials. In this project the investigators are examining whether access to Mom-Net can be expanded by delivering it in Head Starts (HS). To address that broad question, the investigators will focus on two sets of scientific questions: 1. Implementation Questions: e.g., Can HS agencies deliver the program successfully; do HSs choose to sustain the program after the research project ends; what agency characteristics are associated with successful delivery of Mom-Net); 2. Effectiveness Questions: e.g., Does Mom-Net reduce maternal depression when delivered by Head Start agencies, with HS staff doing the coaching? Head Start agencies will be randomized to deliver either Mom-Net with the usual high-intensity coaching or with a low-intensity coaching alternative. Within each agency, depressed mothers will be randomized to receive either: 1) Mom-Net program; or 2) Treatment as Usual (TAU;) referral to community mental health providers). Mothers initially assigned to the TAU condition, will have the option of receiving Mom-Net at a later date. Mothers will participate in assessments of depressive symptoms, parenting behavior, and child adjustment at Time 1 (T1; prior to randomization); and Time 2 (T2; after the intervention period) and Time 3 (T3; one year after T1).

NCT05142384 — Depression
Status: Recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/depression/NCT05142384/

Neurocardiac Predictors of Treatment Response to rTMS in Depression - NCP

Neuro-cardiac Predictors of Treatment Response to rTMS in Depression: A Mechanistic Study Using Interleaved TMS-fMRI

Heartbeat is controlled by the brain and is regular but flexible to change in response to environmental and internal stimuli. This feature is known as heart rate variability (HRV). Major depressive disorder (MDD) has been associated with diminished HRV and this is a reflection of abnormal brain function caused by MDD. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is a treatment that stimulates specific areas of the brain. The goal of this study is to test the hypothesis that rTMS induces changes in connectivity between the area of the brain stimulated with rTMS and deeper areas in the brain associated to heart rate regulation. 110 patients with TRD will be recruited and will undergo a concurrent TMS-fMRI session before receiving a course of iTBS to the L-DLPFC for 30 sessions at 120% rMT.

NCT05139862 — Depression
Status: Not yet recruiting
http://inclinicaltrials.com/depression/NCT05139862/

Brief Internet-delivered Intervention for Children and Adolescents With Anxiety and Depression Symptoms

Brief Internet-delivered Cognitive-behavioral Intervention for Children and Adolescents With Anxiety and Depression Symptoms During the COVID-19 Pandemic: a Randomized Clinical Trial

Investigators developed a brief standardized internet-delivered cognitive-behavioral program for treating anxious and depressive symptoms in children and adolescents in the context of COVID-19 pandemics in Brazil. A 2-arm parallel-randomized controlled clinical trial will be conducted to test the efficacy of this program (intervention group), in comparison with a educational-only intervention program based on videos (active control group). 280 children and adolescents (8 to 17 years-old) with clinically significant anxious and/or depressive symptoms will be recruited through internet and social media. They will be randomized either to the intervention (n=140) or active control group (n=140). Participants will be recruited from across the country. The therapeutic program consists of 5 weekly sessions covering the following contents: education on stress reactions, family communication, relaxation and mindful techniques, emotion recognition, management of irritability, behavioral activation, and cognitive restructuring. The educational program consists of 15 videos covering the same content. Participants in the intervention group will also have access to these videos. Both child/adolescent and at least one caregiver will be required to take part in the sessions (and watch the videos). Participants will be assessed at the beginning (baseline; T0) at the end (endpoint; T1), and 30 days after the intervention (follow-up; T2) with standardized questionnaires, through an interview with a blinded investigator. Participants that develop severe symptomatology requiring further support during the intervention (such as psychiatric pharmacological treatment and/or more intensive psychotherapy) will be referred to adequate treatment. During the week prior to the intervention and the first week after its end, adolescents (older than 12 years-old) in both groups with access to a smartphone will be asked to report their momentary mood, emotions, and stress several times a day using the same smartphone app that will deliver the educational content to both groups. Adolescents will also be asked to install a second smartphone application that captures data from the phone sensors to provide proxies on behaviors associated with depression, such as social isolation (by the proximity with other devices, time spent on social media, as well as environmental sound and light) amount of inactivity (by assessing the maximum distance traveled throughout the day), among others.

NCT05139433 — Childhood Depression
Status: Completed
http://inclinicaltrials.com/childhood-depression/NCT05139433/