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Active clinical trials for "Depressive Disorder, Major"

Results 1271-1280 of 2240

Venlafaxine ER Long-Term Extension Study for Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)

Major Depressive Disorder

This is a phase 3, flexible-dose, open-label, multi-center study. The subjects who complete the week 8 visit in the prior double-blind study (B2411263) will be eligible to participate in this study. This study consists of 10 month treatment phase and 1-3 week tapering phase. The 2 follow-up visits will be evaluated after 2 weeks and 4 weeks of last study medication dosing.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Efficacy and Safety of GLYX-13 in Subjects With Inadequate/Partial Response to Antidepressants

Major Depressive Disorder

GLYX-13 is a NMDA receptor glycine site partial agonist being studied in subjects with major depressive disorder (depression) who have responded inadequately to another antidepressant drug during the current episode. This trial will assess the effects of GLYX-13 on depression when added to another antidepressant drug that the patient is already taking.

Completed26 enrollment criteria

Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) for Elderly Patients With Major Depression

Major Depression

ECT (electroconvulsive therapy) is mostly given to patients between the age of 60 - 85 years. There is limited evidence on the efficacy and cognitive side-effects of right unilateral (RU) and bifrontal (BF) electrode positions, the placements that are considered safe for the elderly. As far as the investigators know no randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have yet been published describing this population treated with BF or RU ECT. Non-demented depressed patients will be randomized to either method (n = 2x36). Symptom intensity, global cognitive function and biomarkers will be related to 20 healthy comparators. Testing, evaluation of depression and blood-tests are done before ECT-treatment, after a series of 6-16 ECT and 3 months after terminated ECT-treatment.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

A Study of JNJ-40411813 as Supplementary Treatment to an Antidepressant in Adults With Depression...

Major Depressive Disorder

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and overall safety and tolerability of treatment with adjunctive JNJ-40411813 compared to placebo in patients with MDD with anxiety symptoms being treated with an antidepressant.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Enhanced Collaborative Depression Treatment in Primary Care: The RESPECT-D-E Trial

Depressive DisorderMajor3 more

Primary care physicians have emerged as the predominant mental health care providers for diagnosing and treating depression. The majority of patients with mood disorders receive treatment in the primary care setting, within which approximately 10-30% of all patients present with a depressive disorder. Comprehensive 'Collaborative Care' models of depression management significantly improve depression outcomes and health-related quality of life. Core features of these programs include use of a trained depression care manager to closely coordinate with primary care clinicians, support treatment recommendations, provide patient education, conduct patient follow-up to ensure adequate treatment, and manage as-needed access to psychiatrists for patients with more complex presentations. Evidence based Collaborative Care models do not currently weave in the use of web-based or mobile technologies. These technologies offer unique features that may make collaborative depression care more effective. The digital health coaching program for depressive symptoms enhanced during Phase I of the current project is a web-based tool featuring video, text, links and graphics which provide patients with education, self-management techniques, tailored feedback, and tools for tracking treatment progress. The RESPECT-D (Re-engineering Systems of Primary Care Treatment of Depression) intervention is a collaborative depression management model for primary care. The primary objective of this project is to compare the efficacy of an enhanced Collaborative Care model for depression (RESPECT-D-E) to the standard model (RESPECT-D) for patients with minor and major depression and dysthymic disorder. This study will be a randomized controlled trial with 150 participants who are receiving antidepressant medication treatment in the primary care setting. The primary objectives are: reduction in subject reported depressive symptoms, improvement in subject reported health related quality of life and improvement in subject adherence to treatment regimen as demonstrated by self-report measures and clinician-administered assessment. The investigators hypothesize that compared to RESPECT-D at 12 weeks, participants randomized to RESPECT-D-E will demonstrate: a greater reduction in depressive symptoms, a greater improvement in health-related quality of life and a greater satisfaction with quality of depression care received.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Schema Focused Therapy for Chronic Depression

Chronic Major Depressive Disorder

Schema focused therapy (SFT) is an innovative treatment approach to chronic, lifelong problems that incorporates cognitive, behavioral, experiential and psychodynamic elements and techniques. This study will determine whether SFT is a suitable and effective treatment for chronic depression in terms of acute effects and the prevention of relapse/recurrence. The secondary aim of this study is to identify the underlying mechanisms of change in SFT that lead to recovery from depression and the prevention of future relapse/recurrence.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

A Safety Study in Participants With Major Depressive Disorder

Depressive DisorderMajor

The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of LY2216684 administered once daily (QD) in the adjunctive treatment with a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) for up to approximately 1 year in participants with major depressive disorder (MDD) who are partial responders to their SSRI treatment.

Completed23 enrollment criteria

Long-term Bilateral Theta Burst Stimulation for the Treatment of Major Depression

Major Depression

Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation has been shown to be moderately effective in the treatment of major depression. Theta burst stimulation (TBS) is a new form of rTMS that may exert larger effects. This sham-controlled study examines the effectivity of daily bilateral TBS to the dorsolateral frontal cortex over 6 weeks in 2x16 patients with major depression add on to the local standard of a combined pharmacological/psychotherapeutical treatment.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Antidepressant Adherence Via AD_IVR

Major Depressive Disorder

Antidepressants are the most frequently prescribed class of psycho¬tropic medications and the most common treatment for depression and anxiety disorders-yet patient adherence is poor and is widely viewed as contributing to reduced effectiveness. However, traditionally-delivered adherence promotion programs are complex, staff-intensive, and costly-barriers to wider adoption, implementation, and maintenance of these programs in real-world settings. Our aim is to carry out a trial of a low-cost, IT-enabled Antidepressants adherence program, specifically a direct-to-patient, automated telephone interactive voice recognition (IVR) intervention to boost patient Antidepressants persistence. We will conduct a randomized clinical trial enrolling at least 6,000 Kaiser Permanente NW Region health plan members ages 21 to 75, who had recently started on Antidepressants medications for depression and/or anxiety diagnoses. Participants will be randomized one of four arms;1. a no contact control arm, 2. a treatment as usual (TAU) control condition 3. to TAU plus the IVR automated telephone program and 4. a TAU plus the IVR automated telephone program plus receipt of psycho-education materials about antidepression medication use. Recruitment will continue for up to 18 months, with periodic participant-level follow-up assessment for the intervention participants for 40 weeks. The IVR intervention portion of the program will deliver reminder and/or tardy calls timed to projected Antidepressants refill dates. The intervention also optionally offers brief psycho-education, or transfer to a live pharmacist or the Kaiser mail refill pharmacy. The primary outcome will be the Estimated Level of Persistence with Therapy (continued us of Antidepressants medications). This will be based on prescription refill data abstracted from the Kaiser's electronic medical record (EMR). We hypothesize that participants in the IVR + psycho-education materials study arm will have a significantly higher rate of Antidepressants persistence than those in the TAU control condition ons only IRV call arms. We will also conduct cost-effectiveness analyses to assess the value-for-money (cost per depression free day gained, and cost per quality adjusted life year gained) of the IVR technology compared to TAU. Costs will include IVR development and implementation as well as EMR-derived healthcare utilization data (visits, medications, etc.), augmented with participant report of out-of-plan services.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

A Comparison of Cognitive and Dynamic Therapy for Depression in Community Settings

Major Depressive Disorder

The goal of this study is to compare supportive-expressive therapy, a type of psychodynamic psychotherapy, with cognitive therapy for the treatment of depression in community mental health consumers. Hypothesized mediators of treatment will also be examined.

Completed8 enrollment criteria
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