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Active clinical trials for "Depressive Disorder"

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Schema Therapy for Patients With Chronic Treatment Resistant Depression

Treatment Resistant DepressionChronic Depression

The goal of this clinical study is to test a particular form of psychotherapy, called schema therapy, for people with difficult-to-treat depression (when depression is very lengthy or difficult to cure with antidepressive medication). Researchers will compare the group of participants receiving schema therapy to a group receiving standard psychotherapeutic treatment to see if schema therapy is more effective on depression symptoms and other important issues for the participant. The main question the study aims to answer is: - Can schema therapy be a more effective treatment for difficult-to-treat depression than other forms of psychotherapy offered in psychiatry today? People who have difficult-to-treat depression are a special group of patients who are more strained in a wide range of areas of life than other people with depression. They also more often have childhood trauma, as well as simultaneous personality disorder or personality traits that brings challenges in everyday life. Currently we can not offer a sufficiently effective psychiatric treatment for this group of people. Schema therapy was developed to help patients who do not have sufficient effect of the usual psychotherapeutic treatments. It also addresses personality disorders or problematic traits and childhood trauma directly in the therapy. The project will include 129 participants in total, of which half will receive schema therapy. Treatment is provided at four psychiatric centers at both the Southern and the Capital Region of Denmark. Participants receiving schema therapy will be given 30 sessions of weekly therapy, as well as the opportunity for the rest of the standard care package in the Danish secondary mental health system, that is, treatment with psychopharmacological medicine and meetings with next-to-kin and other parts of the participant's support system. Participants receiving the standard treatment will receive 6-16 sessions of individual or group therapy with a range of other psychotherapies that are not schema therapy, as well as the other parts of the standard care package as listed above. If schema therapy proves to be more effective for treatment of difficult-to-treat depression than the treatment offered today, it may give rise to more extended use of schema therapy in and outside psychiatry. This means that the toolbox for the treatment of difficult-to-treat depression is expanded with a new specialized and effective psychotherapeutic tool.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Comparison of Aerobics and Pilates Exercises in Primigraivda Females

DepressionSleep Quality1 more

Many physical changes, as well as emotional disturbance, occur during pregnancy. In addition to external physical changes, some mental health problems such as depression, sleep and psychosis significantly increase during pregnancy. Aerobic exercises during pregnancy in primigravida females has a positive effect on depression and sleep as a primary and secondary preventive strategy. The study will be a randomized clinical trial and Setting will be children hospital and Mehmooda hospital sheikhupura. This study will be completed in ten months and convenient sampling technique will be used. Fourty two subjects will be assigned randomly by using lottery method into two groups. Group A will receive Aerobic exercises and Group B will receive Pilate exercises. Warm up (walking) and cool down period of ten minutes will be performed by both groups. Data will be collected from all participants at baseline and after 8 weeks of treatment by using CES-D and PSQI questionnaire. After assessing the data will be analyzed by using parametric or non-parametric test by using SPSS-25.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Effects of Epidural Labor Analgesia With Esketamine on the Incidence of Postpartum Depression in...

Postpartum Depression

Postpartum depression is a common psychological abnormality during the puerperium, which seriously affects maternal and neonatal health. Esketamine, the S-enantiomer of ketamine, is twice as potent as ketamine and can be safely used for cesarean section and labor analgesia. However, it is not clear whether esketamine used for epidural labor analgesia can significantly reduce the incidence of postpartum depression. This study intends to explore the incidence of maternal prenatal depression and to investigate the effect of esketamine for epidural labor analgesia on postpartum depression and maternal and neonatal outcomes in parturients with prenatal depression through a multi-center, large-scale and high-quality clinical trail, in order to provide a clinical basis and theoretical basis for the application of esketamine used for epidural labor analgesia in postpartum depression and further reduce the incidence of postpartum depression, promote maternal and infant health, and ensure maternal and infant safety .

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Influence of Nutrition in Depression Treatment (INDEPT)

Major Depressive Disorder - MDD

The hypothesis to be tested by this study is that an intervention promoting adherence to the MedDiet can decrease symptoms of depression in patients with elevated inflammation biomarkers, namely C-reactive protein (CRP) and Interleukin 6 (IL-6) diagnosed with Major Depression Disorder (MDD), under treatment with antidepressant medication for a period of time less than or equal to 6 months. The main aim of this study is to understand if promoting the adherence to the MedDiet, as an adjuvant strategy in the treatment of MDD, is effective in decreasing symptoms of depression in MDD patients, with elevated levels of inflammation biomarkers. Other specific objectives of the study are To assess the association between adherence to MedDiet and changes in inflammatory biomarkers; To assess the association between changes in inflammatory biomarkers with symptoms of MDD; To evaluate the association between adherence to MedDiet and effectiveness of psychiatric treatment of MDD; To characterize the association between adherence to MedDiet and changes in health-related quality of life To evaluate the economic cost-effectiveness of dietary counselling, as an adjuvant treatment in MDD. The study will have a duration of 12 weeks, with a randomized parallel-group open controlled trial design, with two parallel groups with an allocation ratio of 1:1 - (a) intervention arm with six nutritional consultations with a registered nutritionist, promoting adherence to MedDiet, in addition to MDD Treatment-As-Usual (TAU) and (b) control group arm benefitting only from MDD TAU. A follow up assessment will be performed at 6- and 12-months. Having into consideration an attrition of 40 percentage at the end of the intervention, the minimum sample size estimated is 190 (95 per arm). The main outcome of the trial, changes in symptoms of depression, will be evaluated using the Beck Depression Inventory Second Edition (BDI-II).

Recruiting14 enrollment criteria

The Safety and Efficacy of Psilocybin in Patients With Treatment-resistant Depression and Chronic...

Treatment Resistant DepressionSuicidal Ideation

This study aims to explore the safety and tolerability of a single dose of psilocybin (25mg) administered under supportive conditions to adult participants with TRD and chronic suicidal ideation

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Depressed IAPT Non-Responders

Major Depressive Disorder

If not treated sufficiently, Major Depression tends to take a recurrent or chronic lifetime course that is associated with a significantly increased risk for physical and neurodegenerative disorders. In England, Increasing Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) services provide evidence-based treatment for patients with common mental disorder with an access rate intended to rise to 25% of this population by 2021. However, about 50% of the depressed patients who come to the end of this pathway, have not responded sufficiently. Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy, a treatment combining training in mindfulness meditation and components from cognitive therapy, has previously been shown to be effective in treatment non-responders, but further evidence is needed to establish this finding more definitively and to see whether positive effects can be achieved within the stepped care approach of IAPT. In order to address these issues, this study will investigate whether MBCT can effectively reduce symptoms and lead to sustained recovery in patients suffering from Major Depressive Disorder who have not sufficiently responded to high-intensity evidence-based therapy and have thus come to the end of the Increasing Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) care pathway. It will also test whether the introduction of this treatment can reduce subsequent service use. The investigators will randomly allocate 234 patients who have not sufficiently responded to IAPT high-intensity therapy to take part either in MBCT or to continue with TAU in a three-centre (London, Exeter, Sussex) RCT. Reductions in depression symptomatology will be assessed using the Patient Health Questionnaire-9, a standard measure of the severity of depression used in IAPT treatment monitoring, at 10-week (secondary outcome) and 34-week follow-up post-randomisation (primary outcome). Service-use information will be collected using the Adults Service Use Schedule. If successful, the current project would provide the necessary evidence base for the introduction of MBCT for IAPT high-intensity non-responders.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Low-dose Ketamine Infusion Among Adolescents With Treatment-resistant Depression

Treatment-resistant DepressionMajor Depressive Disorder

In the past decades, the prevalence of adolescent depression and suicide increased significantly in Taiwan and worldwide. To date, the suicide mortality is the second mortality cause in the adolescent and young adult population in Taiwan. Previous studies reported that up to 40% of adolescents with major depressive disorder did not respond to at least two traditional antidepressants with the optimal dose and adequate duration. Those patients would be considered the cases with treatment-resistant depression (TRD), which is related to the poor prognosis, chronic depressive course, higher suicidal risk, severer cognitive dysfunction, and greater family burdens. However, much less studies investigated the treatment strategy for adolescent TRD compared with that for adult TRD. In this decade, low-dose ketamine infusion has been proved as a rapid-acting antidepressant for adult patients with TRD. In recent 5 years, the investigators study team finished two randomized, double-blind, and placebo-control trials to support the rapid antidepressant and anti-suicidal effect in Taiwanese adult patients with TRD. The investigators published several SCI studies about the investigators clinical findings and the underlying brain mechanisms. In the following 4 years, the investigators will conduct a new randomized, double-blind, and placebo-control trial in the adolescent TRD. It will be the first clinical trial for ketamine effect in adolescent TRD worldwide. The investigators will enroll 54 adolescents aged between 13 and 19 with TRD in four years. The investigators hypothesize that low-dose ketamine will be effective and well tolerable for adolescents with TRD.

Recruiting17 enrollment criteria

Follow-up Study With Clinical Vitamin D Supplementation Trial on Patients With Depression (DepFuD)...

DepressionDepressive Disorder

Depression affects 350 million people worldwide. In the light of the global disease burden statistics, the efficacy of current treatments for depression appears insufficient. Thus, research on novel treatment interventions and predictors for good treatment response are warranted. Earlier prospective follow-up studies and intervention studies suggest that several bio-psychosocial factors, including high serum concentrations of vitamin D, are related to better treatment outcomes. In this follow-up study with randomized clinical vitamin D supplementation trial on patients with depression, the investigators aim to clarify how a six-month intervention with vitamin D supplementation affects treatment response, recovery, and the biological pathways related to depression. This aims to finding potential sub-groups getting benefits from vitamin D supplementation. In addition, the investigators want to investigate and characterize factors related to recovery from depression and working ability in depression patients in the long-term. The investigators are especially interested in the bio-psychosocial factors and the aims include examining both the individual's positive resources. The trial will start with a six-month double-blinded randomized controlled trial with vitamin D supplementation. The aim is to recruit altogether 3028 patients with non-psychotic, unipolar depression, aged 18-65 years, who are referred to the recruitment sites for treatment for depression. The participants will be randomized to low (10 µg/day) or high (100 µg/day) vitamin D supplementation group. Clinically necessary antidepressant treatments will continue during the intervention as needed. After six months of intervention, the participants will be followed up at 18 months and at 5 years. Several measurements will be conducted during the intervention and follow-up period. Participants will fill a variety of clinical questionnaires and questionnaires with background information. All participants give blood samples for biomarker analyses at time points 3, 6, 18 months and 5 years. Clinical interviews of mental disorders (e.g. SCID) and anthropometric measurements (e.g. weight, height, blood pressure) will be carried out.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Depressed Mood Improvement Through Nicotine Dosing 3

Depressive Disorder

Deficits in cognitive control are core features of late-life depression (LLD), contributing both to emotion dysregulation and problems with inhibiting irrelevant information, conflict detection, and working memory. Clinically characterized as executive dysfunction, these deficits are associated with poor response to antidepressants and higher levels of disability. Improvement of cognitive control network (CCN) dysfunction may benefit both mood and cognitive performance, however no current pharmacotherapy improves Cognitive Control Network deficits in LLD. The study examines the hypothesis that nicotine acetylcholine receptor agonists enhance Cognitive Control Network function. This effect may resultantly improve mood and cognitive performance in LLD. Small, open-label studies of transdermal nicotine (TDN) patches have supported potential clinical benefit and provided support that transdermal nicotine administration engages the Cognitive Control Network. This blinded study will expand past open-label trials supporting potential benefit in LLD. It will examine TDN's effect on depression severity and cognitive control functions measured by neuropsychological testing. The study will evaluate 60 eligible and enrolled participants over a 3-year period.

Recruiting21 enrollment criteria

A Phase II, Multicentre, Randomised, Double-blind, Controlled Study to Investigate the Safety, Tolerability,...

Major Depressive Disorder

Safety, Tolerability, pharmacokinetics and efficacy of a single administration of COMP360 in participants with Major Depressive Disorder with one prior treatment failure.

Recruiting16 enrollment criteria
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