DBS for TRD With the Medtronic Summit RC+S
Major Depressive DisorderTreatment Resistant DepressionOf the estimated 30 million Americans who suffer from Major Depressive Disorder, approximately 10% are considered treatment resistant. Deep brain stimulation (DBS) to a region of the brain called the subcallosal cingulate (SCC) is an emerging strategy for treatment resistant depression (TRD), which involves placement of electrodes in a specific region of the brain and stimulating that area with electricity. This is believed to reset the brain network responsible for symptoms and results in a significant antidepressant response. A series of open-label studies have demonstrated sustained, long-term antidepressant effects in 40-60% of patients who received this treatment. A challenge to the effective dissemination of this fledgling treatment is the absence of biomarkers (objective, measureable indications of the state of the body and brain) to guide device placement and select stimulation parameters during follow-up care. By using an experimental prototype DBS device called the Summit RC+S (Medtronic, Inc) which has the ability to both deliver stimulation to and record electrical signals directly from the brain, this study aims to identify changes in local field potentials (LFPs), specific electrical signals that are thought to represent how the brain communicates information from one region to another, to see how this relates to DBS parameter settings and patient depressive symptomatology. The goal of this study is to study LFPs before and during active DBS stimulation to identify changes that correlate with the antidepressant effects of SCC DBS. The study team will recruit 10 patients with TRD and implant them with the Summit RC+S system. Participants will be asked to complete short questionnaires and collect LFP data twice daily for the first year of the study, as well as have weekly in person research procedures and assessments with the study team for up to one year. These include meetings with the study psychiatrist, psychologist, symptom ratings, and periodic EEGs (scalp brainwave recordings). A brief discontinuation experiment will be conducted after 6 months of stimulation, in which the device will be turned off and patterns of LFP changes will be recorded. The entire study is expected to last about 10 years, which is the expected life of the battery that powers the device. All participants are required to live in the New York metropolitan area for the first two years of the study.
Home-based Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) for Major Depressive Disorders (MDD)
Major Depressive DisorderThis is an open label pilot feasibility telemedicine study. This pilot will involve a total of 37 at-home stimulation sessions (30-minutes each) of multichannel excitatory tDCS targeting the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) administered over 8 weeks, with a follow-up period of 4 weeks following the final stimulation session.
Home-Based CR and tDCS to Enhance Cognition in Persons With Mild Cognitive Impairment and Late Life...
Mild Cognitive ImpairmentMajor Depressive Disorder3 moreThe overall goals of this project are to assess the feasibility and impact of designing and implementing an at-home intervention aimed at preventing long-term cognitive decline and improving cognition in individuals currently at-risk for developing AD.
Transdiagnostic Brain-Behavior Profiling to Enhance Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Response
Major Depressive DisorderSocial Anxiety DisorderMany patients with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) and generalized Social Anxiety Disorder (gSAD) are treated with cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) but few have meaningful improvement. MDD and gSAD are diseases of brain dysfunction that manifest as impaired emotion regulation; CBT teaches emotion regulation strategies but how it works in the brain remains largely unknown. Individual differences in brain function related to emotion regulation may make some patients better suited for CBT and CBT may remedy the brain dysfunction that underlies these disorders. This project will compare CBT with a placebo psychotherapy (i.e., supportive therapy) in MDD and gSAD to test, validate, and refine brain-based markers and examine mechanisms of change to examine how CBT works and for whom.
Fixed Order, Open-Label, Dose-Escalation Study of DMT in Humans
Major Depressive DisorderDepressionThe goal of this fixed order, open-label, dose-escalation study is to investigate the safety and efficacy of specific doses of dimethyltryptamine (DMT) in humans.
Observation of Ketamine Treatment Safety and Tolerability in Adult Psychiatry Clinic Medical University...
Major Depressive DisorderPost Traumatic Stress Disorder4 moreAdult Psychiatry Clinic Medical University of Gdańsk (MUG) is a healthcare facility that provides ketamine treatment to adult patients suffering from mental health conditions. The Clinic especially treats individuals suffering from treatment-resistant disorders, like - mood disorders, anxiety disorders, obsessive-compulsive and related disorders, trauma and stressor-related disorders, somatic symptom and related disorders, and dissociative disorders. Herein, this naturalistic observation aims to look at the safety and tolerability of ketamine treatment to further develop the understanding of ketamine in the use of psychiatry.
Anti-suicidal Effects of Buprenorphine In Depressed Individuals
Suicidal IdeationMajor Depressive DisorderThis study aims to examine the effect of low-dose buprenorphine as an add-on to treatment-as-usual for suicidal ideation in individuals with major depression, and investigate the functional brain activity related to its potential anti-suicidal effect.
Mobile Screening for Major Depressive Disorder in Adults From an Ethnically and Socioeconomically...
Major Depressive DisorderMajor depressive disorder (MDD) is a mental disorder leading to a variety of emotional and physical problems affecting almost 300 million people worldwide. Long-term treatments for MDD, including medication and therapy, imposes a significant financial burden on society. Mobile-based screening interventions might be a promising approach for effectively reducing MDD symptoms. The investigators hypothesize that the mobile-based screening strategy evaluated in this proposal will substantially reduce the burden of MDD over time, increase participants' quality of life, and decrease MDD-related disparities
Ketamine Versus Electroconvulsive Therapy in Depression
Depressive DisorderMajor1 moreWhile there are effective treatments for depression available, some patients do not see results with these options. Often, these patients are referred to electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) which has drawbacks such as adverse side effects, cost, and limited access. Recent research shows that intravenous ketamine may be an alternative option for these patients due to its rapid antidepressant effect sustained with multiple treatments. This study will recruit 240 participants from the ECT waiting list at the five participating hospitals, and randomize them to either the ketamine or ECT treatment arm. Participants in the ketamine treatment arm will receive 0.5mg/kg ketamine intravenously (IV) over 40 minutes as described in the study schedule. Participants in the ECT treatment arm will receive ECT as described in the study schedule and as decided by their treating physician. Throughout the study, clinical, neuroimaging, molecular, and cognitive assessments will be conducted. The aim of this study is to show that compared to ECT, ketamine treatment produces faster results, has less side effects, requires less or shorter hospitalizations, and is less expensive. The measures collected throughout the study (clinician scales, self-reports, blood samples, and neuroimaging) may help with predicting if future patients will respond to ECT or ketamine. This could lead to faster, more effective treatment for patient with depression.
Selenium as Augmentation Treatment for Sertraline Resistant Major Depression
Major DepressionThe main goals of antidepressant treatments are to achieve remission of depressive episodes and prevent recurrences. However, clinical trials designed to approve antidepressants targets a response rate of at least 50%, which is considered partially effective. Therefore, there is a need for new treatment strategies, including augmentation with other substances such as lithium. This research aims to verify through a pilot study, the effect of selenium as an augmentation treatment for sertraline-resistant major depression. This clinical trial was designed to be a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial evaluating the effect of selenium or placebo in subjects diagnosed with major depression who have not responded to treatment with sertraline