Study of the Safety and Efficacy of OPC-34712 as Adjunctive Therapy in the Treatment of Patients...
Major Depressive DisorderPrimary: To compare the efficacy of OPC-34712 to placebo as adjunctive treatment to an assigned open-label marketed antidepressant treatment (ADT)in patients who demonstrate an incomplete response to a prospective eight week trial of the same assigned open-label marketed ADT.
Optimization of IV Ketamine for Treatment Resistant Depression
Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)Treatment Resistant Depression (TRD)Existing treatments for major depressive disorder (MDD) generally take weeks to months to exert their maximal benefit. There is an urgent need to develop rapid-acting treatments for MDD. Ketamine, a high-affinity N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptor antagonist, has been used as a standard intravenous (IV) anesthetic agent for many years in both pediatric and adult patients. Beyond its well-established role in anesthesia and pain management, there is emerging evidence that ketamine may have rapid antidepressant properties for patients with severe mood disorders. In this study we are investigating whether ketamine can have an antidepressant effect compared to midazolam. Midazolam has similar anesthetic effects compared to ketamine but has not been shown to be an antidepressant, and is therefore acting as an active control in this study. The study period can last up to 8 weeks, depending on your response to the study medication. There are two required overnight stays in our Research Commons as part of this study.
Randomised Placebo-controlled Venlafaxine-referenced Study of Efficacy and Safety of 5 and 10 mg...
Major Depressive DisorderThe purpose of this Venlafaxine-referenced study is to evaluate the efficacy, safety and tolerability of two fixed doses of Vortioxetine in the acute treatment of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD).
Ziprasidone Augmentation of SSRIs for Patients With Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) That do Not...
Major Depressive DisorderThe purpose of this study is to see if adding the study drug, ziprasidone, to an antidepressant medication helps improve symptoms of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). We are studying the drug's effectiveness in treating depression, as well as its safety when it is added to another drug. Hypothesis A: There will be a difference in the percentage of responders in the two treatment conditions during phase 2; response rates will be higher for the ziprasidone group.
Does Sleep Quality Change After Switch From Wellbutrin SR to Wellbutrin XL in Patients With Major...
Mood DisorderWellbutrin (bupropion) is an effective antidepressant (Thase, M 2005). It exists in instant release (IR), sustained release (SR) and extended release (XL) forms. The IR formulation was never approved for use in Canada. The XL formulation allows for once daily dosing. Wellbutrin is both a norepinephrine and dopamine reuptake inhibitor, and as such increases the synaptic concentration of both neurotransmitters. This adds to its positive effects on cognition, apathy, tiredness and executive functioning. The increased activation may be also responsible for some of its side effects such as initial insomnia and reduced sleep efficiency, especially when taken at night.
Patient Tolerability Study of GSK163090
Depressive DisorderMajor1 moreThe purpose of this study is to determine the safety and tolerability of a new drug, GSK163090, which is being developed for the treatment of depression and anxiety disorders.
Childhood Adversity, Genetic Polymorphisms and Stress in First Onset Major Depression
DepressionThe Blue Sky Project, a 5-year study funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, seeks to examine how genetics and early life experiences work together to cause a person's very first onset of depression by increasing sensitivity to stress.
Does Dual Therapy Hasten Antidepressant Response?
Major Depressive DisorderThis study will utilize a randomized double-blind design to evaluate whether initial treatment with two anti-depressant medications (escitalopram and bupropion) results in more rapid remission and greater over-all remission rates than either monotherapy in 240 depressed subjects.
Combining Medications to Enhance Depression Outcomes
Major Depressive DisorderThis study will compare whether a combination of antidepressant medications is better than one antidepressant medication alone when given as initial treatment for people with chronic or recurrent major depressive disorder.
Sequential Use of Fluoxetine for Smokers With Elevated Depressive Symptoms
Major Depressive DisorderNicotine Dependence1 moreThe primary purpose of this study is to determine whether, among smokers with elevated depressive symptoms, sequential antidepressant pharmacotherapy with fluoxetine (20 mg) begun 8 weeks prior to and extended throughout standard smoking cessation treatment with transdermal nicotine patch (ST-TNP) will result in superior short-and long-term smoking cessation outcomes compared to sequential pharmacotherapy with placebo medication combined with ST-TNP. The secondary aim of the study is to test the hypothesis that, among smokers with elevated depressive symptoms, sequential treatment with fluoxetine will result in lower levels of depressive symptoms and negative mood and higher levels of positive mood immediately prior to and throughout the course of smoking cessation treatment relative to the placebo condition.