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Personalized Indications for CBT and Antidepressants in Treating Depression
Sponsor: Nova Scotia Health Authority
Summary
Depression currently affects close to 2 million Canadians and is the leading cause of disability worldwide. Pharmacological treatments (antidepressant medication) and psychological treatments such as cognitive-behavioural therapy are available for depression, but the majority of those who receive treatment have an unsatisfactory response. On average, the combination of pharmacological and psychological treatment achieves better results than either treatment alone. However, the apparently superior results of combination treatment may be due to the fact that different individuals preferentially respond to pharmacological or psychological treatment. The invesitagtors have discovered several clinical factors and biomarkers that predict poor response to commonly used antidepressant medication: history of childhood maltreatment, loss of interest and reduced activity, a biomarker of systemic inflammation, and a genetic marker of sensitivity to environment. Indirect evidence suggests that the same factors may indicate the need for psychological treatment, but their usefulness as differential predictors of psychological and pharmacological treatment outcomes remains to be established. The investigators will test the hypothesis that a pre-determined clinical variables (history of childhood maltreatment, loss of interest and reduced activity) and biomarkers (serum C-reactive protein, a marker of systemic inflammation, and insulin resistence, an indicator of metabolic health) differentially predict response to antidepressants and to cognitive-behavioural psychotherapy with clinically significant accuracy. If this hypothesis is supported, the resulting predictor will allow personalized selection of treatment for depression, leading to improved outcomes and healthcare efficiency. Additional objectives include replication of additional predictors and integrative analyses aimed at refining the treatment choice algorithms.
Official title: Personalized Indications for Cognitive Behavioural Therapy and Antidepressants in the Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder and Persistent Depressive Disorder
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
80
Start Date
2016-10-31
Completion Date
2027-06
Last Updated
2025-05-14
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
CBT will be delivered in a one-to-one face-to-face format by trained Masters or PhD level CBT therapists who will follow a protocol adapted from existing manuals and piloted in the participating centres. Up to 20 sessions will be offered over 18 weeks, initially twice per week, then weekly and later spaced to every other week. The treatment will have core obligatory modules and flexible elements adaptable to participant's maintaining factors.
Pharmacotherapy
Pharmacotherapy will be prescribed and adjusted by psychiatrists in 20-30 minute pharmacotherapy sessions once every two weeks. The manual-guided best-evidence pharmacotherapy will follow current guidelines for first, second and third line treatment.41 The primary focus will be on serotonin-reuptake inhibiting antidepressant (escitalopram 5-20mg, sertraline 50-200 mg daily) monotherapy, which may remain the only treatment for the majority of participants. Augmentation (aripiprazole 2-10mg, bupropione 150-450mg) will be offered to participants with partial response. The manual, developed as part of Canadian Biomarker Integration Network in Depression (CAN-BIND).43, also specifies admissible supportive therapeutic elements and prohibits CBT-specific techniques.
Locations (1)
Nova Scotia Health Authority
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada