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RECRUITING
NCT06080646

Reward Processing and Depressive Subtypes: Identifying Neural Biotypes

Sponsor: San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Deficits in motivation and pleasure are common in depression, and thought to be caused by alterations in the ways in which the brain anticipates, evaluates, and adaptively uses reward-related information. However, reward processing is a complex, multi-circuit phenomenon, and the precise neural mechanisms that contribute to the absence or reduction of pleasure and motivation are not well understood. Variation in the clinical presentation of depression has long been a rule rather than an exception, including individual variation in symptoms, severity, and treatment response. This heterogeneity complicates understanding of depression and thwarts progress toward disease classification and treatment planning. Discovery of depression-specific biomarkers that account for neurobiological variation that presumably underlies distinct clinical manifestations is critical to this larger effort.

Official title: Reward Processing and Depressive Subtypes: Identifying Neural Biotypes Related to Suicide Risk, Resilience, and Treatment Response

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 70 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

150

Start Date

2021-06-01

Completion Date

2025-09-01

Last Updated

2024-08-02

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

OTHER

cross-sectional MRI and EEG assessments (NO INTERVENTION)

n/a there is no intervention in this observational study

Locations (1)

San Francisco Healthcare System

San Francisco, California, United States