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Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

3 clinical studies listed.

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Mild to Moderate Depression

Tundra lists 3 Mild to Moderate Depression clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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RECRUITING

NCT06751784

Cross-over Study on the Influence of Fampridine on Working Memory in Mild to Moderate Depression

Cognitive deficits, including working memory deficits, are often present in depression and there are currently no effective pharmacological treatments targeting working memory deficits. Papassotiropoulos et al. (2024) has recently demonstrated that fampridine, a potassium channel blocker, can enhance working memory in healthy individuals with lower baseline performance, suggesting it may hold potential for addressing cognitive deficits in clinical populations. The primary aim of this study is to evaluate whether fampridine improves working memory performance in mild to moderate depression

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 55 Years

Updated: 2025-12-12

1 state

Working Memory
Mild to Moderate Depression
RECRUITING

NCT06430476

EMI Therapy for Depression in Hong Kong

To determine if a two-week ecological momentary intervention (two EMA + one EMI daily) as augmentation to treatment as usual would reduce depressive symptoms, rumination levels, and functioning in subjects with mild to moderate depression, as compared to active controls receiving three EMA prompts daily.

Gender: All

Ages: 16 Years - 65 Years

Updated: 2024-12-11

Mild to Moderate Depression
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT05118828

Guided Internet-based Interventions in Primary Care Effectiveness-implementation Randomized Controlled Trial

Internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety and depression have far-reaching potential to overcome common barriers to accessing evidence-based treatment, such as waiting lists, travel distance and costs. Despite the undeniable promise of iCBT, several aspects remain poorly understood and warrants further study. The INTERMENTAL project is a joint effort between Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Norwegian Directorate of Health and six Prompt Mental Health Care (PMHC) services, situated in 11 municipalities, to evaluate the iCBT interventions developed by the technology company "Assistert Selvhjelp" (AS-iCBT). We will conduct a large-scale hybrid effectiveness-implementation randomized controlled non-inferiority trial that will provide new knowledge on the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and implementation of AS-iCBT in primary care. Primary objective: Examine the non-inferiority of guided internet-based cognitive behavioural treatment "Assistert Selvhjelp" (AS-iCBT) compared to treatment as usual in the primary care service Prompt Mental Health Care (TAU-PMHC) with regard to effects on symptoms of anxiety and depression. Secondary objectives: (i) Examine the non-inferiority of AS-iCBT compared to TAU-PMHC on other outcomes such as quality of life, functional level, specific anxiety measures (social anxiety, panic disorder), sleep and employment status; (ii) Examine the cost-effectiveness of AS-iCBT compared to TAU-PMHC; (iii) Examine to what extent moderators and mediators of change are associated with treatment effectiveness of AS-iCBT; (iv) Assess whether AS-iCBT is as acceptable and appropriate for treatment of anxiety and depression as TAU-PMHC, and examine barriers/facilitators for their further implementation.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2024-12-11

Anxiety
Mild to Moderate Depression