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Antiglucocorticoid Augmentation of antiDepressants in Depression

Antiglucocorticoid Augmentation of antiDepressants in Depression

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01375920
Acronym
ADD
Enrollment
190
Registered
2011-06-20
Start date
2011-02-28
Completion date
2013-06-30
Last updated
2014-07-17

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Depression

Keywords

Depression, Antiglucocorticoid, Anti-depressants

Brief summary

Depression is one of the most common mental health problems, with at least one in six adults suffering from this at some time in their life. It can become long-lasting and frequently recurs. Depression has a large negative impact on quality of life of patients and their carers and it has also been shown to be one of the leading causes of working age adults receiving disability payments in the UK. The need for improved treatment has been recognised by the Department of Health and others. Improvements in drug treatments are therefore required. There has been recent increased understanding of some of the causes of the frequent lack of complete response seen with antidepressants. The stress hormone, cortisol, is often elevated or poorly controlled in depression and there is laboratory and clinical research to show that this hormonal change reduces the benefits from antidepressants with associated poor outcome and memory problems. Recently it has been shown in small studies that giving treatments that reduce cortisol or block its harmful effects for between 1 and 3 weeks overcome these negative consequences. Our group is particularly interested and experienced in this topic. The investigators plan to study a drug that decreases cortisol levels in people who have not recovered with standard antidepressants so that the investigators can find out the usefulness of this treatment (compared with placebo (dummy tablet)) in day to day life as well as checking closely for side-effects (the initial studies have shown that the particular drug the investigators wish to study (metyrapone) has few side effects). The investigators will also measure cortisol and see if its level can tell us which people do best with this treatment. The investigators will carry out this study in 3 centres across the UK. The investigators will carry out some additional tests of specific sorts of memory and decision making and also do this while scanning the brain (in a painless test). The results of these tests, along with tests of brain wave patterns, should help us understand more fully how this new treatment is working and who responds best to it. The study will help us find out if this drug should be used more widely for people not responding to standard treatments and will also lead on to the development of other new treatments with an anti-cortisol effect to help tackle the major problem of poor outcome from depression.

Interventions

500 milligrams to be taken twice a day orally

DRUGplacebo

a matched placebo will be administered to patients to take twice a day for 3 weeks

Sponsors

National Institute for Health Research, United Kingdom
CollaboratorOTHER_GOV
Jane Barnes
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

Patient Inclusion Criteria: 1. Depression Severity: Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS17) score ≥18, consistent with a moderate to severe episode. The stability of the patient's clinical state will also be assessed at week 0. A repeat HDRS17 score at time 0 is required ≥18 or greater. 2. Treatment refractoriness: assessed using the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) staging method. This defines minimum effective doses of all currently-available antidepressants and an adequate trial as being for at least six weeks. For the trial to be considered a failure, it must have been considered by the clinical team to have been ineffective rather, than the drug not having been taken or tolerated. Patients must have failed to have responded to at least their second trial of an antidepressant. This equates to a minimum score of two on MGH staging. The maximum MGH score for inclusion in the study will be 10. A UK study showed mean MGH scores in primary care patients of less than one, in secondary care mental health settings of around five and of 11 in a population of patients referred to a tertiary centre (Dr D Christmas, Dundee, Personal Communication). 3. Current antidepressant treatment: patients must be taking monotherapy or combination antidepressant therapy which includes a serotonergic drug (an SSRI, a tertiary amine tricyclic, venlafaxine, duloxetine or mirtazapine). They must not be on noradrenergic antidepressant monotherapy (e.g. with lofepramine, imipramine or reboxetine). At the point of randomisation, patients must have been on their current antidepressant medication, at the current dose, for a minimum of four weeks. 4. Age: 18-65. For the mechanistic sub-studies the patients upper age limit is 60. Healthy Control Inclusion Criteria: 1. Aged 18-60. 2. Currently psychiatrically well, confirmed through SCID interview. HDRS17 score of ≤5, and no current psychotropic medication. 3. No past history of psychiatric illness, as revealed by SCID interview, or requiring any treatment (formal psychotherapy or psychotropic medication). 4. No first degree family history of psychiatric illness. Patient

Exclusion criteria

1. Any other DSM IV Axis I disorder other than an anxiety disorder unless the depressive episode is considered to be secondary to the anxiety disorder, confirmed using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM (SCID). 2. Physical co-morbidity which would render the use of Metyrapone inappropriate, including untreated hypothyroidism, disorders of steroid production, current, severe cardiac failure, current, severe or frequent angina, current renal failure or myocardial infarction within the last year. 3. Pregnancy, determined by history and, if indicated, urine pregnancy test. 4. Mothers who are breastfeeding. 5. Use of concomitant medication that would interfere, in a pharmacodynamic or pharmacokinetic manner, with Metyrapone. 6. Dependence on alcohol or other drug in the past 12 months, and/or current harmful use of alcohol or other drug. 7. Recently having taken part in another research study that could interfere with the results of this one. Healthy Control

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
The primary outcome will be the change in Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) from week 0 to +5 weeks.5 weeksThe primary outcome will be the change in Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) from week 0 to +5 weeks.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Secondary outcomes related to mood will be the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) measured at time +3, +5, +8, +16 and + 24 weeks relative to baseline.up to 6 monthsSecondary outcomes related to mood will be the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) measured at time randomisation, +3, +5, +8, +16 and + 24 weeks relative to baseline.
Clinical Anxiety Scale (CAS)up to 6 months1. Mood as measured by YMRS and BDI at time 0, +3, +5, +8, +16, +24 weeks 2. Anxiety as measured by the CAS and STAI at time 0, +3, +5, +8, +16, +24 weeks 3. Quality of life, assessed using the EQ-5D at weeks 0, +3, +5, +8, +16, +24 4. Tolerability assessed using the TSES and self-report at weeks 0, +3, +5, +8 (additional self-report at weeks +1, +2 and +4) 5. Suicide risk assessed at weeks 0, +1, +3, +5, +8, +16, +24 6. Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal (HPA) axis function assessed by salivary cortisol awakening response (CAR) and sample at 11 pm at weeks 0, +3 and +5 7. Safety assessments including blood pressure, urea and electrolytes and plasma cortisol levels at weeks -2, +1 and +5
Quality of life will be assessed using the self-completed EuroQol EQ-5D instrument (http://www.euroqol.org/). The EQ-5D will be completed at 0, +3, +5, +8, +16 and + 24, weeks.up to 6 monthsQuality of life will be assessed using the self-completed EuroQol EQ-5D instrument (http://www.euroqol.org/). The EQ-5D will be completed at 0, +3, +5, +8, +16 and + 24, weeks.

Countries

United Kingdom

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026