CompletedN/Aketamine

Cognitive Therapy to Sustain the Antidepressant Effects of Intravenous Ketamine in Treatment-resistant Depression

Sponsored by Yale University

NCT ID
NCT03027362
Target Enrollment
28 participants
Start Date
2017-01
Est. Completion
2020-01-15

About This Study

The goals of this study are: 1) to investigate the efficacy of combining ketamine with intensive cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) to sustain the antidepressant effects of ketamine; and 2) to determine ketamine's delayed effects on learning and memory, and to explore the relationship between any ketamine-induced changes in learning and memory and duration of antidepressant efficacy, with and without CBT augmentation. Subjects with a diagnosis of MDD who are treatment-resistant to at least 2 antidepressants and have chosen to pursue clinical ketamine treatment at Yale Psychiatric Hospital will be recruited for the study.

Conditions Studied

Depressive Disorder, Major

Interventions

  • Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and medication
  • Psychoeducation and medication

Eligibility

Age:18 Years - 65 Years
Healthy Volunteers:No
View full eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

* Suffering from a major depressive episode based on Diagnostic and Statistical manual (DSM) 5 criteria and having failed one or more standard antidepressant treatments during the current episode
* Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (17-HAM-D) score of 21 or more prior to ketamine treatment.
* Planned clinical treatment with ketamine at Yale Psychiatric Hospital (YPH)
* As the purpose of this study is to determine the feasibility and efficacy of CBT to sustain the antidepressant effects of ketamine, only those who achieve a clinical response (i.e., 50% reduction in depression symptoms, as measured by the Montgomery-Asberg Depressive Rating Scale (MADRS) will be eligible for randomization.
* Patients must be treatment resistant to at least two drugs used to treat depression.

Exclusion Criteria:

* Any Axis I or Axis II Disorder, which at screening is clinically predominant to their depressive episode or has been predominant to their depressive episode at any time within 6 months prior to screening
* Active suicidal thoughts with a plan
* Current or recent (\<6 months ago) substance use disorder
* Non-affective psychosis (such as schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder)
* Inability to speak English fluently
* A clinically significant abnormality on the screening physical examination that might affect safety, study participation, or confound interpretation of study results
* Dementia, delirium, or any other neurological or mental disease that might affect cognition or the ability to meaningfully participate in cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT).

Study Locations (1)

Yale University
New Haven, Connecticut, United States

This trial is not recruiting

This study has completed enrollment. Check back for results or find similar trials.

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Data Source
ClinicalTrials.gov

Last updated from source