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The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between depressive symptoms and markers of inflammation, two predictors of heart disease.
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Depressive symptoms and inflammatory markers have both been proposed as measures that indicate/precede coronary artery disease (CAD). However, no controlled research study has tested the impact of these two candidate CAD risk factors within the same design to see the directionality of their influence. This study will explore if simvastatin reduces depressive symptoms and if sertraline reduces C-Reactive protein (CRP). Additionally, the recruitment process will help determine the feasibility of a larger trial, powered for significance testing. Three hundred and seventy-five participants will be consented and screened for this study. We expect forty-two otherwise healthy outpatients to have both elevated symptoms and high CRP levels, and be willing to be randomly assigned to sertraline, an antidepressant, simvastatin, a drug with anti-inflammatory properties, or a placebo for 8 weeks. Depressive symptoms and inflammatory indicators will be assessed before treatment (screening and baseline), mid-treatment (after 4 weeks), post-treatment (after 8 weeks), and a follow-up visit (after 12 weeks), using blood tests and depression interviews. We expect that both inflammation and depressive symptoms may be reduced by both medications, but the number of subjects needed to test this hypothesis is not yet known. Hence, this pilot study will be conducted. Knowledge about the inter-dependency of these two CAD risk factors allows the most promising future observational/intervention studies to be designed and conducted.
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7 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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