ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Agomelatine Treatment of Depression in Schizophrenia (AGOPSYCH)

C

Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Schizophrenia
Schizoaffective Disorder
Delusional Disorder

Treatments

Drug: agomelatine

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT01822418
01112012

Details and patient eligibility

About

Major depressive episodes (MDEs) occur frequently during the course of psychotic disorders, and several antidepressive agents have been successfully applied. The new melatonergic antidepressant agomelatine (AGO) appears promising for the treatment of MDEs in schizophrenia for several reasons. The investigators plan to test the efficacy and tolerability of AGO for antidepressive treatment in schizophrenia. For this task, the investigators plan to enrol 27 schizophrenic patients into an open, single-armed, prospective clinical trial with agomelatine.

Full description

Major depressive episodes (MDEs) occur frequently during the course of psychotic disorders, and several antidepressive agents have been successfully applied. The new melatonergic antidepressant agomelatine (AGO) appears promising for the treatment of MDEs in schizophrenia for several reasons: 1. AGO provides a unique pharmacological profile by combining antidepressive potency, sleep regulation and enhancement of frontocortical dopaminergic activity by 5-HT-2C-blockade. 2. AGO might exert favourable effects on cognition. 3. While pharmacokinetic interactions are generally possible, major influences on antipsychotic substances are unlikely due to metabolism by cytochrome isoenzymes CYP1A2 and CYP2C9/19. 4. AGO is characterized by a favourable range of adverse events (AE) which do not overlap with typical antipsychotic AEs such as weight gain and sexual dysfunction. Thus, the risk of additive effects seems to be small. The investigators plan to enroll 27 schizophrenic patients into an open, single-armed, prospective clinical trial with agomelatine. As predefined primary and secondary endpoints, we are going to investigate whether AGO is able to improve MDE severity, sleep quality, general and psychosocial functioning as well as cognitive function in schizophrenia without detrimental effects on the psychotic syndrome. Moreover, we intend to monitor for pharmacokinetic interactions. The results obtained will allow designing future randomized and controlled clinical trials in order to improve the range of therapeutic options for affective and cognitive deficits in schizophrenia.

Enrollment

27 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 60 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age between 18 and 60 years.
  2. Presence of an MDE according to ICD-10 criteria (HAMD17 ≥ 18 or CDSS-Score ≥ 8 points).
  3. Lifetime diagnosis of schizophrenia-spectrum disorder according to ICD-10 (F 20, F22, F23, F25).
  4. Partial remission of psychotic positive symptoms (PANSS positive subscore ≤ 15 points).
  5. Stable antipsychotic medication for at least 2 weeks (tolerable quantitative changes of daily dosage ≤ 25%).
  6. The patient is able to give an informed consent. In case of legal guardianship, the custodian will have to agree to the patient's participation.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Contraindications against AGO treatment
  2. Insufficient contraception in women of childbearing potential when sexually active.
  3. Gravidity or breastfeeding.
  4. Addiction to alcohol
  5. Current abuse of THC and other illegal substances according to ICD-10
  6. Dementia

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

27 participants in 1 patient group

Treatment
Experimental group
Description:
Open-label treatment with agomelatine 25 mg/day (or 50 mg/day after week 3).
Treatment:
Drug: agomelatine

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems