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This research study seeks to find causes and treatments of depression in teenagers. The study goals are to increase our knowledge of treatments for depression and understand how the brain changes when teenagers have depression. The study will also compare teenagers with depression to those without mental health diagnoses.
This outpatient study is recruiting participants ages 11-17 who are depressed. They must have a pediatrician or other medical provider, be medically healthy, and able to perform research tasks. They may not currently be hospitalized, psychotic or actively suicidal. Teenagers with depression are eligible even if they are taking medication.
The study begins with an evaluation that includes clinical assessment, interviews, and questionnaires.
All clinical evaluations, research tasks and visits are free of cost. Participants are compensated for research activities. Parents and teenager must agree to the teenager s participation in research.
The study is conducted at the NIH in Bethesda, Maryland and enrolls participants from the Washington DC Metro region within 50 miles of NIH. Transportation expenses are reimbursed by NIMH....
Full description
Objective
Depression has a prevalence of 19% in the US population and close to 350 million people suffer from the disorder worldwide. The chronic course of depression and its early onset-a maximal incidence in adolescence and young adulthood)-contribute to it being a leading cause of disability worldwide. Yet, compared to many other medical conditions, we know little about the mechanisms underlying depression. In recent years, reward processing has been proposed to underlie several key behavioral and neural aberrations observed in depression. This has led to the promise that targeting reward processing may lead to much needed breakthroughs in the field. In this protocol we seek to characterize and treat depression in youth by integrating methodological and conceptual approaches that specifically focus on reward processing. Patients and their families can elect to participate in standard outpatient clinical care in this protocol. Our objective is to answer four key questions:
Studies from our own group demonstrate that stress in early life has an impact on how rewards and punishers are processed in the brain several years later. Similarly, there is good evidence for the acute effects of stress on reward processing, as indicated in our recent metanalysis. And, of course, there is ample evidence for the role on how stressful events worsen symptoms of depression.
We also wish to explore more deeply the role of family environment on stress in teens with major depression. There is a substantial literature on the role of family environment in moderating or exacerbating stress in teens, and measures and methods to assess this would be important to understand its role in teen depression.
Study population
We will study three populations: (1) Healthy volunteer children and adults (HVs; n=600); (2) Participants with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD; n=500); (3) parents (biological or legal guardians) of children with MDD or HVs who are enrolled in this protocol (N=800 total as 400/200/200 respectively). Study participants will be aged 11-17 years at initial enrollment in Characterization; this is a longitudinal study and participants who turn 18 may continue in it for up to two years. Previously we enrolled 4 cohorts. Youths with Subthreshold Depression (s-MDD) (n=200 were to be enrolled; we have enrolled n=8 over the life of the protocol and no subjects with s-MDD have been enrolled after Dec 2021)
Design
This is a Characterization study that, as of 2022, includes longitudinal observation of two adolescent cohorts. HV and MDD subjects will take part in a longitudinal, observational study that involves clinical assessment, computer tasks, fMRI and MEG scanning and continue to return for up to two years. A sample of young adult HVs (18-30 years old) will also be enrolled as a comparison cohort. Those previously enrolled as subthreshold MDD (s-MDD) will be followed for up to two years (from their initial enrollment); with Amendment J, we ceased enrolling this population; no new participants with s-MDD have been enrolled since Dec, 2021.
Adolescent patients who still suffer from current MDD will be offered standard outpatient care with clinically indicated treatments. During and following outpatient clinical care, participants with MDD will continue in Characterization.
Outcome measures For Objective 1 Primary Outcomes
fMRI: Monetary incentive delay task Magnetoencephalography: Monetary incentive delay task
Automated Affect encoding: variables obtained through machine learning analysis
For Objective 2
Primary outcomes:
fMRI: Monetary Incentive Delay Task
Questionnaires: MFQ, ARI, SCARED, PROMIS-A-SR, PROMIS-A-PR
For Objective 3
Primary outcomes:
Questionnaires: PCSC, SCSC, MFQ
Imaging (fMRI): Activity in prefrontal cortex and striatum in response to controllable setback cues in the Persistence after Setbacks task
For Objective 4
Primary outcomes:
Questionnaires: MFQ, ARI, SCARED, PROMIS-A-SR, PROMIS-A-PR
Secondary outcomes:
Questionnaires: Family-function measures (FAD, FBS, and FRFC-P), quality of life measure (PQ-LES-Q), sleep measures (PROMIS-Sleep)
Behavioral task: Five Minute Speech Sample, Parent-Child Discussion Task, SMT, Mood Induction task, Parent-Child Discussion Task (PCDT)
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion criteria for Youth with MDD (all must be met):
Ages 11-17 at the time of enrollment in Characterization;
Current diagnosis of DSM-5 Major Depressive Disorder (within the last six months from assessment) which are:
Five or more of the following symptoms have been present during the same 2-week period and represent a change from previous functioning; at least one of the symptoms is either (1) depressed mood or (2) loss of interest or pleasure.
Symptoms cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational/academic, or other important areas of functioning.
The episode is not attributable to the physiological effects of a substance or to another medical condition.
-Youths who meet modified DSM criteria for Subthreshold Depression (Group 2) (This cohort is historical only; (previously n=200 to be enrolled; ceased enrolling this population with Amendment J (2022); none enrolled after Dec 2021).
Inclusion criteria for subthreshold depressive disorder were:
INCLUSION CRITERIA FOR HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS:
Adolescent Healthy Volunteers (Group 3a)
Adult Healthy Volunteers (Group 3b)
INCLUSION CRITERIA FOR PARENTS OF ENROLLED YOUTH (Group 4):
EXCLUSION CRITERIA: (All patients)
-Exclusion Criteria for MDD patients (Group 1)
Youths with passive suicidal ideation and/or past active suicidal ideation are still eligible.
Participants with repeated self-harm occurring in the context of inter-personal conflict.
-Exclusion criteria for youths meeting modified DSM criteria for Subthreshold Depression (Group 2) (this cohort is historical only; previously n=200 to be enrolled; ceased enrolling this population with Amendment J (2022); none enrolled after Dec 2021):
Intellectual disability (clinically identified or IQ < 70).
Any serious medical condition (such as epilepsy, heart disease requiring medication) by self and parent report.
Past or current diagnosis of a manic or hypomanic episode, major depression), schizophrenia, schizophreniform disorder, schizoaffective illness, Tourette Disorder, or Autism Spectrum Disorder, Anorexia Nervosa or other severe Eating Disorder.
Meets DSM-5 criteria for alcohol or substance abuse within the last three months by self and parent report.
NIMH IRP Employees/staff and immediate family members will be excluded from the study per NIMH policy.
-Healthy volunteer youths and adults exclusion criteria:
Intellectual disability (clinically identified or IQ < 70).
Any serious medical condition (such as epilepsy, heart disease requiring medication) by self and parent report.
Past or current diagnosis of any mood disorder (manic or hypomanic episode, major depression), anxiety disorder (except specific phobia), Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders (PTSD), Conduct Disorder, schizophrenia, schizophreniform disorder, schizoaffective illness, Tourette Disorder, or Autism Spectrum Disorder.
Meets DSM-5 criteria for alcohol or substance abuse within the last three months by self and parent report; for adults, past history of substance dependency or substance abuse within the last three months by self-report.
Parents of enrolled participants (group 3) exclusion criteria:
--Parents who are unable to understand or read English well enough to complete the study interview and tests.
4,100 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Daniel S Pine, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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