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Comparing Effectiveness of Treating Depression With & Without Comorbidity to Improve Fetal Health (PCORIPTD)

Kaiser Permanente logo

Kaiser Permanente

Status

Completed

Conditions

Preterm Delivery
Depression

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02371356
CN-13-1650-H

Details and patient eligibility

About

Depression during pregnancy is prevalent (15-20%) and has an adverse impact on fetal outcomes including preterm delivery (PTD) and low birthweight (LBW). Currently, significant confusion exists about if and how depression during pregnancy should be treated, given the unknown risk-benefit profiles of various treatments. We propose to conduct a two-stage prospective cohort study to determine if treating depression in pregnancy is effective in improving fetal outcomes, and which treatment is most effective: pharmacotherapy, psychotherapy or a combination. The risk-benefit of the treatments will be examined separately for two depression types: pregnant women with depression only and those with other psychiatric comorbidities to evaluate possible differences in treatment effectiveness between the two groups. Findings will provide answers to long standing stakeholder questions of how to treat depression in pregnancy and which treatment is most effective with the best risk-benefit profile in improving fetal outcomes. Selecting an effective treatment could reduce PTD or LBW, thus, reducing infant mortality and morbidity, and medical costs.

Full description

Depression during pregnancy is prevalent (15-20%) and has an adverse impact on fetal outcomes including preterm delivery (PTD) and low birthweight (LBW). Currently, significant confusion exists about if and how depression during pregnancy should be treated, given the unknown risk-benefit profiles of various treatments. Kaiser Permanente Northern California has implemented a large scale universal peripartum depression screening program, annually screening more than 35,000 pregnant women. Taking advantage of this unique infrastructure, we propose to conduct a two-stage prospective cohort study to determine if treating depression in pregnancy is effective in improving fetal outcomes, and which treatment is most effective: pharmacotherapy, psychotherapy or a combination. The risk-benefit of the treatments will be examined separately for two depression types: pregnant women with depression only and those with other psychiatric comorbidities to evaluate possible differences in treatment effectiveness between the two groups. Stakeholders (patients, advocacy groups, and providers) are an integral part of the research team. Four cohorts with different treatment options including untreated will be formed within each depression type (with or without comorbidity): (A) "Antidepressant only": screen positive for depression and use only antidepressants during pregnancy; (B) "Psychotherapy only": screen positive and receive psychotherapy only; (C) "Combination therapy": screen positive and receive both antidepressants and psychotherapy; (D)"Untreated depression": screen positive and receive no treatment. A total of eight cohorts will be formed. A final cohort (E) "No depression": screen negative and receive no treatment, will be examined for baseline comparison. Information on depression treatment and PTD and LBW will be available for all participating women who will be followed until the end of pregnancy. Within each depression category, comparison of Cohort A, B & C to D, respectively, will determine if treating depression is effective. Pair-wise comparisons among Cohorts A, B & C will determine the comparative effectiveness of treatment regimens. Comparison of Cohort D to E provides baseline fetal risks of untreated depression. Findings will provide answers to long standing stakeholder questions of how to treat depression in pregnancy and which treatment is most effective with the best risk-benefit profile in improving fetal outcomes. Selecting an effective treatment could reduce PTD or LBW, thus, reducing infant mortality and morbidity, and medical costs.

Enrollment

91,084 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Kaiser member
  • Pregnant

Exclusion criteria

  • Not a member of Kaiser Permanente
  • Not pregnant

Trial design

91,084 participants in 5 patient groups

Depressed, Medication only
Description:
Screen positive for depression and use only antidepressants during pregnancy
Depressed, Psychotherapy only
Description:
Screen positive for depression and receive psychotherapy only.
Depressed, Medication & Psychotherapy
Description:
Screen positive for depression and receive both antidepressants and psychotherapy.
Depressed, untreated
Description:
Screen positive for depression and receive no treatment.
Not depressed
Description:
Screen negative for depression and receive no treatment.

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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