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Lithium and Standard Therapy in Resistant Depression (LAST)

U

University of Verona

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 4

Conditions

Depression

Treatments

Drug: lithium
Drug: usual care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00927550
LAST_RD_FARM77Z3BL-5.1_132009

Details and patient eligibility

About

The principal clinical question is whether lithium is effective in reducing the risk of suicidal behaviour in subjects with treatment-resistant depression and suicide risk. Additionally aims of the study are: (a) to assess whether lithium is effective in improving depressive symptomatology in subjects with treatment-resistant depression and suicide risk; (b) to assess the tolerability profile of lithium.

Full description

Inclusion criteria:

  1. Diagnosis of major depression (clinical diagnosis, guided by DSM-IV criteria).
  2. History of attempted suicide or deliberate self-harm in the previous 12 months.
  3. Inadequate response to at least two antidepressants given sequentially at an adequate dose for an adequate time for the current depressive episode.
  4. Uncertainty about which treatment arm would be best for the participant.
  5. Age 18 or above.
  6. Agreement between investigator and patient to enter the study.

Exclusion criteria:

  1. In addition to major depression, a primary diagnosis of any concurrent Axis I disorder (according to DSM-IV criteria) will constitute an exclusion criterion; by contrast, any concurrent Axis II disorder (according to DSM-IV criteria) will not constitute an exclusion criterion.
  2. Previous exposure to lithium was associated with lack of efficacy or unwanted adverse reactions.
  3. Clinical conditions contraindicate the experimental treatment arm (for example thyroid or kidney disease or abnormalities).
  4. Pregnant/lactating women.
  5. Women of childbearing potential not practicing a reliable method of contraception.

PRIMARY OUTCOME DEFINITION

Suicide completion and acts of deliberate self harm (DSH) will constitute the composite primary outcome. The term "suicide" is defined as an act with a fatal outcome, deliberately initiated and performed by the person with the knowledge or expectation of its fatal outcome.

DSH is defined as intentional self-poisoning or self-injury, irrespective of motivation. Self-poisoning includes the intentional self-ingestion of more than the prescribed amount of any drug, whether or not there is evidence that the act was intended to result in death. This also includes poisoning with non-ingestible substances and gas, overdoses of "recreational drugs" and severe alcohol intoxication where clinical staff consider such cases to be an act of intentional self-harm (rather than recreational binge drinking). Self-injury is defined as any injury that has been intentionally self-inflicted, including self-cutting. The intention to end life may be absent or present to a variable degree. Other terms used to describe this phenomenon are "attempted suicide" and "parasuicide". Some acts of DSH are characterised by high suicidal intent, meticulous planning (including precautions against being found out), and severe lethality of the method used. Other acts of DSH are characterised by no or low intention of suicide, lack of planning and concealing of the act, and low lethality of the method used.

Enrollment

230 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis of major depression (clinical diagnosis, guided by DSM-IV criteria).
  • History of attempted suicide or deliberate self-harm in the previous 12 months.
  • Inadequate response to at least two antidepressants given sequentially at an adequate dose for an adequate time for the current depressive episode.
  • Uncertainty about which treatment arm would be best for participant.
  • Age 18 or above.
  • Agreement between investigator and patient to enter the study.

Exclusion criteria

  • In addition to major depression, a primary diagnosis of any concurrent Axis I disorder (according to DSM-IV criteria) will constitute an exclusion criterion; by contrast, any concurrent Axis II disorder (according to DSM-IV criteria) will not constitute an exclusion criterion.
  • Previous exposure to lithium was associated with lack of efficacy or unwanted adverse reactions.
  • Clinical conditions contraindicate the experimental treatment arm (for example thyroid or kidney disease or abnormalities).
  • Pregnant/lactating women.
  • Women of childbearing potential not practicing a reliable method of contraception.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

230 participants in 2 patient groups

lithium plus usual care
Experimental group
Treatment:
Drug: lithium
usual care without lithium therapy
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Drug: usual care

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

corrado barbui, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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