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The Taste-Mood Diagnostic Study

R

Ranvier Health

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Depression

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: Taste test

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Industry

Identifiers

NCT03645447
Ranvier BRS 2.1

Details and patient eligibility

About

The study looks at whether a taste test device can be used as a diagnostic aid for depression. Taste tests will be carried out before and after first use of an antidepressant (prescribed by the patient's GP) and then again six to eight weeks later a further taste test will be conducted. The results of these tests will be assessed to see if they correlate with the outcome of validated mood questionnaires carried out at the first and second visits.

Full description

Research shows a clear link between taste sensitivity and depression, based on chemistry shared by the tongue and the brain. (Heath, T.P., Melichar, J.M., Nutt, D.J., Donaldson L.F. (2006) Human taste thresholds are modulated by serotonin and noradrenaline). The aim of this study is to investigate the use of a taste test in the diagnosis of depression and to predict drug effectiveness.

A test is carried out before and after ingesting a probe drug (first prescribed antidepressant) to assess change in taste. Standard validated questionnaires are used to assess mood on the day the first antidepressant is ingested and then again six to eight weeks later.

The study is a single centre, open label study using the patient's prescribed antidepressant as a probe with the primary objective of building on previous results obtained in a pilot study which used paroxetine as the probe drug (whether or not this was the drug chosen for treatment). The study is powered to test 240 patients, with a provision built in to the protocol for an interim analysis after 120 patients.

Participants will be followed up after six to eight weeks of usual clinical care, by means of follow up questionnaires.

Enrollment

240 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients with a diagnosis of previously untreated Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) of at least 3 weeks duration or new or recurrent MDD untreated before this episode (patients who have previously received treatment for MDD must have stopped taking antidepressant medication at least six weeks prior to entering the trial);
  • Patients requiring pharmaceutical intervention as a treatment for MDD;
  • Not suffering from any significant other mental or physical illness, such as confirmed psychosis, or end of life care.
  • Receiving stable medical therapy for 30 days or longer before screening assessments;
  • Be willing and able to comply with all visits and study related procedures;
  • Not infected with coronavirus or needing to self-isolate
  • Understands the study requirements and the treatment procedures and is able to provide written informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  • Already on antidepressant medication;
  • Known or suspected hypersensitivity or intolerance to any probes, or any of their excipients;
  • Relevant history or presence upon clinical examination, of cardiac, ophthalmologic, gastro-intestinal, hepatic, or renal disease or other condition known to increase risk of side effects of the probe drugs. This exclusion criterion is determined by the Site Investigator;
  • Have a history or presence of neurological or confounding psychiatric conditions (such as stroke, traumatic brain injury, epilepsy, space occupying lesions, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, vascular dementia, transient ischemic attack, or schizophrenia),
  • Patients with a diagnosis of chronic pain.
  • Participation in another trial concurrently or within 30 days preceding enrolment that is deemed to interfere with this trial;
  • Patients who are pregnant, or who are likely to become pregnant, will be excluded from the trial, as will breastfeeding mothers;
  • Patients using supplements containing psychoactive herbs (for example St Johns Wort or 5-HTP (5-Hydroxytryptophan, also known as oxitriptan);
  • Patients regularly using psychoactive stimulants and recreational drugs (for example MDMA (ecstasy/ methyl enedioxy methamphetamine), amphetamine, LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide), cocaine);
  • Patients infected with coronavirus, or who are advised to self-isolate
  • Patients who are unable or unwilling to comply with study procedures.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

240 participants in 1 patient group

Taste test
Experimental group
Description:
Participants newly diagnosed with depression will be presented with a series of sugar solutions of 9 different concentrations in pseudo-random order. The threshold at which each participant reliably detects the sugar taste is determined before and after a first antidepressant. Mood Questionnaires will be used to determine whether a participant is clinically depressed at the time of the taste test and 6 to 8 weeks later.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Taste test

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Central trial contact

David Adams, MBBS; Helen Leach, BDS, MSc

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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