Treatment of Outpatients With Severe Asthma and Moderate or Severe Major Depressive Disorder
NCT ID: NCT00621946
Last Updated: 2014-02-04
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE4
26 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2008-03-31
2010-03-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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1\) Determine if escitalopram treatment is associated with less oral corticosteroid use for asthma symptom control than placebo in asthma outpatients with moderate or MDD.
Secondary Aims
1. Determine if escitalopram treatment is associated with greater improvement in asthma symptoms than placebo in outpatients with severe asthma and moderate or severe MDD.
2. Determine if escitalopram treatment is associated with greater depressive symptom remission rates than placebo in outpatients with severe asthma and moderate or severe MDD.
Background/Significance
Asthma is a common, chronic general medical condition characterized by inflammation and variable, but usually reversible, airflow obstruction. Approximately 7.2% of people in the United States have a history of asthma. Asthma is common with an increasing prevalence and mortality especially in low-income and minority populations.
The course of asthma appears to be influenced by mood and emotions. It has been reported that there is a high prevalence of depression or depressive symptoms in both children and adults with asthma.
Depression is associated with increased use of asthma-related urgent care services, as well as a variety of unfavorable asthma outcomes. In addition to the possible associations between depression and asthma medication nonadherence and even death, depression appears to be associated with increased use of emergency rooms, hospitals, and unscheduled appointments for asthma.
Despite data on the frequency of depression in asthma and its adverse consequences, it is generally not recognized or treated.
Our proposed study is different. We observed a modest difference between antidepressant and placebo in a prior trial. However, in a subgroup with more severe asthma (based on frequent corticosteroid use) and more severe depression (based on higher depressive symptoms scores) we saw a much larger effect size. The proposed study will target this subgroup. The sample size is based on the effect size we observed in this subgroup in our previous pilot study.
A placebo controlled trial is needed because 1) the primary outcome in our previous trial was not significant. Therefore, it is not clear that antidepressant treatment is effective in depressed asthma patients. 2) We identified a subgroup with greater depressive symptom and asthma severity that based on a post-hoc analysis appeared to show a favorable response to the antidepressant. Thus, we want to confirm these post-hoc findings with a targeted prospective study. In the clinical population we will study, very few patients have ever received assessment or treatment for depression. Therefore, we would not be withholding clearly effective treatment that they would otherwise receive.
Standard of care for severe asthma is aggressive asthma treatment. Our study does not require any changes in the patient's asthma treatment. No guidelines are currently available on the treatment of depression in asthma patients. Standard care for depression would be antidepressants.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
TRIPLE
Study Groups
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Placebo
Placebo Matching Escitalopram given orally daily (for a 12-week duration).
Placebo
Placebo Matching Escitalopram
Escitalopram
Once daily oral administration (for a 12-week duration) of 10 mg escitalopram tablets with an increase to 20 mg in those with a less than 30% decrease in HAM-D scores at week 4.
Escitalopram
Active Escitalopram
Interventions
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Placebo
Placebo Matching Escitalopram
Escitalopram
Active Escitalopram
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Patients with severe asthma (defined as asthma requiring three or more course of oral corticosteroids in the past year).
* No changes in asthma medications, oral corticosteroid use, or treatment for respiratory tract infections in the past week
* Needs to have taken ≥ 3 courses of oral corticosteroids, for asthma, in the past 12 months.
* Both male and female
* English- or Spanish-speaking
Exclusion Criteria
* MDD with psychotic features (delusions, hallucinations, disorganized thought processes)
* Bipolar disorder
* Schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder
* Substance-induced mood disorder and mood disorder secondary to a general medical condition
* Mental retardation or other severe cognitive impairment
* Prison or jail inmates
* Pregnant or nursing women or women of childbearing age who will not use The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center - Institutional Review Board (UTSW IRB) approved methods of birth control or abstinence during the study
* Treatment-resistant depressed persons defined as having failed two adequate trials of antidepressants
* Current antipsychotic or antidepressant therapy or psychotherapy
* Initiation of other psychotropic medications or psychotherapy within past 2 weeks (e.g., anxiolytics, hypnotics)
18 Years
70 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Forest Laboratories
INDUSTRY
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Sherwood Brown
Principal Investigator, MD/PhD
Principal Investigators
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E. Sherwood Brown, Ph.D, M.D.
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas
Locations
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The UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas
Dallas, Texas, United States
Countries
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References
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Agarwal CD, Palka JM, Gajewski AJ, Khan DA, Brown ES. The efficacy of citalopram or escitalopram in patients with asthma and major depressive disorder. Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol. 2024 Mar;132(3):374-382. doi: 10.1016/j.anai.2023.11.004. Epub 2023 Nov 11.
Other Identifiers
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092007-057
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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