Effectiveness Study of Mirtazapine Combined With Paroxetine in Major Depressive Patients Without Early Improvement
NCT ID: NCT01458626
Last Updated: 2017-08-31
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE4
525 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2012-11-14
2016-08-24
Brief Summary
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Early improvement not only predicted response or remission, but also that lack of improvement was associated with little chance of response if the treatment strategy remained unchanged. The criterion of a 20% score reduction has been chosen as an early indicator of improvement because it can be reliably measured in clinical trials and translates into a clinically relevant change in the severity of depressive symptoms.
Antidepressants that enhance both serotonergic and noradrenergic neurotransmission may be more effective than selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) for acute-phase therapy of major depressive disorder. As a noradrenergic and specific serotonergic antidepressant, the antidepressive mechanism of mirtazapine is quite superior to SSRI and in particular has been suggested to have a faster onset of action than SSRIs in MDD patients.
The aim of this study is to provide physicians with further information regarding early improvement and the effectiveness of mirtazapine combined with a SSRI antidepressant therapy in nonresponders.
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Detailed Description
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The aim of this study is to provide physicians with further information regarding early improvement and mirtazapine combined with a SSRI antidepressant therapy in nonresponders, by providing a comparison of depressive symptoms outcomes associated with adjunctive mirtazapine or mono- paroxetine in MDD patients who have previously been treated with paroxetine for 2 weeks and who have not attained improvement. Paroxetine has been chosen as a comparator because it is a widely-used and relatively well-tolerated SSRI antidepressant.
The study is designed as a multi-center, randomized, double-blind, active-controlled trial in subjects with MDD.
Patients will be male or female, 18 to 60 years of age, inclusive, outpatient or inpatient status, with diagnosis of major depressive episode (single or recurrent) by DSM-IV. The patients should also have HAMD-17 total score ≥ 20,a HAMD-17 Item 1(depressed mood) score ≥ 2 at enrollment in open-label preliminary phase.
It will consist of 2 phases. An open-label preliminary phase lasts for 2 weeks, during which paroxetine is titrated up to 20mg/day (Day 5). At Week 2, patients will be evaluated by HAMD-17. The patients who have achieved early improvement (the decrease of HAMD-17 total score ≥ 20%) will be discontinued. The patients who have not achieved early improvement (the decrease of HAMD-17 total score \< 20%), will be randomized into three treatment arms \[1.Mirtazapine (30mg/d); 2.Paroxetine (20mg/d); 3.Mirtazapine (30mg/d) +Paroxetine(20mg/d)\]. In double-blind treatment phase (consist of 6 weeks), patients will be evaluated at Week 3, 4, 6 and 8.
Primary efficacy measure will be assessed based on the decrease of HAMD-17 from randomization (Week 2) to endpoint (Week 8). CGI-I and CGI-S will be used as secondary efficacy measures throughout this phase.
The safety in this study will be assessed by adverse event reporting, clinical laboratory measurements and physical examinations.
Up to 540 patients will enter into Open-label Phase in order to yield approximately 200 evaluable patients in Randomization Phase.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
FACTORIAL
TREATMENT
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Add-on therapy
mirtazapine 30mg QD and paroxetine 20mg QD
mirtazapine
mirtazapine 30mg QD
paroxetine 20mg QD
paroxetine 20mg QD
mirtazapine monotherapy
mirtazapine 30mg QD
mirtazapine
mirtazapine 30mg QD
paroxetine monotherapy
paroxetine 20mg QD
paroxetine 20mg QD
paroxetine 20mg QD
Interventions
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mirtazapine
mirtazapine 30mg QD
paroxetine 20mg QD
paroxetine 20mg QD
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Male or female outpatients aged at least 18 years and not more than 60 years.
3. Has a diagnosis of major depressive disorder by Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) criteria.
4. HAMD-17 ≥ 20 and HAMD-17 Item 1(depressed mood) score ≥2 at enrolment in open-label preliminary phase.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Current Axis I primary psychiatric diagnosis other than major depressive disorder.
3. Organic mental disease, including mental retardation.
4. History of clinically significant disease, including any cardiovascular, hepatic, renal, respiratory, hematologic, endocrinologic, or neurologic disease, or clinically significant laboratory abnormality that is not stabilized or is anticipated to require treatment during the study.
5. Subjects receiving an investigational agent (including different formulation and generic agents of investigational drug) in the previous 3 months prior to screening.
6. Women in pregnancy or lactation, or female of child bearing potential without appropriate birth control measures.
7. Use of antipsychotics or mood stabilizers within 5 days prior to screening.
8. Has received depot antipsychotic medication within one cycle prior to screening.
9. Known allergy or lack of response to mirtazapine.
10. Has received ECT or MECT within 3 months prior to screening.
11. Significant risk of suicidal and/or self-harm behaviors.
18 Years
60 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Capital Medical University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Gang Wang, MD
Head of Depression Center
Principal Investigators
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Gang Wang, M.D., Ph.D
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Beijing Anding Hospital, Capital Medical University
Locations
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Beijing Anding Hospital
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China
Countries
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References
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Zhou J, Liu S, Mayes TL, Feng Y, Fang M, Xiao L, Wang G. The network analysis of depressive symptoms before and after two weeks of antidepressant treatment. J Affect Disord. 2022 Feb 15;299:126-134. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.11.059. Epub 2021 Nov 24.
Other Identifiers
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MISP # 39888
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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