UTSW Depression Cohort: A Longitudinal Study of Depression
NCT ID: NCT02697487
Last Updated: 2023-11-07
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
Get a concise snapshot of the trial, including recruitment status, study phase, enrollment targets, and key timeline milestones.
COMPLETED
447 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2016-02-29
2018-03-22
Brief Summary
Review the sponsor-provided synopsis that highlights what the study is about and why it is being conducted.
Related Clinical Trials
Explore similar clinical trials based on study characteristics and research focus.
Dallas 2K: A Natural History Study of Depression
NCT02919280
Predictors of Depression Treatment Response to Exercise
NCT02583867
Efficacy Study of a Computer Decision Support System to Treat Depression
NCT00551083
Increasing Physical Activity in Persons With Depression
NCT02781688
Personalized Depression Treatment Supported by Mobile Sensor Analytics
NCT06292221
Detailed Description
Dive into the extended narrative that explains the scientific background, objectives, and procedures in greater depth.
Clinics or health care facilities collaborating with CDRCC will approach their patients to participate in this cohort. Research staff from UTSW or staff at these clinics (or health care facilities) who have received training on how to obtain informed consent will then ask interested patients to sign the IRB-approved Informed Consent and HIPAA authorization documents. Initially, the Informed Consent and HIPAA authorization will be documented on paper, and these documents will be scanned and stored in the master log of the Cohort database in addition to securely storing the paper copy. In the future, patients will be asked to complete Informed Consent and HIPAA authorization documents using computers or handheld electronic devices (including signatures). Paper documents will be made available to those who prefer and request them. Staff from CDRCC will be available either in person, by email, or by phone to answer any questions that arise during the informed consent process that cannot be answered by clinic staff. If patients are under the age of 18, they will provide assent, and a parent or LAR will provide consent. The CDRCC will also develop materials in print and electronic format to publicize the UTSW Depression Cohort. Other patients or healthy individuals who are not involved with a CDRCC collaborator can also join the registry if they complete the informed consent process. The UTSW Depression Cohort will include comprehensive information collected as part of routine care by the patient's provider(s). During routine care at their medical providers' offices, patients may fill out screening questionnaires and self-rated behavioral health assessments, provide medical and psychiatric history, undergo laboratory tests, electrocardiogram (EKG), radiologic or other clinically relevant investigations and be given treatment recommendations. Some of the self-rated assessments completed as part of measurement based care may include Patient Health Questionnaire 2 (PHQ-2), Patient Health Questionnaire 9 (PHQ-9), Patient Adherence Questionnaire (PAQ), Frequency, Intensity, and Burden of Side Effects Rating (FIBSER), Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7 (GAD-7), Concise Associated Symptoms Tracking - Self-Report Scale (CAST-SR), Pain Frequency, Intensity, and Burden Scale (P-FIBS), Concise Health Risk Tracking Scale (CHRT), and Alcohol and Drug usage screen. The information in the Cohort database will be stored indefinitely unless a participant requests the principal investigator to remove his/her name and associated information.
Research only assessments As part of the UTSW Depression Cohort, participants will undergo diagnostic assessment using MINI International Neuropsychiatric Interview, Version 7.0 for DSM-5 (MINI) and complete self-report research assessments for psychiatric symptoms and psychosocial functioning. These research only assessments will add 60-90 minutes to the visit duration.
Specimen banking:
As part of the UTSW Depression Cohort, patients will allow banking of their specimens. The study will only enroll participants comfortable with providing specimens. Of course, like with any other study procedure, those not comfortable with providing specimens will not be enrolled in this study. Specimens which are banked may include blood or blood products, urine, stool samples, tissue samples, saliva or clinical waste products. Clinical waste products include surgical waste tissue samples, placenta samples and biopsy samples. Once a sample is collected, all identifying information will be removed, and it will be given a unique code. The information linking this unique code to a patient's identifying information will be stored in the master log. Samples will be stored appropriately in the CDRCC freezers located in the north campus building of UT Southwestern. Samples will be overseen by CDRCC research personnel. A sample will be stored indefinitely until the sample runs out or it is destroyed.
Blood and blood products- Blood will be obtained by venipuncture performed by personnel with phlebotomy training.
Adult blood draws will not exceed the following:
Patient weight Maximum Volume per 24 hour Maximum Volume per Month Kilograms Pounds Milliliters Milliliters 51-60 112-132 112-120 224-240 61-65 134-143 122-130 244-260 68-70 145-154 132-140 264-280 71-75 156-185 142-150 284-300 76-80 167-176 152-160 304-360 81-85 178-187 162-170 324-340 86-90 189-198 172-180 344-360 91-95 200-209 182-190 364-380 96-100 211-220 192-200 384-400
Pediatric blood draws will not exceed:
Patient weight Maximum Volume per 24 hour Maximum Volume per Month Kilograms Pounds Milliliters Milliliters \<0.9 \<2 3 12 0.9-1.8 2-4 4.5 18 1.9-2.7 4-6 6 24 2.8-3.6 6-8 7.5 30 3.7-4.5 8-10 10.5 42 4.6-6.8 10-15 15 60 6.9-9.1 16-20 30 120 9.2-11.4 21-25 30 120 11.5-13.6 26-30 30 120 13.7-15.9 31-35 30 120 16.0-18.2 36-40 30 120 18.3-20.5 41-45 60 240 20.6-22.7 46-50 60 240 22.8-25.0 51-55 60 240 25.1-27.3 56-60 60 240 27.4-29.5 61-65 75 300 29.6-31.8 66-70 90 360 31.9-34.1 71-75 90 360 34.2-36.4 76-80 90 360 36.5-38.6 81-85 90 360 38.7-40.9 86-90 90 360 41.0-43.2 91-95 90 360 43.3-45.5 96-100 90 360
Blood may be obtained as a single blood draw, which may be a patient's only collection. Patients may be contacted to provide similar specimens at intervals around every 3-4 months for over 5-10 years (for a total of 40 blood draws). Collections will be restricted by the maximum safe volumes outlined above for both adult and pediatric participants. If being obtained in a clinical setting, clinical care specimens will take precedence over research specimens. If specimens are obtained during the course of clinical care, a safe volume will be determined in conjunction with treating physicians, but will not exceed the above table.
Saliva- Saliva will be collected into the Oragene DNA and/or RNA self-collection kit and stored at room temperature until DNA isolation.
Urine- Urine samples will be collected in sterile urinalysis cups and 10 mL aliquots will be frozen at -80°C in conical tubes.
Stool- Stool samples will be collected once or possibly over time in conjunction with blood draws described above in sterile 50 ml conical tubes and will be frozen at -80°C.
Clinical waste products- Samples obtained could include: a. surgical waste tissue samples; b. placenta samples; and c. biopsy samples. These samples will be obtained as a part of standard of care. Procedures involving these sample collections will be done by trained physicians and medical technicians only. The tissue that will be used for research is the tissue that would normally be discarded. After providing informed consent, study participants may allow study personnel to collect these clinical waste products from the clinical sites. The clinical waste product will then be transported to CDRCC on ice for storage. These samples will be de-identified, stored and used for future research. There will be no cost or compensation to the patients for donating this tissue to CDRCC.
The intended use of these samples is to enable future research into the diagnostics, prognostics and biologic understanding of depression. The samples will be primarily used by investigators affiliated with UT Southwestern, but will also be released to public and private collaborators in a HIPAA compliant fashion (i.e., de-identified). Development of cell lines and DNA libraries may occur with these samples. Samples may be used by investigators not affiliated with UT Southwestern if they are collaborating with a UTSW investigator. Also, samples may be used by colleagues at other institutions who are conducting their own IRB -approved research. Furthermore, de-identified samples can be provided to collaborators in industry if appropriate technology transfer agreements are in place. Samples sent to investigators or private entities outside of UT Southwestern will have a charge associated with them based on sample cost and projected use of the samples. Any specimen or data can be released to collaborators (outlined above) as long as it is released in a HIPAA compliant fashion (i.e., de-identified).
The investigators will obtain an IRB approval letter and maintain a current record of the Federal Wide Assurance (FWA) for an IRB at another medical center if data and specimens are sent from human cell banks at UT Southwestern to another medical center. If an investigator at another medical center receives data and specimens from our Cohort at UT Southwestern, the investigator will maintain documentation that (a) the recipient of samples from CDRCC acknowledges that the conditions for use of the research material are governed by the IRB at UT Southwestern in accordance with 45 CFR 46, (b) the recipient agrees to comply fully with all such conditions and to report promptly to the CDRCC at UT Southwestern any proposed changes in the research project, (c) the recipient remains subject to applicable State or local laws or regulations and institutional policies which provide additional protections for human subjects, and (d) the research material may be utilized only in accordance with the conditions stipulated by the IRB at UT Southwestern. Any additional use of this material requires prior review and approval by the IRB at UT Southwestern and, where appropriate, by an IRB at the recipient site, which must be convened under an applicable OHRP-approved Assurance. Non-UT Southwestern recipients of samples will be charged a usual and customary fee for the sample to cover procurement costs.
Under the supervision of the principal investigator of CDRCC, two different subcommittees will oversee the different aspects of the UTSW Depression Cohort: data management committee and executive committee. The data management committee will be tasked with managing the flow of information into and out of the Cohort database, maintaining the codebook of variables, developing big data tools (as mentioned in specific aim 3), and ensuring consistency of data collection and quality. The executive committee will be tasked with all other responsibilities related to the registry like establishing collaborations with providers, reviewing research proposals, and providing access to the cohort data for qualified researchers.
All procedures will be conducted as part of a patient's routine medical care except for collection of research-only blood, urine, and saliva specimens as described above. This study does not involve any interventions.
Conditions
See the medical conditions and disease areas that this research is targeting or investigating.
Study Design
Understand how the trial is structured, including allocation methods, masking strategies, primary purpose, and other design elements.
COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
Review each arm or cohort in the study, along with the interventions and objectives associated with them.
No Treatment
This is a longitudinal observational study involving individuals who are depressed, depressed with other comorbidities and non-depressed individuals. The primary aim of this study is to describe the longitudinal course of illness and real world treatment outcomes for depressed patients receiving routine care from their providers. Health outcomes and biospecimens along with the functional and economic burden of depression will be characterized and compared amongst three groups: (1) depressed patients, (2) depressed patients with comorbid illnesses, and (3) non-depressed patients.
No treatment
This is an observational study with no intervention.
Interventions
Learn about the drugs, procedures, or behavioral strategies being tested and how they are applied within this trial.
No treatment
This is an observational study with no intervention.
Eligibility Criteria
Check the participation requirements, including inclusion and exclusion rules, age limits, and whether healthy volunteers are accepted.
Inclusion Criteria
* Provide informed consent (parent or LAR for participants aged 10 to 17).
Exclusion Criteria
* Participants who are less than 10 or greater than 89 years old.
10 Years
89 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
Meet the organizations funding or collaborating on the study and learn about their roles.
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
OTHER
Responsible Party
Identify the individual or organization who holds primary responsibility for the study information submitted to regulators.
Madhukar H. Trivedi, MD
Professor
Principal Investigators
Learn about the lead researchers overseeing the trial and their institutional affiliations.
Madhukar Trivedi, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Locations
Explore where the study is taking place and check the recruitment status at each participating site.
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Dallas, Texas, United States
Countries
Review the countries where the study has at least one active or historical site.
Other Identifiers
Review additional registry numbers or institutional identifiers associated with this trial.
STU 092015-049
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
More Related Trials
Additional clinical trials that may be relevant based on similarity analysis.