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Predictors of Relapse in Major Depressive Disorder

Predictors of Relapse in Major Depressive Disorder

Recruiting
18-70 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a common condition involving recurring periods of depression. One of the major challenges faced by people with MDD is that the episodes of depression tend to recur even after they are successfully treated. Currently, it is hard to predict when a depressive episode will recur. Being able to forecast this would help healthcare providers monitor patients and prevent relapse.

The purpose of this study is to monitor features such as clinical symptoms, physical activity, sleep patterns, cognitive functioning and brain activity to help us understand how relapse happens and the mechanisms that cause it. From these different types of data, investigators will build a model that tells us who is more likely to experience a relapse and when the relapse is likely to occur.

This study will be a significant step forward in understanding and managing MDD. Investigator will create a practical tool that will allow healthcare providers to monitor patients more effectively. By identifying early signs of relapse, investigators may be able to intervene promptly to prevent depressive episodes. Finally, our research will help understand the factors that underlie relapse in MDD, which will encourage the development of novel treatment approaches.

Description

This study is a multi-centre prospective naturalistic observational cohort study. Participants will be enrolled and followed for 18 months since enrollment. This study will be conducted across nine Canadian clinical-academic sites (Vancouver, Calgary, Hamilton, Toronto Western Hospital, Toronto-Center for Addiction and Mental Health [CAMH], Kingston, Ottawa, Ontario Shores and Halifax), which are currently enrolling participants for the OPTIMUM-D study (NCT05017311). For the present study, participants will be recruited from each of these sites, focusing on OPTIMUM-D participants who attain broadly-defined remission.

Participants will wear a GENEActiv accelerometer (Activinsights; motion tracker) on the non-dominant wrist for the duration of the study. Participants will rate their depression by completing the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptoms 16-item Self-Rated Version (QIDS-16SR) and anxiety by completing the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item (GAD-7) at weekly interval throughout the study. Participants will have bi-monthly in-person follow-up assessments to rate their depressive symptom severity using the Montgomery-Asberg depression Rating Scale (MADRS). Speech and Electroencephalography (EEG) will be collected bi-monthly, and at the time of relapse.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Outpatients 18 to 70 years of age.
  • Meet DSM-V criteria for MDD as determined by the SCID-5.
  • In the current or most recent MDE, participant must be responding or responded to a treatment or a combination of treatments for MDD. Patients with remitted MDD who are currently not taking medications will also be accepted.
  • Participants must have a MADRS total score ≤14.
  • Participant must be willing and able to complete self-reported assessments including sufficient fluency in English.
  • Participant must be willing to wear the wrist-worn actigraphic device for the duration of the study.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Bipolar I or Bipolar-II diagnosis (lifetime), schizophrenia, or schizoaffective disorder.
  • Elevated risk of suicide, as determined by clinical evaluation.
  • Existence of major neurological disorders, head injury (if accompanied by any of [A] loss of consciousness longer than 24 hours, [B] documented evidence of Glasgow Coma Scale <9 at the time of injury, [C] post-traumatic amnesia lasting longer than 24 hours) (43), or other unstable medical conditions.
  • The participant presents with any condition which, according to the researcher's judgment, could interfere with the assessments stipulated in the protocol.
  • The participant is employed by the researcher, actively involved in the current study or other research overseen by the same researcher, or is a relative of a study employee or the researcher.

Study details
    Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)

NCT06746155

Abraham Nunes

15 October 2025

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