Phase 4
Completed N=100
Antidepressant Response in the Treatment of Depressive Symptoms and Frailty Characteristics in Older Adults
Major Depressive Disorder · Dysthymic Disorder · Depressive Disorder, NOS
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01973283 ↗
Enrolled (actual)
100
Serious AEs
2.0%
Results posted
Jan 2021
Primary outcomePrimary: Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) — 13.3 score on a scale
◆ Published Evidence
Established
44citations · ~7 / year
Frailty and Its Correlates in Adults With Late Life Depression.
Summary
The goal of this open-administration treatment study of citalopram (or duloxetine) is to evaluate the effect of antidepressant medication on treating the syndrome of "frailty" in older adults with depressive symptoms. Patients with significant depressive symptoms (defined as CES-D (Center for Epidemiological Studies - Depression scale) > 10) and 1 or more symptoms of the frailty syndrome (exhaustion, decreased energy, weight loss, decreased grip strength, and slow/unsteady gait) will be evaluated and treated with citalopram (or duloxetine) for 8 weeks to test whether antidepressant medication improves both the syndrome of frailty and depressive symptoms. Patients evaluated at the Adult and Late Life Depression clinic and eligible to participate in the study will be treated with an antidepressant medication and assessed on the primary outcome variables (characteristics of frailty, depressive symptoms) as well as on secondary variables which include cognition (global cognition, episodic memory, executive function), and function (physical mobility, instrumental activities of daily living, and social functioning) prior to treatment initiation and following 8-weeks of treatment. The hypotheses for this protocol predict that we will discover a significant improvement on both frailty characteristics and depressive symptoms in this clinical population when treated with antidepressant medication (citalopram or duloxetine).
Linked Publications (2)
-
Frailty and Its Correlates in Adults With Late Life Depression.
-
Frailty Worsens Antidepressant Treatment Outcomes in Late Life Depression.
Outcome Measures
| Outcome | Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| PRIMARY Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) |
12.5 | — |
| PRIMARY Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HRSD) |
13.6 | — |
| PRIMARY Hamilton Depression Rating Scale: Stratified by Baseline Frailty |
14.3; 13.0 | — |
| SECONDARY World Health Organization Disability Assessment 2.0 (36-item) |
67.8 | — |
| SECONDARY World Health Organization Disability Assessment 2.0 (36-item)--Stratified by Baseline Frailty |
80.9; 56.7 | — |
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- Anyone with 1 or more characteristics of frailty
- HRSD>16 and a DSM-IV depressive disorder (e.g. MDD, Dysthymia)
- Capable of providing informed consent
- Currently followed by a PCP (had an eval in last 6-months)
Exclusion Criteria
- Acute cancer treatment
- Acute, severe or unstable medical illness
- End stage medical illness (e.g. liver, kidney, pulmonary)
- Mini Mental Exam < 24 or a diagnosis of dementia
- Individuals who do not have capacity to consent
- Diagnosis of substance abuse or dependence (last 12 months), excluding Nicotine dependence
- History of psychosis or psychotic disorder or bipolar disorder
- Patient is considered a significant risk of suicide
- Subject is considered based on history to be unlikely to respond to the single agent antidepressant (i.e., subjects with treatment resistant depression, including subjects with previous treatment with ECT)
- History of allergic or adverse reaction to escitalopram or duloxetine, or non-response to adequate trial of escitalopram (at least 4 weeks at dose of 20 mg) or duloxetine (at least 4 weeks at dose of 90mg).
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01973283) and the linked publication. Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication. Informational only — not medical advice.