The purpose of this study is to see whether the medication mifepristone is an effective and tolerable treatment for increasing the clinical effectiveness of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) and protecting cognitive function during ECT. Both Mifepristone and ECT appear to normalize hyperfunctioning of the hypothalmic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, which has been found among patients with major depression referred for ECT. The combination of these two treatments in major depression may lead to a more rapid clinical response than ECT alone. Additionally, there appears to be a connection between pre-ECT higher cortisol levels due to HPA axis hyperfunctioning and post-ECT cognitive impairment. Administration of mifepristone prior to and during ECT treatment may reduce cortisol levels and reduce the incidence of cognitive impairment observed after ECT.
Patients referred to the Stanford ECT Service who provide informed consent for this study will be screened for eligibility. Day -4 to 0: Screening (visit 1) will occur three to six days prior to the first ECT treatment. Screening procedures will include: Psychiatric interviews and ratings (including MINI, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale and Clinician's Global Impression) and review/retrieval of results of pre-ECT physical exam, ECG, chest x-ray, laboratory evaluations (including comprehensive metabolic panel, comprehensive blood count, and urine toxicology), and vital signs from the subject's medical record. A urine pregnancy test will be included for females of childbearing potential. Concomitant medications and pre-existing health issues will be recorded. Subjects who are deemed eligible for this study will then undergo a battery of neuropsychiatric assessments and will be admitted to GCRC for collection of blood samples to measure adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) and cortisol levels. These samples will be collected hourly beginning at 1pm and ending at 4pm. Day 1: Subjects will be randomized 1:1 to receive either mifepristone 600mg or placebo each day at bedtime beginning two days prior to the first ECT treatment. Subjects will be administered study medication on Day 1 through Day 8. Day 3: Subjects will be interviewed with the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale and Clinician's Global Impression before their first ECT treatment. Day 11: (visit 2) assessments will include psychiatric ratings (including Hamilton Depression Rating Scale and Clinician's Global Impression) and a battery of neuropsychiatric assessments. Adverse events and concomitant medications will be reviewed and recorded. Subjects will be admitted to the GCRC for collection of blood samples to measure ACTH and cortisol levels. Samples will be collected hourly beginning at 1pm and ending at 4pm. Day 18: (visit 3) assessments will include psychiatric ratings (including Hamilton Depression Rating Scale and Clinician's Global Impression). Adverse events and concomitant medications will be reviewed and recorded. Clinical laboratory assessments will be completed (including a urine pregnancy test for females, comprehensive metabolic panel, comprehensive blood count, urine toxicology, and ECG.) Final visit: (visit 4) will occur 24-72 hours after the last ECT treatment. Assessments will include psychiatric ratings (including Hamilton Depression Rating Scale and Clinician's Global Impression) and a battery of neuropsychiatric assessments. Adverse events and concomitant medications will be reviewed and recorded. A urine pregnancy test will be completed for females. In addition to the ECT treatment consent, the following materials will be collected from the participant's medical record for every ECT treatment: ECT treatment orders, ECT procedure note and the results of each pre-ECT Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS). ECT treatments at Stanford's ECT Service run every Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
11
Mifepristone is a glucocorticoid receptor antagonist.
Placebo is a capsule without a pharmacological active ingredient
Stanford University School of Medicine
Stanford, California, United States
Hamilton Depression Rating Scale Score
The Hamilton Depression Scale measures the severity of depression. There are 17 items rated 0 to 4. A total score of 0 indicates that the patient does not endorse any symptoms of depression. The maximum score (the most severe depression) is 68. The outcome measure is the difference between Visit 1 and Visit 4 Hamilton Depression Rating Scale scores of the mifepristone and placebo groups.
Time frame: Screening to Final Visit
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