The purpose of this research study is to find out if a test can predict whether someone with depression will get better with treatment. We also want to find out whether there are changes in the brains of depressed patients having different types of treatment (drug therapy vs. talk therapy). We hope that a test called QEEG (Quantitative Electroencephalogram) can tell us if a treatment is going to work, even before the person starts to feel better. Hypothesis 1: Response to treatment will correlate with changes in QEEG metrics. Hypothesis 2: QEEG parameters, different from those that predict response to pharmacotherapy, will be associated with response to CBT.
To our knowledge, QEEG has not been studied in the prediction of response to CBT, an important and widely used non-pharmacologic approach to treating depression. Establishing QEEG technology as a predictor of response to CBT could help to guide treatment selection for individual patients. It is probable that certain patient populations are more likely to respond to either psychotherapeutic or psychopharmacological interventions, while others may benefit from a combination of treatment modalities. This study will provide preliminary information about the utility of QEEG as a predictor of response in psychotherapy and will furnish the knowledge base of QEEG changes related to clinical variables, providing pilot data for a study in a larger sample. We have hypothesized that clinical response will correlate with changes in QEEG metrics from beginning to two weeks after treatment, and that QEEG parameters, different from those that predict response to pharmacotherapy, will be associated with response to CBT.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
39
The CBT group will receive weekly 50-minute individual sessions over the course of 12 weeks conducted by experienced therapists who are trained in manual based CBT.
The medication group will receive open label treatment of escitalopram, 10-20 mg/day, flexible dose, for 12 weeks, and will be seen every two weeks by a study physician.
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D-17) Scores
The Hamilton Depression Rating Scale is a clinician-rated scale used to rate depression severity. The maximum score is a 50 and the minimum score is a 0, where higher scores indicate greater severity. Scores from 14 to 18 indicate moderately severe depression.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Change in Absolute Beta Power in Channel 4
Change between baseline and LOCF in absolute power of the beta wave recorded from channel 4 of the EEG
Time frame: 12 weeks
Change in Absolute Theta Power From Channel 1
Change between baseline and LOCF in relative power of the theta wave recorded from channel 1 of the EEG. Relative power refers to the percentage of power in the theta wave compared with the total power in the patient's EEG.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Change in Relative Theta Power Channel 3
Change between baseline and LOCF in relative power of the theta wave recorded from channel 3 of the EEG. Relative power refers to the percentage of power in the theta wave compared with the total power in the patient's EEG.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Change in Relative Theta Power From Channel 4
Change between baseline and LOCF in relative power of the theta wave recorded from channel 4 of the EEG. Relative power refers to the percentage of power in the theta wave compared with the total power in the patient's EEG.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Change in Relative Beta Power From Channel 4
Change between baseline and LOCF in relative power of the beetawave recorded from channel 4 of the EEG. Relative power refers to the percentage of power in the beta wave compared with the total power in the patient's EEG.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Change in Absolute Beta Power From the Ear Channel
Change between baseline and LOCF in absolute power of the beta wave recorded from the ear channel of the EEG. The ear channel refers to the average of channels 3 and 4.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Change in Relative Theta Power From Temporal Channel
Change between baseline and LOCF in relative power of the theta wave recorded from the temporal channel of the EEG. Relative power refers to the percentage of power in the theta wave compared with the total power in the patient's EEG. The temporal channel refers to the average of channels 1 and 2
Time frame: 12 weeks
Change in Relative Theta Power From Ear Channel
Change between baseline and LOCF in relative power of the theta wave recorded from the ear channel of the EEG. Relative power refers to the percentage of power in the theta wave compared with the total power in the patient's EEG. The ear channel refers to the average of channels 3 and 4
Time frame: 12 weeks
Percent Change in Relative Theta Power From Week 1 of the Ear Channel
Percent change between baseline and week 1 in relative power of the theta wave recorded from the ear channel of the EEG. Relative power refers to the percentage of power in the theta wave compared with the total power in the patient's EEG. The ear channel refers to the average of channels 3 and 4
Time frame: 1 week
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