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Rationale and design of the randomised clinical trial comparing early medication change (EMC) strategy with treatment as usual (TAU) in patients with Major Depressive Disorder - the EMC trial

BACKGROUND: In Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), the traditional belief of a delayed onset of antidepressants' effects has lead to the concept of current guidelines that treatment durations should be between 3-8 weeks before medication change in case of insufficient outcome. Post hoc analyses of...

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Autores principales: Tadić, André, Gorbulev, Stanislav, Dahmen, Norbert, Hiemke, Christoph, Braus, Dieter F, Röschke, Joachim, van Calker, Dietrich, Wachtlin, Daniel, Kronfeld, Kai, Gorbauch, Thorsten, Seibert-Grafe, Monika, Lieb, Klaus
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2837649/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20187947
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-11-21
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author Tadić, André
Gorbulev, Stanislav
Dahmen, Norbert
Hiemke, Christoph
Braus, Dieter F
Röschke, Joachim
van Calker, Dietrich
Wachtlin, Daniel
Kronfeld, Kai
Gorbauch, Thorsten
Seibert-Grafe, Monika
Lieb, Klaus
author_facet Tadić, André
Gorbulev, Stanislav
Dahmen, Norbert
Hiemke, Christoph
Braus, Dieter F
Röschke, Joachim
van Calker, Dietrich
Wachtlin, Daniel
Kronfeld, Kai
Gorbauch, Thorsten
Seibert-Grafe, Monika
Lieb, Klaus
author_sort Tadić, André
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), the traditional belief of a delayed onset of antidepressants' effects has lead to the concept of current guidelines that treatment durations should be between 3-8 weeks before medication change in case of insufficient outcome. Post hoc analyses of clinical trials, however, have shown that improvement usually occurs within the first 10-14 days of treatment and that such early improvement (Hamilton Depression Rating Scale [HAMD] decrease ≥20%) has a substantial predictive value for final treatment outcome. Even more important, non-improvement (HAMD decrease <20%) after 14 days of treatment was found to be highly predictive for a poor final treatment outcome. METHODS/DESIGN: The EMC trial is a phase IV, multi-centre, multi-step, randomized, observer-blinded, actively controlled parallel-group clinical trial to investigate for the first time prospectively, whether non-improvers after 14 days of antidepressant treatment with an early medication change (EMC) are more likely to attain remission (HAMD-17 ≤7) on treatment day 56 compared to patients treated according to current guideline recommendation (treatment as usual; TAU). In level 1 of the EMC trial, non-improvers after 14 days of antidepressant treatment will be randomised to an EMC strategy or TAU. The EMC strategy for this study schedules a first medication change on day 15; in case of non-improvement between days 15-28, a second medication change will be performed. TAU schedules the first medication change after 28 days in case of non-response (HAMD-17 decrease <50%). Both interventions will last 42 days. In levels 2 and 3, EMC strategies will be compared with TAU strategies in improvers on day 14, who experience a stagnation of improvement during the course of treatment. The trial is supported by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) and will be conducted in cooperation with the BMBF funded Interdisciplinary Centre Clinical Trials (IZKS) at the University Medical Centre Mainz and at six clinical trial sites in Germany. DISCUSSION: If the EMC strategies lead to significantly more remitters, changes of clinical practice, guidelines for the treatment of MDD as well as research settings can be expected. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clincaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00974155; EudraCT: 2008-008280-96.
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spelling pubmed-28376492010-03-13 Rationale and design of the randomised clinical trial comparing early medication change (EMC) strategy with treatment as usual (TAU) in patients with Major Depressive Disorder - the EMC trial Tadić, André Gorbulev, Stanislav Dahmen, Norbert Hiemke, Christoph Braus, Dieter F Röschke, Joachim van Calker, Dietrich Wachtlin, Daniel Kronfeld, Kai Gorbauch, Thorsten Seibert-Grafe, Monika Lieb, Klaus Trials Study protocol BACKGROUND: In Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), the traditional belief of a delayed onset of antidepressants' effects has lead to the concept of current guidelines that treatment durations should be between 3-8 weeks before medication change in case of insufficient outcome. Post hoc analyses of clinical trials, however, have shown that improvement usually occurs within the first 10-14 days of treatment and that such early improvement (Hamilton Depression Rating Scale [HAMD] decrease ≥20%) has a substantial predictive value for final treatment outcome. Even more important, non-improvement (HAMD decrease <20%) after 14 days of treatment was found to be highly predictive for a poor final treatment outcome. METHODS/DESIGN: The EMC trial is a phase IV, multi-centre, multi-step, randomized, observer-blinded, actively controlled parallel-group clinical trial to investigate for the first time prospectively, whether non-improvers after 14 days of antidepressant treatment with an early medication change (EMC) are more likely to attain remission (HAMD-17 ≤7) on treatment day 56 compared to patients treated according to current guideline recommendation (treatment as usual; TAU). In level 1 of the EMC trial, non-improvers after 14 days of antidepressant treatment will be randomised to an EMC strategy or TAU. The EMC strategy for this study schedules a first medication change on day 15; in case of non-improvement between days 15-28, a second medication change will be performed. TAU schedules the first medication change after 28 days in case of non-response (HAMD-17 decrease <50%). Both interventions will last 42 days. In levels 2 and 3, EMC strategies will be compared with TAU strategies in improvers on day 14, who experience a stagnation of improvement during the course of treatment. The trial is supported by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) and will be conducted in cooperation with the BMBF funded Interdisciplinary Centre Clinical Trials (IZKS) at the University Medical Centre Mainz and at six clinical trial sites in Germany. DISCUSSION: If the EMC strategies lead to significantly more remitters, changes of clinical practice, guidelines for the treatment of MDD as well as research settings can be expected. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clincaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00974155; EudraCT: 2008-008280-96. BioMed Central 2010-02-26 /pmc/articles/PMC2837649/ /pubmed/20187947 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-11-21 Text en Copyright ©2010 Tadić et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study protocol
Tadić, André
Gorbulev, Stanislav
Dahmen, Norbert
Hiemke, Christoph
Braus, Dieter F
Röschke, Joachim
van Calker, Dietrich
Wachtlin, Daniel
Kronfeld, Kai
Gorbauch, Thorsten
Seibert-Grafe, Monika
Lieb, Klaus
Rationale and design of the randomised clinical trial comparing early medication change (EMC) strategy with treatment as usual (TAU) in patients with Major Depressive Disorder - the EMC trial
title Rationale and design of the randomised clinical trial comparing early medication change (EMC) strategy with treatment as usual (TAU) in patients with Major Depressive Disorder - the EMC trial
title_full Rationale and design of the randomised clinical trial comparing early medication change (EMC) strategy with treatment as usual (TAU) in patients with Major Depressive Disorder - the EMC trial
title_fullStr Rationale and design of the randomised clinical trial comparing early medication change (EMC) strategy with treatment as usual (TAU) in patients with Major Depressive Disorder - the EMC trial
title_full_unstemmed Rationale and design of the randomised clinical trial comparing early medication change (EMC) strategy with treatment as usual (TAU) in patients with Major Depressive Disorder - the EMC trial
title_short Rationale and design of the randomised clinical trial comparing early medication change (EMC) strategy with treatment as usual (TAU) in patients with Major Depressive Disorder - the EMC trial
title_sort rationale and design of the randomised clinical trial comparing early medication change (emc) strategy with treatment as usual (tau) in patients with major depressive disorder - the emc trial
topic Study protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2837649/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20187947
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-11-21
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