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Clinical Trials/NCT02407821
NCT02407821
Terminated
Phase 2

A Pilot Study to Evaluate the Feasibility and Safety of Performing a Double Blind, Placebo-controlled, Randomized Controlled Trial of the Routine Use of SSRI's at the Initiation of End-stage Renal Disease Treatment

University Health Network, Toronto3 sites in 1 country25 target enrollmentMarch 2015

Overview

Phase
Phase 2
Intervention
Escitalopram
Conditions
End Stage Renal Disease
Sponsor
University Health Network, Toronto
Enrollment
25
Locations
3
Primary Endpoint
Proportion of consecutive incident dialysis patients that are eligible
Status
Terminated
Last Updated
7 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

In this study the investigators hypothesize that antidepressant therapy may improve the overall welling of patients with acute or chronic kidney disease when given around the time of starting chronic dialysis therapy. This study is a pilot, randomized controlled trial that aims to examine whether prescribing oral escitalopram to all incident dialysis patients is safe and feasible.

Detailed Description

Over 120,000 people with kidney disease start chronic dialysis therapy across North America each year. In addition to high mortality, studies uniformly report high rates of depression, pain and non-specific symptoms after dialysis is started. Suicide rates are high, particularly early in the treatment history, and withdrawal from dialysis is increasingly common in recent years, suggesting a high burden of depressive symptoms. While various treatments appear to be effective, there are multiple barriers preventing patients from getting or accepting appropriate care for depression. The investigators hypothesize that antidepressant therapy may improve morbidity and mortality when prescribed to patients with acute or chronic kidney disease (CKD) around the time of starting chronic dialysis therapy. This is a phase II, multi-centre, double blind, randomized controlled trial to compare the safety and feasibility of oral escitalopram to placebo in incident dialysis patients. Those who have started chronic dialysis therapy within 12 weeks of being identified will be eligible for the study. Participants will randomized 1:1 to receive either escitalopram or placebo daily for 26 weeks. The primary outcome is feasibility in terms of recruitment rates and protocol compliance. The secondary outcomes include estimates of safety (adverse events) and efficacy (hospitalization days, mortality, and changes in depression and quality of life scores). This pilot trial is intended to guide and inform the design of a full scale study to evaluate whether the routine use of escitalopram can improve the quality of life and hospital free days in patients on dialysis, as compared to placebo.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
March 2015
End Date
January 2017
Last Updated
7 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Male or Female aged ≥ 25 years
  • Patient or substitute decision maker willing and able to give informed consent
  • Incident to dialysis defined as within a 12-week window from the first dialysis treatment (1 week prior to, to 11 weeks after). Patients on all forms of dialysis except CRRT (including peritoneal dialysis, home hemodialysis, in-centre intermittent hemodialysis and nocturnal dialysis) will be eligible. Patients returning to dialysis after transplant graft loss will be eligible.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Past history of allergy to, or intolerance of, escitalopram
  • Known severe hepatic dysfunction
  • Recent history of active bleeding within the past 3 months (e.g. gastrointestinal bleeding requiring hospitalization) or known bleeding disorder
  • Current use of class I anti-arrhythmic medications; SSRI or SNRI antidepressants; pimozide, MAO inhibitors, reserpine, guanethidine, cimetidine or methyldopa, omeprazole; tri-cyclic and tetra-cyclic anti-depressants, neuroleptics or anti-convulsants, triptans, tramadol, linezolid, tryptophan, and St. John's Wort; but not gabapentin
  • Past treatment failure for depression with escitalopram or with ≥ 2 antidepressant treatments of at least 6 weeks duration each
  • Initiation of psychotherapy for depression in the 3 months prior to study entry
  • Alcohol or substance abuse or dependence that requires acute detoxification at study entry
  • Present or past psychosis or bipolar disorder, schizophrenia or any other psychotic disorder documented in medical records
  • Suicidal ideation defined as the patient is at significant risk of suicide on the Columbia Suicide Scale71 or has attempted suicide within 6 months prior to the Screening Visit
  • Clinically-identified major depressive disorder that, in the opinion of the clinical team, requires treatment

Arms & Interventions

Escitalopram

Intervention: Escitalopram

Placebo

Intervention: Placebo

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Proportion of consecutive incident dialysis patients that are eligible

Time Frame: 12 months

Proportion of eligible patients that will consent to randomization

Time Frame: 12 months

Proportion of randomized patients that comply with their group assignment

Time Frame: 12 months

Compliance defined as \>80% of doses taken

Secondary Outcomes

  • Hospital-free days(12 months)
  • Serious adverse events(12 months)
  • Number of patients withdrawn from the study drug due to QTc prolongation(12 months)
  • Completion rate for all secondary outcome measures (KDQoL, HUI-III, PHQ-9, Handgrip and 2-Minute Walk Test)(3 months and 6 months)
  • Death(12 months)

Study Sites (3)

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