Clinical Trial of Estrogen for Postpartum Depression
Information source: National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on October 19, 2009 Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.
Condition(s) targeted: Postpartum Depression; Depression
Intervention: 17 beta-estradiol (Drug)
Phase: Phase 2
Status: Recruiting
Sponsored by: National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Overall contact: Patient Recruitment and Public Liaison Office, Phone: (800) 411-1222, Email: prpl@mail.cc.nih.gov
Summary
This study evaluates the efficacy of estrogen treatment in women with postpartum depression
(PPD).
PPD causes significant distress to a large number of women; the demand for effective
therapies to treat PPD is considerable. Estradiol therapy has a prophylactic effect in women
at high risk for developing PPD. The prevention of a decline in estradiol levels may prevent
the onset of PPD. Studies also suggest that estradiol has antidepressant effects in women
and may provide a safe and effective alternative to traditional antidepressants in women
with PPD.
Participants will be screened with a medical history, physical examination, blood and urine
tests, psychological tests, genetic studies, and self-rating scales and questionnaires. Upon
study entry, women will be randomly assigned to wear skin patches containing either
estradiol or placebo (a patch with no active ingredient) for 6 weeks. Women who receive
estradiol and do not menstruate during the last week of the study will receive progesterone
for 7 days to initiate menstruation. Women who receive placebo and do not menstruate during
the last week of the study will continue to receive placebo at the end of the study. Every
week, participants will have blood taken and will be asked to complete symptom self-rating
scales. A urine sample and blood samples will be collected at different time points through
out of the study. Participants who receive placebo and those whose symptoms do not improve
with estradiol therapy will be offered treatment with standard antidepressant medications
for 8 weeks at the end of the study.
Clinical Details
Official title: The Efficacy of 17Beta-Estradiol in Postpartum-Related Depressive Illness
Study design: Treatment, Randomized, Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Parallel Assignment, Efficacy Study
Primary outcome: Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (2) the 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS).
Secondary outcome: Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D); visual analogue scale (VAS) measuring the reported severity of 15 mood and behavioral symptoms; SCID interview.
Detailed description:
Postpartum-related mood disorders cause significant distress to a potentially large number
of women. The demand for effective therapies for treating these mood disorders is
considerable, as is the need to define clinical or biologic markers that may predict
successful response of these mood disturbances to estradiol. Despite the prevalence of
postpartum depressions, only one double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of a single
psychotropic agent has been performed in this condition. Similarly, despite evidence of
estradiol's therapeutic efficacy in trials that were both open (monotherapy) (1) and
controlled (combined with traditional antidepressant agents (2), the potential of estradiol
to be an effective alternative to traditional psychotropics in postpartum depression has not
been examined under controlled conditions.
Postpartum depressions occur by definition after delivery when women are relatively
hypogonadal. Indeed, plasma estradiol and progesterone levels are low and comparable to
those seen during the peri and postmenopause. However, there is no evidence that postpartum
depression represents a simple hormone deficiency, and women with postpartum depression are
not distinguished from women without postpartum depression on the basis of any abnormality
of basal reproductive hormones. Nonetheless, a role for declining estradiol secretion has
been suggested by the following observations: 1) estradiol therapy has been reported to have
a prophylactic effect in women at high risk for developing postpartum depression (3),
suggesting that the prevention of a decline in estradiol levels (threshold or rate of
decline) may prevent the onset of postpartum depression in some women; and (2) declining
ovarian steroids trigger the onset of mood disturbances in women with but not women without
a history of postpartum depression during a scaled down model of pregnancy in the puerperium
(4). Thus, as with depressions occurring during the perimenopause, when ovarian hormone
secretion is also declining, postpartum depression may also be responsive to estradiol
therapy. In fact, open trials of estradiol therapy in postpartum depression (1) as well as a
trial of estradiol in combination with traditional antidepressants (2) have suggested that
estradiol does have antidepressant-like effects that are observed within a three week period
in women with postpartum onset major depression. Thus, estradiol treatment may not only
provide a safe and effective alternative to traditional antidepressants in women with
postpartum depression, but it may also suggest the relevant hormonal trigger for the
development of this condition.
In this protocol we wish to investigate the effects of estradiol on mood in women with
moderately severe postpartum depression under placebo controlled conditions. This protocol
will address the following question: 1) Does estradiol improve mood in postpartum depressed
women?
Eligibility
Minimum age: 20 Years.
Maximum age: 45 Years.
Gender(s): Female.
Criteria:
- INCLUSION CRITERIA:
Subjects for this study will meet the following criteria:
1. A history of at least two weeks with postpartum-related mood disturbances of moderate
severity, and self-report of the onset of depression within three months of a normal
vaginal delivery or uncomplicated Caesarean section;
2. A current episode of minor (meeting 3-4 criterion symptoms) or major depression (of
moderate severity or less on the SCID severity scale and not meeting DSM-IV criteria
symptom 9 [suicidal ideation]) as determined by the administration of the minor
depression module of the SADS-L and the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV.
Additionally, to ensure that subjects meet a minimum threshold for severity of
depression, subjects will have scores greater than or equal to 10 on either the Beck
Depression Inventory (BDI) or the Center for Epidemiologic Studies - Depression
(CES-D) Scale during at least three of the six clinic visits during the two week
screening phase, as well as a 17 item Hamilton Depression score greater than or equal
to 10. Subjects will be excluded if they meet any of the following criteria: major
depression of greater than moderate severity (including postpartum psychosis). DSM-IV
criteria #9 (suicidal ideation), or anyone requiring immediate treatment after
clinical assessment.
3. Not greater than six months post delivery;
4. Age 20 to 45;
5.) No prior hormonal therapy for the treatment of postpartum-related mood or physical
symptoms within the last six months;
6) No history of psychiatric illness during the two years prior to the reported onset of
the current episode of depression;
7) In good medical health, and not taking any medication or dietary and herbal supplements
on a regular basis (with the exception of multivitamins or calcium supplements).
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
The following conditions will constitute contraindications to treatment and will preclude
a subject's participation in this protocol:
1) severe major depression with any of the following:
1. positive (threshold) response to SCID major depression section item # 9, suicidal
ideation;
2. anyone requiring immediate treatment after clinical assessment;
3. severity ratings greater than moderate on the SCID IV interview (including postpartum
psychosis);
2) current treatment with antidepressant medications
3) history of psychiatric illness during the two years before the reported onset of the
current episode of depression or a history of either mania (DSM-IV criteria) or postpartum
psychosis at any time in the past.
4) history of ischemic cardiac disease, pulmonary embolism, retinal thrombosis, or
thrombophlebitis; any subject with risk factors for thrombo-embolic phenomena including
cigarette smokers (greater than 10 cigarettes per day), varicose veins, patients with
prolonged periods of immobilization (including prolonged travel), and active heart
disease.
5) renal disease, asthma
6) hepatic dysfunction
7) women with a history of carcinoma of the breast, or women with a family history of the
following: premenopausal breast cancer or bilateral breast cancer in a first degree
relative; multiple family members (greater than three relatives) with postmenopausal
breast cancer
8) women with a history of uterine cancer, endometriosis, ill-defined pelvic lesions,
particularly undiagnosed ovarian enlargement, undiagnosed vaginal bleeding
9) patients with a known hypersensitivity of estradiol, Alora, or medroxyprogesterone
acetate
10) pregnant women
11) porphyria
12) diabetes mellitus
13) cholecystitis or pancreatitis
14) history of cerebrovascular disease (stroke), epilepsy, hypertension, hypercalcemia
15) recurrent migraine headaches
16) malignant melanoma
17) history of familial hyperlipoproteinemia
Locations and Contacts
Patient Recruitment and Public Liaison Office, Phone: (800) 411-1222, Email: prpl@mail.cc.nih.gov
National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, 9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, United States; Recruiting
Additional Information
NIH Clinical Center Detailed Web Page
Related publications: Ahokas A, Kaukoranta J, Wahlbeck K, Aito M. Estrogen deficiency in severe postpartum depression: successful treatment with sublingual physiologic 17beta-estradiol: a preliminary study. J Clin Psychiatry. 2001 May;62(5):332-6. Gregoire AJ, Kumar R, Everitt B, Henderson AF, Studd JW. Transdermal oestrogen for treatment of severe postnatal depression. Lancet. 1996 Apr 6;347(9006):930-3. Bloch M, Schmidt PJ, Danaceau M, Murphy J, Nieman L, Rubinow DR. Effects of gonadal steroids in women with a history of postpartum depression. Am J Psychiatry. 2000 Jun;157(6):924-30.
Starting date: April 2003
Ending date: January 2012
Last updated: August 24, 2009
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