Sequential Multiple Assignment Randomized Trial for Bipolar Depression

PHASE4RecruitingINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

2,726

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

October 1, 2024

Primary Completion Date

February 28, 2030

Study Completion Date

February 28, 2030

Conditions
Bipolar I DisorderDepression
Interventions
DRUG

Cariprazine

"1. Cariprazine monotherapy outperformed placebo in improving depressive symptoms in most large randomized control trials (RCT). Pooled data showed higher remission rates (30.2%) with cariprazine (1.5 mg and 3 mg/day) compared to placebo (20.9%). Its efficacy extends to bipolar I depression, including mixed features and anxiety.~2. Common adverse effects include nausea (8%) and akathisia (7%). Somnolence and sedation were slightly more common with cariprazine than placebo.~3. Results from a large RCT evaluating cariprazine for bipolar disorder maintenance treatment (NCT03573297) are awaited. An open-label trial reported reduced manic symptoms over 16 weeks.~4. Cariprazine is a D3-preferring partial agonist for D3 and D2 receptors. It antagonizes 5-HT2A and 5-HT2B receptors and partially agonizes 5-HT1A receptors. Affinity for 5-HT1C and histamine 1 receptors is low to moderate."

DRUG

Aripiprazole/Escitalopram combination

"1. 40-70% of bipolar patients use antidepressants, often with antipsychotics or mood stabilizers. Aripiprazole lacks efficacy in bipolar depression but is used for mania. Escitalopram, studied alongside mood stabilizers, showed some efficacy.~2. Aripiprazole in bipolar depression trials led to higher rates of akathisia, insomnia, nausea, fatigue, and impulse control disorders. Escitalopram's is generally safe but adverse effects include nausea, diarrhea, insomnia, dry mouth, ejaculatory dysfunction and dizziness.~3. Aripiprazole monotherapy in bipolar I patients reduced relapse rates and delayed relapse time, but not for depressive episodes.~4. Aripiprazole acts as a partial agonist at D2, D3, 5-HT1A, and 5-HT2C receptors, with antagonistic effects on α1 and possibly H1 receptors. Escitalopram is highly selective for the serotonin transporter, with no significant activity at other receptors."

DRUG

Quetiapine

"1. Both immediate and extended-release quetiapine monotherapies showed superiority over placebo in acute BD depression across three 8-week randomized trials, confirmed by meta-analysis. Quetiapine exhibited significantly higher remission rates (52.8%) compared to placebo (34.7%) and improved various aspects of life, including quality of life, clinical global impression, sleep, functioning, and anxiety.~2. Common adverse events of quetiapine include sedation, hypotension, increased appetite, weight gain, dyslipidemia, and elevated glucose levels, particularly in a population already at risk.~3. Four studies examined quetiapine's maintenance effects in patients with manic, mixed, or depressive episodes. Overall, quetiapine prolonged the time to recurrence for both depressive and manic episodes."

DRUG

Lurasidone

"1. Lurasidone, either alone or with lithium/valproate, proved more effective than placebo for acute BD depression in two 6-week randomized trials. Remission rates were significantly higher with lurasidone monotherapy (40.9%) and in combination (50.3%) compared to placebo (24.7% and 35.4% respectively). Lurasidone also improved anxiety, quality of life, and disability.~2. Common mild adverse events included nausea, headache, akathisia, somnolence, sedation, dry mouth, and vomiting. Weight gain, dyslipidemia, and increased glucose levels were not observed.~3. In a 6-month double-blind discontinuation study post-acute treatment response, lurasidone combined with lithium/valproate prolonged time to depressive episode recurrence compared to placebo (hazard ratio: 0.68). Although not statistically significant due to low placebo recurrence and shorter follow-up, it hints at maintenance efficacy."

Trial Locations (17)

10016

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

New York University Grossman School of Medicine NYU, New York

10461

RECRUITING

Montefiore Medical Center and Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York

15260

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh

19104

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

21218

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

John Hopkins, Baltimore

27599

RECRUITING

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill

35294

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

University of Alabama Birmingham, Birmingham

47405

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

Steve Strakowski, Bloomington

48109

RECRUITING

University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

77030

RECRUITING

UT Health Houston Texas, Houston

78712

RECRUITING

University of Texas at Austin, Austin

02478

RECRUITING

McLean Hospital, Belmont

02114

RECRUITING

Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston

87131-0001

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center Albuquerque, Albuquerque

44106-1712

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland

75390-7208

RECRUITING

UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas

V6T 1Z4

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

University of British Columbia, Vancouver

All Listed Sponsors
collaborator

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute

OTHER

lead

Massachusetts General Hospital

OTHER

NCT06433635 - Sequential Multiple Assignment Randomized Trial for Bipolar Depression | Biotech Hunter | Biotech Hunter