Search Clinical Trials
Before medications are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or before certain therapy methods are widely accepted as effective, they are tested on people who volunteer to participate in a clinical trial.
Organizations across the country are looking for people like you to take part in their research studies. The list of studies below have been selected from ClinicalTrials.gov based on their inclusion of one or more of the following terms: anxiety disorders, depression, OCD, PTSD, and bipolar disorder.
The Anxiety and Depression Association of America (ADAA) is supportive of research that is conducted through clinical trials. Participating in research can potentially help change the mental health outcomes for you and others who suffer anxiety, depression, and related disorders. You may learn about new interventions/treatments that are being considered.
Read this ADAA blog about things to know and questions to ask before committing to a clinical trial.
This website page is brought to you in partnership with ResearchMatch.
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Use of Ketosis in Modulating Metabolic Pathways in Bipolar Disorder
Stony Brook University
Bipolar Disorder
Bipolar Disorder Type 1
The goal of this clinical trial is to test how specific components of diet affect brain
function and behavior for individuals with bipolar. The main question it aims to answer
is how glucose and ketones each affect the brain's response to risk and reward.
Participants will be asked to provide blood1 expand
The goal of this clinical trial is to test how specific components of diet affect brain function and behavior for individuals with bipolar. The main question it aims to answer is how glucose and ketones each affect the brain's response to risk and reward. Participants will be asked to provide blood (to assess baseline measures of how the body uses energy), and then to receive two MRI scan sessions, on separate days. During each MRI scan session, participants will play three games, from which they can win money, before and after drinking glucose (on one day) or ketones (on the other day). Investigators will compare individuals with and without bipolar to test whether the two groups differ in how their brains use energy, and to test how the brain's use of energy affects behavior. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jan 2024 |
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Getting Out of the House: Using Behavioral Activation to Increase Community Participation
Temple University
Major Depressive Disorder
Schizo Affective Disorder
Schizophrenia
Bipolar Disorder
The goal of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of an behavioral activation
intervention to increase meaningful activity and community participation for people with
serious mental illness.
The overall objective of this study is to increase engagement in meaningful activities
and community1 expand
The goal of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of an behavioral activation intervention to increase meaningful activity and community participation for people with serious mental illness. The overall objective of this study is to increase engagement in meaningful activities and community participation. The objectives of the project are as follows: 1. To determine if the intervention leads to increases the frequency and variety of activities. 2. To determine if the intervention leads to increases in community mobility. 3. To determine which demographic and environmental factors and mechanisms of action impact the effectiveness of the intervention. 4. To determine if the the intervention leads to an improvement in overall well-being (e.g., improved quality of life). Participants will be asked to attend a 2-hour weekly online session for 10 weeks and then a 1-hour online monthly session for a 3 month maintenance period. For data collection, participants will also be asked to: 1. Complete three, approximately 1-hour interviews at baseline, after the 10 week intervention, and again at the end of the maintenance period; 2. Carry a mobile phone with a global positioning system app to track their movements outside their home for 2 weeks at a time, at three separate times (e.g., baseline, after the intervention, and at the end of the maintenance period); and 3. Complete a 15 minute weekly interviews for 26 weeks about their daily activities and participation. The study will enroll 52 participants split into 4 cohorts of 13. The study will use a multiple baseline design and, as such, all participants will receive the intervention and there is no control group. Type: Interventional Start Date: Feb 2024 |
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An Exploratory Study Examining Biopsychosocial Markers of Anxiety and Depression
Singula Institute
Depression
Anxiety Disorders
Stress Related Disorder
This research study is studying how thoughts, feelings, surroundings, and individual
biology may contribute to why and how people experience anxiety or depression.
We are trying to find out the wide variety of reasons that people may experience anxiety
or depression, and why different people are h1 expand
This research study is studying how thoughts, feelings, surroundings, and individual biology may contribute to why and how people experience anxiety or depression. We are trying to find out the wide variety of reasons that people may experience anxiety or depression, and why different people are helped by different forms of treatment. We are trying to determine why people stay in treatment, and what factors contribute to a positive or negative response to treatment. These reasons may be due to thoughts, feelings, beliefs, personality, biology, social support network, life events, and barriers to treatment. A wide range of information about factors that impact anxiety and depression will be included. These include, among others, measures of inflammation, hormone levels, behavior, spoken language, personality, medical history, social determinants of health, and attitudes toward mental health and its treatment. The study involves psychological and psychiatric treatments in the form of psychotherapy and medication management. The participant will be asked to set specific goals for study treatment, and to provide videos between sessions about relevant medication, emotional, and sleep factors in their life. In summary, this study will collect biological, psychological, and social factors that may play a role in anxiety and depression. This will inform both individual's diagnosis and treatment and will be used in a later set of analyses that can inform diagnosis and treatment for other individuals who share similar characteristics. Type: Observational Start Date: Mar 2023 |
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Examining the Efficacy of a Digital Therapeutic to Prevent Suicidal Behaviors
University of Memphis
Suicidal Behaviors
Suicide Ideation
Depression/Anxiety
The primary aim of the project is to test the efficacy of BCBT delivered via a digital
platform (i.e., smartphone) to Servicemembers with recent suicidal ideation and/or
suicide attempts presenting to primary care clinics. Given existing challenges of scaling
empirically-supported treatments/interv1 expand
The primary aim of the project is to test the efficacy of BCBT delivered via a digital platform (i.e., smartphone) to Servicemembers with recent suicidal ideation and/or suicide attempts presenting to primary care clinics. Given existing challenges of scaling empirically-supported treatments/interventions for suicidality with fidelity, this project could lead to markedly expanded access to BCBT, along with improving our understanding about what intervention strategies are most effective and how they can be delivered with meaningful fidelity. Aviva, the digital version of BCBT, was developed for use with patients across the full spectrum of healthcare settings, including primary care. Aviva is not an emergency alert system, rather a digital platform for delivery of the full scope of BCBT treatment components. An open-label single group Phase I clinical trial has demonstrated the safety, tolerability, feasibility, fidelity, and potential efficacy of Aviva, with participants completing modules over 8 weeks, and follow-up assessments at weeks 1, 4, and 8. Subsequent refinements included the addition of technical features that would allow patients to revisit and/or repeat previously completed modules, along with integration of more characters for delivering video vignettes and greater opportunities for skills practice and treatment engagement. These modifications have further enhanced Aviva safety, tolerability, and fidelity, consistent with the original BCBT protocol. Not only is it hypothesized that Aviva will result in significantly larger reductions in severity of suicidal ideation than participants randomized to the control condition, but also that greater app engagement will be negatively correlated with severity of suicidal thinking. Moderators and mediators (i.e. suicidal beliefs, wish to live, impulsive decision-making) of intervention effects will also be examined. The study will be conducted at the primary care clinics at Fort Carson, with a goal of enrolling 720 patients across a two-year timeframe. Participants will be identified using each clinic's existing suicide risk assessment methods, including the PHQ-9 suicide risk item and a score of 1 or higher on the CSSRS Screener (Recent). Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two treatment conditions, Aviva or control (i.e., development of a safety plan consistent with local procedures and policies, along with referral for standard mental health care and suicide risk management in accordance with local policies and procedures). In an effort to address potential performance bias specific to smartphone use, participants in the control condition will download the Suicide Safety Plan app to their smartphones. Those in the Aviva condition will also complete weekly check-ins with Project 2 research clinicians to review treatment adherence, identify and respond to any logistical/operational problems, and respond to any unexpected emergencies and/or participant safety concerns. Participants will have up to five data points: baseline, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months. All data available from all participants and all time points will be included in the analyses, consistent with the intent-to-treat principle. Across our two previous clinical trials and our in-progress RCT, attrition during the first 12 months postbaseline was <30% and we anticipate similar rates in this trial. Type: Interventional Start Date: Feb 2024 |
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Impact of Virtual Reality on Anxiety in Patients Undergoing Interventional Procedures
Northwestern University
Anxiety
Periprocedural anxiety is a common problem for patients who undergo interventional pain
procedures. Virtual Reality (VR) is an immersive experience that has gained acceptance in
the medical field as a tool for reducing anxiety and pain for patients.Research Aim:
To evaluate the effect of immersive1 expand
Periprocedural anxiety is a common problem for patients who undergo interventional pain procedures. Virtual Reality (VR) is an immersive experience that has gained acceptance in the medical field as a tool for reducing anxiety and pain for patients.Research Aim: To evaluate the effect of immersive virtual reality (VR) on periprocedural anxiety related to therapeutic cervical epidural steroid injections (ESI). The investigators hypothesize that immersive virtual reality will result in a clinically meaningful anxiety reduction, defined as the proportion of participants with > 50% reduction in Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) anxiety scores when compared to participants in the non-treatment group who will have standard preprocedural waiting time conditions in clinic, but no VR experience. Similarly, the investigators hypothesize a significant reduction in objective sympathetic tone as measured by skin sympathetic nerve activity (SKNA). Type: Interventional Start Date: Mar 2023 |
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Cognitive Behavioral Intervention to Reduce Procedural Anxiety Among Woman With High Risk Pregnanci1
University of Colorado, Denver
Procedural Anxiety
High Risk Pregnancy
Fetal Complications
The goals of this study are to determine the feasibility and efficacy of a brief,
single-session cognitive-behavioral intervention for reducing preoperative and
postoperative anxiety and for determining satisfaction with the delivery process in
pregnant women scheduled for Cesarean delivery due to1 expand
The goals of this study are to determine the feasibility and efficacy of a brief, single-session cognitive-behavioral intervention for reducing preoperative and postoperative anxiety and for determining satisfaction with the delivery process in pregnant women scheduled for Cesarean delivery due to complications with their pregnancy. This will be done through a combination of psychoeducation and exposure therapy, where the participants will be walked through the steps of a Cesarean delivery in an operating room that mimics where the patient would actually be delivering. Follow-up will occur during the immediate and extended postpartum periods to determine satisfaction and levels of anxiety. Type: Interventional Start Date: Jul 2020 |
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Ketamine Treatment Plans for Chronic Conditions
RIVER Foundation
Chronic Pain
Depressive Disorder
Anxiety Disorders
Chronic Disease
A study aimed to assess the efficacy of the various approaches to prescribing Ketamine
currently in use off-label. The focus will be to include ketamine within the study plan
of those with chronic conditions who are receiving ketamine. expand
A study aimed to assess the efficacy of the various approaches to prescribing Ketamine currently in use off-label. The focus will be to include ketamine within the study plan of those with chronic conditions who are receiving ketamine. Type: Observational Start Date: Jan 2023 |
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Discovering Factors in the Clinical Study Journey of Patients With OCD
Power Life Sciences Inc.
OCD
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
This research aims to collect comprehensive data on the clinical trial experience of OCD
patients. Its goal is to identify the factors that limit patients' ability to join or
complete a trial successfully. Clinical trial participation often favors specific
demographic groups, and limited research e1 expand
This research aims to collect comprehensive data on the clinical trial experience of OCD patients. Its goal is to identify the factors that limit patients' ability to join or complete a trial successfully. Clinical trial participation often favors specific demographic groups, and limited research exists on the impact of trial attributes on participation. Therefore, this study aims to analyze data from various demographic groups and identify any recurring trends that could provide valuable insights for future OCD patients. Type: Observational Start Date: Jun 2024 |
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Fresh RX: NHS 2020
Washington University School of Medicine
Premature Birth
Birth Weight
Post Partum Depression
Health Care Utilization
Nutrition Deficiency Due to Insufficient Food
This study is an evaluation of the Fresh Rx: Nourishing Healthy Starts program
administered by Operation Food Search, a St. Louis-based nonprofit organization. The
program provides food and nutrition supports to food insecure pregnant women in
conjunction with integrative care services in order to1 expand
This study is an evaluation of the Fresh Rx: Nourishing Healthy Starts program administered by Operation Food Search, a St. Louis-based nonprofit organization. The program provides food and nutrition supports to food insecure pregnant women in conjunction with integrative care services in order to improve health and birth outcomes for both the mother and the child. The purpose of this study is to test the efficacy of this approach through a field experiment, and to assess the extent to which these services can provide cost savings to the healthcare system. Type: Interventional Start Date: Aug 2021 |