Healia Clinical Trials Information Database

Treatment of Depression With Massage in HIV

The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of massage therapy on depression, quality of life and plasma cortisol levels in subjects with advanced HIV disease.

Description

This is a study to assess the usefulness of massage therapy for treatment of depression and improvement in the quality of life in patients with HIV. This study will define the clinical and biologic response to massage therapy in patients with HIV and depression who are clinically stable and on a fixed medical regimen. Depression is a co-morbid condition in individuals with advanced HIV disease and has a negative impact on quality of life. Depression in HIV-infected patients also has been associated with a decrease in adherence to medications and progression of clinical disease. While pharmacologic therapy for depression have resulted in variable success in managing this problem, it is associated with an increase in the number of medications that these patients are required to take, potential for additional drug-drug interactions, and many adverse events. In patients with advanced stage HIV disease, palliative care is often a priority and identifying new treatment modalities that do not require additional medications while improve clinical symptoms and overall quality of life is of the utmost importance. Pilot studies with massage therapy have been performed in HIV-infected and uninfected individuals. These studies have shown a reduction in depression scores in HIV-uninfected subjects. In HIV-infected patients, massage therapy has been shown to improve quality of life measures and decrease plasma cortisol levels.

The specific aims of this proposal are 1) to determine the effect of massage therapy on depression in subjects with advanced HIV disease, 2) to investigate the effect of massage therapy on quality of life in subjects with advanced HIV disease, and 3) to investigate the effect of massage therapy on plasma cortisol levels in subjects with advanced HIV disease. This study will randomize advanced stage HIV-infected subjects with depression in a 1:1:1 manner to massage therapy, “sham massage” or no physical intervention. The massage and “sham massage” groups will be treated for one hour, twice per week, for 8 weeks. All enrolled subjects will have depression measured (Hamilton Depression Scale) at baseline, weeks 1, 2, 4, 6 and 8, and quality of life (SF-36), and pain assessments (Gracely Pain Scale) at baseline, weeks 4 and 8. In addition, 24-hour urine free cortisol, lymphocyte subsets and HIV RNA measurements will be assessed at baseline and weeks 4 and 8. This will be a rigorously controlled clinical trial using validated measures to assess the clinical (depression and quality of life), and biologic (cortisol levels) effect of massage therapy on subjects with advanced stage HIV disease and clinical depression.

Status: Completed (Phase 2). Started on April 1st, 2002. Ended on May 1st, 2004.

Enrollment: 90 subjects

Study Type: Interventional

Study Design:

  • Treatment
  • Randomized
  • Single Blind
  • Placebo Control
  • Parallel Assignment
  • Efficacy Study

Conditions:

Interventions:

  • Procedure: Massage Therapy

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • HIV Seropositive

  • Depression as defined by SCID-I with HAM-D score of ³15 (21-item scale)

  • On stable neuropsychiatric, analgesic and antiretroviral regimen for >30 days and no plans to modify therapy during the ensuing 4 months.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Unable to provide informed consent (e.g.sever cognitive impairment)

  • New opportunistic infection, malignancies, or acute hospitalizations during the past 30 days

  • Suicidal ideation

  • Psychosis or bipolar disorder

  • Taking any growth hormone or adrenocorticoid preparations

  • Massage therapy or new alternative medicine use in preceeding 30 days

  • History of intolerance to massage or contraindication to massage (e.g. skin lesions that prevent direct contact by the therapist)

Gender

Both

Mininum Age

16 Years

Maximum Age

N/A

Healthy Volunteers

No


Resources

Source: National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM)

Authority: United States: Federal Government

Locations

  • Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
    Los Angeles
    California
    90048
    United States

Officials

  • Russell E. Poland, PhD (Principal Investigator, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center)

  • Eric Daar, MD

Sponsors

  • National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) (Lead Sponsor)

References

None.

Links


Date Verified
March 1st, 2008
First Received
March 5th, 2008
Last Changed
March 5th, 2008

Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on July 15, 2008. Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.


All data in the Healia Clinical Trials Information Database and content displayed by the Healia Clinical Trials Search Engine are licensed from the National Institutes of Health (National Library of Medicine), which collects and maintains the data.

The Healia Clinical Trials Search Engine searches the data set at clinicaltrials.gov, providing up-to-date information about current clinical trials. In the Healia Clinical Trials Database you can find information on new experimental drugs, medical devices, and other types of treatments for all types of diseases. Each clinical trial description includes information about the phase of the trial (phase I, phase II, or phase III), the trial’s methods, such as whether it is a randomized, placebo controlled, double blind study, and the status of the trial including whether or not the trial is currently enrolling new participants.


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