major depression disorders
Depression trials address major depressive disorder (MDD), treatment-resistant depression (TRD), and postpartum depression with a growing toolkit that extends beyond conventional SSRIs/SNRIs. The rapid approval of ketamine/esketamine for TRD has sparked interest in NMDA receptor modulators, while psychedelic-assisted therapy (psilocybin, MDMA) trials represent a paradigm shift in psychiatric research.
Active trials investigate rapid-acting antidepressants (ketamine analogs), neuroactive steroids, transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) protocols, psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy, digital therapeutics, and precision psychiatry approaches using biomarkers or genetic testing to predict treatment response.
Depression trials typically require a minimum MADRS or HAMD score at baseline; TRD trials usually require failure of at least 2 prior adequate antidepressant courses.
Disease Burden & Epidemiology
Major depressive disorder is one of the most prevalent mental health conditions globally, affecting approximately 280 million people — about 3.8% of the world population — according to the World Health Organization. In the United States, the National Institute of Mental Health estimates that 21 million adults experienced at least one major depressive episode in 2021, representing 8.3% of all US adults. Depression is significantly more common among women (10.3%) than men (6.2%), and rates are highest among young adults aged 18–25 (18.6%). The economic burden is enormous: depression accounts for the largest proportion of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) among all mental disorders and costs the US economy an estimated $326 billion annually in lost productivity and healthcare expenditure. Critically, treatment resistance is far more common than many clinicians appreciate: approximately one-third of patients with major depression fail to achieve remission after two or more adequate antidepressant trials, meeting the clinical definition of treatment-resistant depression (TRD) — a population with limited approved therapeutic options and an urgent unmet medical need that drives a large proportion of current clinical trial activity.
Key Research Trends & Landmark Studies
The STAR*D trial, a landmark NIH-funded effectiveness study involving over 4,000 participants and four sequential treatment levels, demonstrated that only 28% of patients achieve remission with initial antidepressant treatment, validating TRD as a major clinical challenge and informing modern trial design. The approval of intranasal esketamine (Spravato) for TRD in 2019 β€” supported by the TRANSFORM and SUSTAIN series of trials β€” marked the first genuinely new antidepressant mechanism approved in decades and established glutamate modulation as a validated pathway. The COMPASS Pathways psilocybin Phase 2 trial showed a 37.9% remission rate with high-dose psilocybin in TRD at three weeks, driving multiple Phase 3 programs. The RECONNECT trial (zuranolone, a neuroactive steroid) demonstrated rapid symptom improvement within days rather than weeks, leading to the first oral rapid-acting antidepressant approval. Currently active trials include multiple next-generation NMDA modulators, psilocybin combination protocols, personalized TMS targeting using fMRI connectivity maps (BrainsWay Deep TMS), and AI-guided precision matching of patients to antidepressant mechanisms based on neuroimaging and inflammatory biomarkers.
Patient Guide: How to Find & Join a Trial
Patients with major depression — particularly those who have not responded adequately to one or more antidepressants — should discuss clinical trial eligibility with their psychiatrist or primary care provider. Most MDD trials require a minimum depression severity score on validated scales (PHQ-9 ≥10, MADRS ≥18, or HAMD ≥17) and a confirmed diagnosis for a specified duration. For TRD trials specifically, documentation of prior treatment failures — including the drug name, dose, duration, and reason for discontinuation — is essential and often required as a formal eligibility document. Academic psychiatry departments and specialized mood disorder clinics at university hospitals typically have the most comprehensive trial portfolios. If access to academic centers is limited, many current trials offer remote or decentralized participation with telehealth screening, home visits for blood draws, and reduced in-person requirements, broadening access for patients in non-urban areas.