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mental health disorders

Total Trials
3
Recruiting Now
3
Trial Phases
Various

Mental health clinical trials span depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, eating disorders, ADHD, sleep disorders, and substance use disorders — representing the most prevalent category of disability-causing conditions globally. Mental health research is undergoing a paradigm shift as biological understanding deepens: from purely symptom-based diagnosis to biomarker-informed phenotyping, and from first-generation neurotransmitter-targeting drugs to precision approaches based on neurocircuit function, genetics, and inflammatory markers.

Active trial areas include psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy (psilocybin, MDMA, ketamine), digital therapeutics validated as prescription medical devices, transcranial magnetic stimulation with personalized targeting using fMRI biomarkers, inflammatory markers (CRP, IL-6) as predictors of antidepressant response, and integrated care models combining pharmacotherapy with technology-delivered psychosocial support. ADHD trials increasingly focus on non-stimulant agents to address cardiovascular safety concerns in adults.

Most mental health trials require a structured diagnostic interview (SCID or MINI) to confirm diagnosis; severity scales (PHQ-9, GAD-7, PANSS) determine eligibility and serve as primary endpoints.

Frequently Asked Questions — mental health disorders Clinical Trials

How many clinical trials are currently recruiting for mental health disorders?
ClinicalMetric currently tracks 3 actively recruiting clinical trials for mental health disorders, sourced in real time from ClinicalTrials.gov. The total number of registered studies—including those not yet enrolling or in active follow-up—is 3. Trial availability changes daily as new studies open enrollment and existing ones reach capacity.
What trial phases are available for mental health disorders?
mental health disorders research spans multiple clinical trial phases. Phase 1 studies evaluate safety and dosing in small groups, Phase 2 studies assess preliminary efficacy in 100–300 participants, and Phase 3 trials compare the new treatment against the standard of care in 300–3,000+ patients. Phase 4 post-approval studies monitor long-term outcomes in real-world populations.
How do I find out if I qualify for a mental health disorders clinical trial?
Eligibility criteria for mental health disorders trials vary by study and typically specify age range, disease stage or severity, prior treatment history, and specific diagnostic or laboratory parameters. Each listing on ClinicalMetric links to the full protocol on ClinicalTrials.gov, where inclusion and exclusion criteria are documented. Contact the sponsoring site's research coordinator directly to confirm your eligibility—your treating physician or specialist can also help identify the most appropriate trial based on your medical history and current treatment status.
Top Sponsors
Clindove Research LLC 1 trial
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey 1 trial
Institute of HIV Research and Innovation Foundation, Thailand 1 trial

Recruiting Clinical Trials

NCT07106879
Recruiting

Non-interventional Pre-screening Protocol Aims to Evaluate Participants for Potential Trial Eligibility in Future Clinical Trials/Studies Focusing on Metabolic and Psychiatric Health.

Enrollment
7,000 pts
Location
United States
Sponsor
Clindove Research LLC
View Trial →
NCT07098260
Recruiting

DECIDE to Improve Maternal Mental Health Care Delivery

Enrollment
35 pts
Location
United States
Sponsor
Rutgers, The State University ...
View Trial →
NCT07512856
Recruiting

The Implementation of a Trans-tailored Harm Reduction Service for Transgender Persons in Relation to chemsEX and Substance Use (iT-REX)

Enrollment
140 pts
Location
Thailand
Sponsor
Institute of HIV Research and ...
View Trial →
ClinicalMetric — Independent clinical trial intelligence platform. Not affiliated with NIH, ClinicalTrials.gov, the U.S. FDA, or any pharmaceutical company, hospital, or clinical research organization. Trial data is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Do not make any treatment, enrollment, or health decisions based solely on information found here — always consult a qualified healthcare professional. Full Disclaimer  ·  Last Reviewed: April 2026  ·  Data Methodology