Results of the Citalopram to Enhance Cognition in Huntington Disease Trial

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Categoría Estudio primario
RevistaMOVEMENT DISORDERS
Año 2014
BackgroundThe objective of this study was to evaluate citalopram for executive functioning in Huntington's disease (HD). MethodsThe study was randomized, double-blind, and placebo-controlled. Thirty-three adults with HD, cognitive complaints, and no depression (Hamilton Depression [HAM-D] rating scale 12) were administered citalopram 20 mg or placebo (7 visits, 20 weeks), with practice and placebo run-ins. The primary outcome was change in executive functioning. ResultsThe intent to treat analysis was controlled for practice effects, comparing visits 1 and 2 to visits 5 and 6 for citalopram versus placebo. There were no significant benefits on the executive function composite (treatment-placebo mean difference -0.167; 95% confidence interval [CI], -0.361 to 0.028; P=.092). Citalopram participants showed improved clinician-rated depression symptoms on the HAM-D (t=-2.02; P=0.05). There were no group differences on motor ratings, self-reported executive functions, psychiatric symptoms, or functional status. ConclusionsThere was no evidence that short-term treatment with citalopram improved executive functions in HD. Despite excluding patients with active depression, participants on citalopram showed improved mood, raising the possibility of efficacy for subsyndromal depression in HD. (c) 2013 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society
Epistemonikos ID: 40c0f6ae5a4cc22214edaadbd44bb128426a1d8f
First added on: Mar 30, 2022