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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04616781
Other study ID # 844235
Secondary ID 4R00AA026892-02
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 2/Phase 3
First received
Last updated
Start date April 5, 2021
Est. completion date September 2025

Study information

Verified date January 2024
Source University of Pennsylvania
Contact Timothy S Pond, MPH
Phone 2152517736
Email timpond@pennmedicine.upenn.edu
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this research is to study how a nutritional ketone ester may effect brain function and alcohol consumption in regular alcohol users. The study will see how the brain responds, once after drinking the ketone ester and once after drinking a "placebo", which will look and taste the same as the ketone ester drink. Metabolic ketosis induced by a ketogenic diet has been previously shown to elevate brain ketone bodies and reduce alcohol withdrawal symptoms in humans with AUD, and reduce alcohol consumption in alcohol-dependent rats. The study investigates whether metabolic ketosis induced by a one-dose nutritional ketone ester (KE) reduces brain reactivity to alcohol cues (fMRI), alcohol craving and alcohol consumption in humans with AUD, and if KE elevates ketone bodies using proton spectroscopy. This study uses a double blind, random ordered, 2-way crossover design in n=20 non-treatment seeking AUD who come in on two separate testing days: on one testing day the participants consume KE ((R)-3-hydroxybutyl (R)-3-hydroxybutyrate), and on another testing day a drink with isocaloric dextrose (DEXT), after which participants are scanned for 1H-MRS and fMRI and complete an alcohol consumption paradigm each day after scanning.


Description:

This is a one month, prospective, double-blind, randomized, 2-way crossover design in n=20 non-treatment seeking AUD who come in for a screening day and two separate testing days: on one testing day the participants consume a drink with 1.9 kcal/kg of nutritional ketone ester (R)-3-hydroxybutyl (R)-3-hydroxybutyrate (KE), and on another testing day a drink with isocaloric dextrose (DEXT), after which participants are scanned for 1H-MRS and fMRI (20 subjects are scanned twice; 40 scans in total) and complete an alcohol consumption paradigm each day after scanning (40 in total). Blood labs for ketone bodies, ghrelin and leptin will be drawn during the study visists. The KE "(R)-3-hydroxybutyl (R)-3-hydroxybutyrate" is a safe, effective, and non-invasive way to increases ketone levels within 1 hr to concentrations similar to KD, and does not require a study IND. KE-induced ketone levels remain heightened for 4 hrs, and one dose of KE has shown to increase athletes' performances, improve mood, and cognitive and daily activity performance in Alzheimer's disease, and decrease ghrelin levels and subjective appetite in healthy volunteers. The latter finding is relevant to AUD, since ghrelin has been positively associated with alcohol craving and alcohol self-administration in AUD patients. Before study participation, subjects are screened for psychiatric and medical problems, fasting glucose, urine drug screen, pregnancy test if female. On each testing day, both before and 30 min after the drink, ketone bodies, leptin and ghrelin are measured in blood. After 15 minutes of KE, participants undergo a 1-hour MRI scan during which, after standard structural scans, the investigators measure ketone body metabolites using 1H-MRS, reactivity to alcohol cues using functional MRI, resting state MRI, cerebral blood flow using perfusion and brain iron measurements. On each study visit, four blood draws will be analyzed for ketone bodies, ghrelin and leptin at KE intake (t0), 15 minutes after when the MRI starts (t15), 10 after the MRI is done and after the priming drink (t85), and then at 140, and 200 minutes after (i.e., t140 and t200). Directly after MRI scanning, participants perform an alcohol self-administation "bar-lab" paradigm. Alcohol craving and alcohol effects will be measured before and during the alcohol self-administration. Participants will then be asked what they thought the study was about, and whether they thought the experimental drink influenced them in any way. After this, participants will be breathalyzed, and receive a meal.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 20
Est. completion date September 2025
Est. primary completion date January 2025
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 21 Years to 65 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: 1. Age 21 years to 65 years old. 2. Willingness to provide signed, informed consent and commit to completing the procedures in the study 3. Meets DSM-5 criteria for AUD 4. Average weekly ethanol consumption of at least 15 standard drinks over the past month prior to consent (self-report) 5. Participants not seeking treatment for their AUD (self-report) 6. Alcohol specified as the preferred drug (self-report). 7. Women of child-bearing potential (i.e., who have not had a hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, tubal ligation or is less than two years postmenopausal): must be non-lactating and practicing a reliable method of birth control, and have a negative urine pregnancy test prior to the initiation of the study and MRI procedures. Examples of medically acceptable methods for this protocol include: the birth control pill, intrauterine device (no copper IUD), injection of Depo-Provera, Norplant, contraceptive patch, contraceptive ring, double-barrier methods (such as condoms and diaphragm/spermicide), male partner sterilization, abstinence (and agreement to continue abstinence or to use an acceptable method of contraception, as listed above, should sexual activity commence), and tubal ligation. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Unwilling or unable to refrain from use, within 24 hours of MRI procedures, psychoactive medications or medication that may affect study results (e.g., analgesics containing narcotics, antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs). 2. Current DSM-5 diagnosis of a major psychiatric disorder (other than alcohol and nicotine use disorders, or substance use disorders that are mild/moderate) that required hospitalization, or that required daily medications for over 4 weeks in the past year (i.e., antidepressants; anticholinergics; antipsychotics; anxiolytics; lithium; psychotropic drugs not otherwise specified (nos) including herbal products (no drugs with psychomotor effects or with anxiolytics, stimulant, antipsychotic, or sedative properties); sedatives/hypnotics). 3. Urine drug screen positive for recent use of opioids, cocaine, or amphetamines on study visits (may be repeated once and if the result is negative on repeat it is not exclusionary). 4. A current, clinically significant physical disease or abnormality on the basis of medical history, physical examination, or routine laboratory evaluation that can impact brain function, the use of a ketone ester or the use of alcohol (e.g., epilepsy, diabetes, liver disease, kidney disease, kidney stones, chronic metabolic acidosis or a cardiomyopathy as determined by history and clinical exam). 5. Currently suffering from or with a history of stroke and/or stroke related spasticity. 6. History of seizures. 7. HIV positive, as the human immunodeficiency virus affects the brain. 8. Head trauma with loss of consciousness for more than 30 minutes or associated with skull fracture or inter-cranial bleeding or abnormal MRI. (self-report, medical history). 9. Presence of ferromagnetic objects in the body that are contraindicated for MRI of the head, fear of enclosed spaces, or other standard contraindication to MRI (self-report checklist). 10. Claustrophobia or other medical condition preventing subject from lying comfortably flat on his/her back for up to 2 hours in the MRI scanner (self-report). 11. BMI > 35, body girth greater than 52 inches and a head girth greater than 25 inches (imaging data acquisition is impaired with high-weight individuals). 12. Vision problems that cannot be corrected with glasses. 13. Judged by the principal investigator or his designee to be an unsuitable candidate for study participation.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Dietary Supplement:
Ketone Ester "(R)-3-hydroxybutyl (R)-3-hydroxybutyrate"
nutritional ketone ester
Drug:
Isocaloric dextrose placebo
Drink indistinguishable from ketone ester
Other:
Alcohol drinks
drink an alcohol priming dose to produce a 0.03 g/dl breath alcohol concentration (BrAC) followed by a choice paradigm in which subjects receive 2 trays of 4 min-drinks each beverages Each min-drink would achieve 0.015 g/ld BrAC over a 1 hour period to achieve a max 0.1 g/dl BrAC.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States University of Pennsylvania Center for Studies of Addiction Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Pennsylvania National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Determine the effects of ketone ester "R)-3-hydroxybutyl (R)-3-hydroxybutyrate" (KE) on alcohol consumption Compare the number of alcoholic drinks consumed in a "bar lab" paradigm after KE versus the Placebo drink 4 hours
Primary Determine the effect of KE on alcohol craving Compare the response to alcohol craving questionnaires after KE versus the Placebo drink 4 hours
Primary Determine the effect of KE on brain reactivity to alcohol cues Compare Brain reactivity to alcohol cues as measured with functional MRI after KE versus the Placebo drink 2 hours
Secondary Determine whether KE elevates brain ketone bodies using magnetic resonance spectroscopy Compare brain ketone levels after KE versus the Placebo drink 2 hours
Secondary Determine whether ghrelin levels in blood covary with alcohol craving and consumption Correlate blood ghrelin levels with alcohol craving questionnaire scores and number of alcoholic drinks consumed, at KE versus Placebo 4 hours
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