Alcoholism Clinical Trial
Official title:
NK1 Receptor Antagonism for Treatment of Anxiety and Craving in Anxious Alcohol Dependent Subjects During Early Abstinence
This study will determine whether the experimental drug LY686017 can reduce a person's
desire for alcohol. A brain chemical called Substance P acts at places in the brain called
NK1 receptors. Substance P is released in response to stress and gives rise to behaviors
that are thought to represent anxiety. LY686017 blocks Substance P from acting at the NK1
receptors.
People between 21 and 65 years of age who have been drinking on a regular basis for at least
one month before entering the study, who meet the criteria for alcohol dependence and who
have an elevated score on a general test of anxiety may be eligible for this study.
Participants are admitted to the NIH Clinical Center for 35 days. They participate in an
alcohol treatment program in addition to the research study. After having been withdrawn
from alcohol for at least 2 days, participants receive either 50 mg of LY686017 or placebo
(an inactive substance that looks like the study drug) every morning for 28 days. In
addition to drug treatment, they undergo the following procedures:
- Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI): In the last week of the study, subjects
undergo MRI to study the amount of blood going to brain structures thought to be
involved in anxiety and craving. During the procedure, they look at pictures of faces
exhibiting various emotions and pictures related to alcohol.
- Cue reactivity: At the beginning and towards the end of the study, subjects are asked
to rate their alcohol craving and their anxiety level while they sniff and handle their
favorite alcoholic beverage or water.
- Metyrapone test: During weeks 1 and 4 of the study, subjects are given metyrapone - a
drug that interferes with the body's ability to make the stress hormone cortisol - to
determine how LY686017 affects the body's hormonal response. The drop in cortisol from
metyrapone administration causes the brain to release ACTH, a hormone that causes the
adrenal gland to make cortisol.
- Trier test: In the last week of the study, subjects give a 5-minute speech to three
people and are then asked to subtract numbers in their head. Then they are asked to
rate their feelings and desire for alcohol on two rating scales. Blood is drawn from a
saline lock at the beginning and end of the test to measure hormone levels.
- Rating scales: Subjects complete an Obsessive Drinking Scale weekly and an Alcohol Urge
Questionnaire and Comprehensive Psychiatric Rating Scale twice a week.
- Blood tests: Blood samples are collected periodically to check blood chemistries,
clotting time, and the amount of LY686017 in the blood.
Background:
Alcoholism is a chronic relapsing disorder characterized by cycles of intoxication
interspersed with phases of withdrawal and abstinence. Co-morbidity with depression and
anxiety disorders is high. Even in absence of independent psychiatric co-morbidity, anxiety
symptoms are almost invariably present during early as well as protracted abstinence,
sensitized over repeated cycles of intoxication and withdrawal, and are correlated with
craving for alcohol upon exposure to alcohol associated cues. This psychopathology is likely
to maintain the dependent state since it has been shown that stress and negative affective
states are major relapse triggering factors. Substance P, released in the amygdala in
response to stress, acts at NK1 receptors as an important mediator of behavioral stress
effects in experimental animals. Blockade of this receptor subtype represents a novel
principle for anxiolytic like actions, which is well documented in animal models and has
some supportive data in humans. Furthermore, decreased opiate reward following NK1 receptor
inaction is indicated by the reports that deletion of the NK1 receptor decreases both
conditioned place preference and self-administration of opiates, while a similar reduction
of alcohol reward is suggested by preliminary data showing decreased voluntary intake of
alcohol in NK1 null-mutants.
Aims:
The present study is aimed at providing an initial, exploratory evaluation of whether the
NK1 receptor is a candidate target for treatment of alcohol dependence that would merit
further clinical development in conventional, full-scale clinical trial designs. To evaluate
this, the aim of the present study is to determine whether NK1 antagonism can beneficially
affect, in anxious alcohol dependent subjects during early abstinence, surrogate variables
correlated with clinical outcomes, i.e.
- reduce craving for alcohol, measured as baseline self-reported urges, or in response to
presentation of alcohol associated cues
- reduce negative affect
- influence corresponding objective measures (brain fMRI responses to alcohol-associated
cues and to fear stimuli, respectively; and endocrine stress responses).
This study will address this aim using a novel, orally bioavailable and brain penetrant NK1
antagonist. Positive data in this exploratory study would be the first of their kind, and
provide a rationale for evaluating the NK1 antagonist for anti-craving / anti-dipsotropic
and anti-anxiety actions in alcohol dependent subjects in a longer term, suggesting that it
might aid relapse prevention.
Methods:
The study will be carried out in 50 subjects aged 21-65 years, with alcohol dependence as
their primary complaint, and without other serious medical or psychiatric conditions. An
additional inclusion criterion will be the presence or history of significant anxiety
symptoms on self report. Subjects will be admitted to the NIAAA research inpatient unit at
the NIH Clinical Center through a platform training and natural history protocol which
provides basic assessments and standard withdrawal treatment if needed. Patients will enter
into the present protocol once such treatment, if needed, is completed. The present protocol
will be started with a 1 week single blind placebo lead-in. During this phase, a baseline
alcohol cue-reactivity session will be carried out according to established procedures, and
urges to drink will be assessed. Cue-responsive subjects only, appr. 70% of alcohol
dependent inpatients, will be randomized to active treatment or placebo, and enter the
active treatment phase. The active treatment arm will receive 50 mg once daily of LY686017by
oral intake, while the placebo group will continue to receive placebo in a double-blind
fashion. The duration of active treatment will be 3 weeks.
Patients will remain hospitalized throughout this protocol. During this period, no
psychotropic medication will be allowed, and abstinence from alcohol and other drugs will be
monitored. Measures of craving will be obtained using: 1) ratings completed twice a week on
the established Alcohol Urge Questionnaire (AUQ); 2) assessments of urge to drink (at
baseline and under medication) during an established cue reactivity paradigm during which
each patient undergoes an invivo exposure to his or her preferred alcoholic beverage. The
medicated cue reactivity session will follow immediately after the Trier Test, a social
stress task that independently induces urges for alcohol (stress induced craving); and
augments subsequent cue-induced urges (stress-potentiated cue induced craving); 3) weekly
assessment of alcohol related cognitions using the Obsessive Drinking Scale (ODS), a
pharmacologically validated subscale of the established Obsessive Compulsive Drinking Scale
(OCDS). In addition, measures of anxiety and depression symptoms will be obtained
twice-weekly using the Comprehensive Psychiatric Rating Scale (CPRS). During the last
treatment week, subjects will undergo an fMRI scan using established paradigms to evoke
emotional responses, and to evoke alcohol-cue associated responses, respectively.
Psychophysiological measures will be obtained in conjunction with the scan. Blood draws will
be carried out on the day of the scan to allow for analysis of plasma concentrations of the
experimental drug. The neuroendocrine stress response will be probed, using the standard
metyrapone challenge test, in unmedicated state following the baseline CR session, and then
again under active treatment or placebo following the fMRI scan.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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