Cocaine Abuse Clinical Trial
Official title:
Psychology of Reward and Punishment: Functional and Molecular Brain Imaging and Monoaminergic Correlates
Background:
- Brain imaging studies, genetic research, and investigations of stress have provided more
information about the role of dopamine in processing reward and punishment, and in
vulnerability to substance dependence. Researchers are interested in learning more about
how the brain responds to rewards, including drugs of abuse, and how these responses may
involve genetic factors or previous stressful events.
- Researchers intend to use the drug amphetamine to increase levels of dopamine in the
brain and study the effects through two kinds of scanning: functional magnetic resonance
imaging (fMRI) and positron emission tomography (PET).
Objectives:
- To examine the relationship among dopamine function, brain activity, reward processing,
genetic profile and exposure to stress in normal healthy adults.
- To examine the variation in these factors between normal healthy adults and individuals
with current cocaine-dependence.
Eligibility:
- Individuals 18 to 45 years of age who are either current cocaine users or healthy
volunteers with no history of substance abuse or dependence.
Design:
- The study will consist of an initial evaluation session and six study visits, four of
which will involve fMRI scans (3 hours each) and two of which will involve PET scans (8
to 9 hours each).
- Cocaine-using participants will enter the inpatient clinical research ward at the
National Institute on Drug Abuse Addiction Research Center the night before each
scanning session and will be discharged the following day. Healthy volunteer subjects
will not be required to stay overnight and will arrive as outpatients for the PET
session. Participants will not be released until researchers have determined that
participants are not experiencing significant effects of the drug.
- Initial session (1): Participants will complete questionnaires about past reactions to
stressful situations, and will be trained to do thinking tasks that will be performed in
fMRI visits. The tasks will be practiced in a mockup of an MRI machine.
- MRI sessions (2-5): Participants will receive either oral amphetamine or a placebo, and
will perform thinking, short-term memory, and reward tasks during MRI scanning as
directed by researchers.
- PET sessions (6-8): Participants will receive either oral amphetamine or a placebo, and
will provide blood samples during the PET scanning sessions. Participants will have
short breaks during the PET scanning sessions.
Objective: This protocol will integrate functional brain imaging of reward processing,
together with assessment of the response to oral dextroamphetamine (d-AMPH), monoaminergic
genotyping, and evaluation of past exposure to stress, in order to examine: (1) the
relationship between these factors (i.e. dopamine function, brain activity, reward
processing, genetic profile and exposure to stress) in normal healthy adults; and (2)
variation in these factors between normal healthy adults and individuals with current
cocaine-dependence, and how this variation contributes to observed behavioral and functional
differences between these populations.
Study Population: The study populations will consist of adult (18-45 years old) healthy
volunteers with no history of substance abuse or dependence and a matched group of
individuals with current primary cocaine-dependence.
Experimental Design and Method: After being medically cleared and giving informed consent,
each participant will undergo fMRI (four sessions, on separate days) and PET scanning (two
sessions, on separate days). All brain imaging sessions will take place after single-blind
administration of either d-AMPH (0.43 mg/kg orally) or placebo. Functional MRI will commence
after dosing and will include several measures (both cognitive and affective) designed to
activate neural circuitry involved in the processing of reward and punishment. PET scanning
will also take place after d-AMPH or placebo and will involve administration of the
radioligand [18F] Fallypride to assess CNS dopamine function.
Outcome Measures: This study is concerned with differences in the noted factors between
experimental cohorts (controls vs. cocaine-dependent adults) and conditions (baseline vs.
post d-AMPH). The primary outcome measures, used to ascertain these differences, will be: (1)
the percentage change in fMRI BOLD signal during performance of measures of reward processing
and cognitive function; (2) alterations or differences in the binding potential of
[18F]Fallypride; (3) variations in genes related to DArgic function between individuals and
groups, and the contribution of this variation to other outcome measures; and (4) history of
exposure to stressful events and its role in behavioral and functional outcomes.
;
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