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Clinical Trial Summary

The project is a double-blind, randomized, placebo controlled clinical trial comparing 3 groups of schizophrenic subjects, who have no less than moderate degree of negative symptoms and carry the homozygous risk genotype (TT) of NRG1-P3, each group having 30 individuals, treated by add-on with escitalopram 10-20 mg/day, duloxetine 30-60 mg/day, and placebo. The treatment duration is 8 week. The investigators will evaluate the Positive and Negative Symptom Scale (PANSS) at baseline, Day 14, Day 28, Day 42, and Day 56. The primary outcome of interest will be the differences of averaged reduction of negative symptom scores among 3 groups and an average decrease of 2 or more in the negative symptoms will be indicated as improvement.


Clinical Trial Description

Negative symptoms of schizophrenia are enduring and detrimental. The underlying pathophysiology of negative symptoms is yet to be understood. Previous clinical trials of antidepressants as add-on therapy for negative symptoms in schizophrenia patients usually found merely a trend favoring augmentation strategy. Since schizophrenia is a heterogeneous disorder, clinical studies are often unable to reveal conclusive results. Thus efforts have been made to classify relatively homogeneous groups of patients by different approaches. Here, we proposed a translational study originating from our novel results of animal study and genetic study describe as the follows.We studied the neurobiological difference of the mice with the heterozygous deletion of NRG1(NRG1+/-mice)in comparison with their wild-type littermates. It was found that the antidepressant effect of desipramine for the immobilization was markedly increased in NRG1+/-mice assessed by two models, forced swimming test and tail suspension test. Furthermore, the expression of serotonin transporter (SERT) was up-regulated in most brain regions in NRG1+/-mice, indicating that the basal activity of serotonin was reduced because of higher uptake rate in NRG1+/-mice. Our data indicate that serotonin hypo-function may be involved in the immobilization symptom of schizophrenia with NRG1 defect. Increased immobility of forced swimming test in mice was suggested to be an animal model of negative symptoms. Thus our study implied that serotonin transporter blockers may be beneficial for the treatment of negative symptoms in some subtypes of schizophrenia, especially for the patients with NRG1 defect, which could be tested by examining specific polymorphism of NRG1 gene.We have identified a novel promoter variant (TC), named NRG1-P3, located on the promoter region of type V NRG1, from a direct sequencing study in Taiwanese schizophrenic patients and found it was significantly associated with schizophrenia in a large case-control sample. Through the luciferase reporter assay, we found the promoter construct with the risk genetic variant (T allele) of NRG1-P3 has significant lower luciferase reporter activity than that with the protected allele (C allele). It implied the schizophrenic patients with the T allele of NRG1-P3 might have lower NRG1 expression than those with the C allele. It is hypothesized that the negative symptoms of the schizophrenic patients with the T allele of NRG1-P3 will be more responsive to the SSRI or SNRI treatment.The project is a double-blind, randomized, placebo controlled clinical trial comparing 3 groups of schizophrenic subjects, who have no less than moderate degree of negative symptoms and carry the homozygous risk genotype (TT) of NRG1-P3, each group having 30 individuals, treated by add-on with escitalopram 10-20 mg/day, duloxetine 30-60 mg/day, and placebo. The treatment duration is 8 week. We will evaluate the Positive and Negative Symptom Scale (PANSS) at baseline, Day 14, Day 28, Day 42, and Day 56. The primary outcome of interest will be the differences of averaged reduction of negative symptom scores among 3 groups and an average decrease of 2 or more in the negative symptoms will be indicated as improvement.The project is novel and feasible because (1) it is the first clinical trial for the treatment of negative symptoms according to different genotypes of the patients and helps fulfill the prospect of individualized medication. (2) the research findings the translational study based upon are novel and unique and comes from our research team. (3) our research team mastered in clinical studies and has many clinical resources to recruit enough patients. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Diagnostic


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01078870
Study type Interventional
Source National Taiwan University Hospital
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase Phase 4
Start date February 2010
Completion date January 2011

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