Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Novel Treatment For Chronic Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Using Post-Reactivation Propranolol
Objective: To use propranolol to treat established chronic post traumatic stress disorder
(PTSD) by reducing reconsolidation of the reactivated trauma memory.
Hypothesis: A series of treatments with propranolol, in comparison to placebo, will produce
a significant reduction in PTSD symptom severity in participants with chronic PTSD.
Study Design: This is a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized study. Methodology:
Twenty-five participants per group with chronic PTSD will be recruited. On their first visit
psychodiagnostic and psychometric evaluation will take place. In addition,
script-preparation for the script-driven imagery procedure will occur. Following this, the
participants will return each week for a period of 6 weeks to participate in the
reactivation sessions with propranolol or placebo (participants assigned to the propranolol
condition will receive propranolol throughout, and participants assigned to the placebo
condition will receive placebo throughout). Two weeks later, the participants will return
for a follow-up of the psychodiagnostic and psychometric evaluation, as well as
psychophysiological assessment using script-driven imagery procedure.
Data Analysis: A two-factor analysis of variance (ANOVA) for repeated measures will be
performed on study completers. The Drug factor will have two levels: propranolol and
placebo. The Time factor will have two levels: pre-treatment and post-treatment. We predict
a significant Drug x Time interaction, more precisely a greater decrease in PTSD severity in
the propranolol than in the placebo group. The psychophysiological data will be contrasted
to a normative cutoff score for PTSD.
Historical background. Recent animal research indicates that retrieval returns a
consolidated memory, or some aspect(s) of it, to a labile state from which it must be
restabilized in order to persist. This process is called reconsolidation, although it is not
identical to consolidation. Support for reconsolidation comes from experiments in a variety
of species ranging from snails to humans; in appetitive, aversive and neutral tasks; and
using a broad range of approaches, including systemic or localized drug administration, gene
manipulation, and interference by new learning. Memory impairments due to blocked
reconsolidation can be long-lasting. Reconsolidation impairments are distinct from
extinction in that they can be made to occur even when a reinforced trial is used to
reactivate the memory, do not show renewal after contextual shift, can be double-dissociated
from extinction, and have distinct neurochemical signatures from extinction. To date there
has only been a single, published, controlled study supporting reconsolidation, and its
blockade, in humans. That study involved weakening the consolidated memory of a simple motor
sequence by presenting a conflicting sequence after reactivation of the memory of the
original sequence.
According to a translational model of the pathogenesis of post-traumatic stress disorder
(PTSD), a psychologically traumatic event overstimulates endogenous stress hormones, which
in turn overly strengthen consolidation of the memory of the event, leading to an
excessively powerful and persistent memory that is too easily activated, with consequent
anxiety and dysfunction. Animal and human data indicate that the memory-modulating effects
of stress hormones are mediated by noradrenergic activity in the amygdala and can be opposed
by a β-adrenergic blocker such as propranolol. Administration of propranolol in the
immediate aftermath of a psychologically traumatic event reduces the strength of its memory,
as manifest in lower physiological responding during script-driven mental imagery of the
event measured 3 months later, and lower self-reported PTSD symptoms measured 2 months
later.
According to the above model, there exists a window of opportunity for influencing the
consolidation of the traumatic event into long-term memory. Once this window has closed, the
memory trace is no longer labile, and β-blockers would no longer be able to exert their
anti-PTSD effect. Attempting to prevent PTSD by blocking consolidation of the traumatic
memory (or some aspects of it) is subject to the formidable limitation that most cases are
unlikely to receive clinical attention until long after this window of opportunity has shut.
In persons who have developed PTSD, this would have happened weeks, months, or years
earlier. However, if a traumatic memory undergoes reconsolidation when it is reactivated,
this could re-open the window of opportunity to influence the memory pharmacologically. The
post-reactivation administration of propranolol could reduce the strength of a traumatic
memory by blocking reconsolidation in a manner parallel to reducing its strength immediately
following its occurrence by blocking consolidation. In support of this possibility,
consolidated memories for aversive tasks in animals have been shown to become sensitive to
β-blockade after reactivation. Specifically, administration of propranolol following
reactivation has been found to reduce inhibitory avoidance and auditory fear conditioning;
the latter impairment was stable for one month. These results demonstrate in rodents that
aversively conditioned memories when reactivated become sensitive to the effects of
propranolol.
Previous studies supporting the proposed research. In a preliminary study, we employed a
validated psychophysiological script-driven imagery technique to study 19 participants with
chronic PTSD resulting from various psychologically traumatic events. Physiological
responses during traumatic imagery have been shown to reliably discriminate PTSD from
non-PTSD psychological trauma victims, leading to the inclusion of the PTSD criterion
"physiological reactivity on exposure to internal cues that symbolize or resemble an aspect
of the traumatic event" in the current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders, fourth edition (DSM-IV). Each participant described the traumatic event that
caused their PTSD; this served to reactivate the traumatic memory. Immediately thereafter,
the participant received either oral 40 mg short-acting propranolol followed 2 hours later
by oral 60 mg long-acting propranolol (n = 9), or look-alike placebo capsules (n = 10),
randomized and double-blind. Group demographic and psychometric means for the two groups
were highly similar. A trained research assistant composed scripts portraying the event in
the participant's own words and recorded them for playback in the laboratory.
One week later, the participant listened to an audio recording of their personal traumatic
event in the psychophysiology laboratory and imagined the event as if it were happening to
them again, while heart rate (HR), skin conductance (SC), and left corrugator (facial
frowning muscle) electromyogram (EMG) responses were measured. Overall physiological
responding during mental imagery of the traumatic event was significantly smaller in the
PTSD participants who had received propranolol a week earlier compared to those who had
received placebo (multivariate p = .007). Drug condition accounted for an impressive 49% of
the variance in overall physiological responding. The univariate analyses indicated that HR
and SC, but not EMG, responses were significantly smaller in the propranolol compared to the
placebo participants. The mean HR and SC responses of the placebo participants were above
the normative cut-offs for PTSD (dashed lines), whereas the mean HR and SC responses of the
propranolol participants were below the normative PTSD cut-offs. The mean EMG responses of
both groups fell below the normative PTSD cut-off. The observed effect sizes (in terms of
Cohen's d, i.e., the difference in group means divided by the pooled standard deviation)
were all in the predicted direction. By conventional standards, these effect sizes were very
large for SC, large for HR, but small for EMG. The psychophysiological results of the
present study along with those of the previously reported study in which propranolol was
administered in the immediate aftermath of the traumatic event indicate that
post-reactivation propranolol recapitulates its effects on consolidation.
Self-reported PTSD symptoms measured by the Impact of Event Scale-Revised showed a
significant decline in the propranolol participants (19%), but not in the placebo
participants (11%). However, the Group x Time interaction was not statistically significant,
and the effect size was only moderate. Certainly the decline in self-reported PTSD symptoms
in the propranolol group was less than the "decline" in physiological responses during
traumatic imagery (taking the placebo group's responses as the comparison in the absence a
baseline physiological measurement). However, because of their subjective nature, symptom
self-reports are vulnerable to a number of potentially confounding factors, including demand
effects, long-standing beliefs and expectations about oneself and one's situation,
incorporating one's symptoms into one's identity, and secondary gain. All these factors may
make changing self-reports more difficult than changing physiological responses, which more
directly access changes in the strength of traumatic memories. It may be that anything
greater than moderate improvement in PTSD symptoms is too much to ask of a single session
and a single dose of propranolol.
Rationale behind the proposed research. The preliminary results described above suggest that
using pharmacological consolidation blockers in conjunction with memory reactivation could
have important implications for therapy. Currently cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) which
relies heavily on exposure and extinction, is the psychotherapeutic treatment of choice for
anxiety disorders, including PTSD. However, its beneficial effects on PTSD -like those of
drug treatment- are partial, with only one-third of patients showing lasting, clinically
meaningful improvement. Modulating reconsolidation may have certain advantages over this
approach. Reconsolidation blockade targets the traumatic memory directly, whereas extinction
attempts to inhibit the traumatic memory through new (inhibitory) learning. There are two
important drawbacks to extinction as a therapy. First, because extinction only inhibits the
underlying fear memory, it will tend to spontaneously recover with the passage of time.
Second, extinction is context-dependent. Thus, cognitive behavioral therapists must find
ways of making extinction-based therapy context-independent and long-lasting. Otherwise,
beneficial effects acquired in the office will be lost at home or over time. In contrast,
reconsolidation has the theoretical advantage that impairments induced by its blockade are
context-independent and long-lasting. From the practical standpoint, CBT typically requires
periods of lengthy exposure to the traumatic memory or feared situation to promote
extinction. In the case of reconsolidation blockade, animal research suggests that briefer
exposure is more suitable.
A report of a case series of 15 patients suffering from various mental disorders who were
treated with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) claimed that when the ECT was administered
during the reactivation of a memory, obsession, or hallucination, it was substantially more
effective. This is roughly consistent with the possibility that psychiatric symptoms can be
made to undergo reconsolidation blockade. However, the patients had a long history of
psychopathology and ECT treatment, which, along with the absence of quantitative outcome
measures and appropriate controls, precluded firm conclusions. Moreover, the treatment
involved administration of ECT to awake patients. The practical advantage of pharmacological
reconsolidation blockade over such a gross approach is obvious.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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