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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04249596
Other study ID # 7944/8436
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 4
First received
Last updated
Start date October 14, 2020
Est. completion date June 1, 2025

Study information

Verified date June 2023
Source New York State Psychiatric Institute
Contact Steven Roose, MD
Phone 646-774-8661
Email spr2@cumc.columbia.edu
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The studies will be conducted in parallel at two sites: the the Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (MSSM), and Stanford Depression Research Clinic at Stanford University School of Medicine (SUSM). In addition, MRI studies for the MSSM patients will be carried out at the New York State Psychaitric Institute (NYSPI). The following procedures will be approved by the local Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) at each site, where the site PIs (Alla Landa, PhD, NYSPI, James Murrough, MD at MSSM, and Alan Schatzberg, MD at SUSM) will be responsible for overseeing conduct of the study at their respective site. Dr. Jonathan Javitch is the scientific leader of this program and holds the IND for tianeptine use in this study. Investigators will recruit 75 participants with current unipolar MDD, non-delusional, between 21-60, who have failed at least 2 two adequate treatment trials with a standard antidepressant. Patients will receive an 8-week treatment trial of tianeptine. MSSM patients will also undergo structural and task-based magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) that will be performed under Dr. Landa's direction at NYSPI in order to maintain the internal validity of the data set. MSSM subjects will be transported to NYSPI to complete neuroimaging procedures as described below. Participants will be screened for MRI clearance during their screening visit and again at NYSPI on the day of the scan. Subjects will be asked MRI screening questions to ensure that are scanning eligible. Participants will also have additional tubes of blood drawn for human whole-genomic testing. This microarray will be used to identify regions of the human genome that contribute to disease susceptibility and phenotypes. The Illumina human whole-genome array will be used to provide a comprehensive view of the genome, detects single nucleotide polymorphisms and other variations across the genome.


Description:

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a leading cause of disability in adults worldwide (~16M patients in United States alone). Unfortunately, only 35-40% of patients achieve full remission following first-line treatment and treatment-resistant depression (TRD), failure to respond to 2 or more treatments, is a critical clinical problem. As with MDD, there is mechanistic heterogeneity in TRD and consequently, there is a need to develop treatments targeted to biologically distinct subgroups of patients. Significant evidence suggests dysfunction of endogenous opioid signaling pathways as a key biological deficit in some MDD patients. Investigators hypothesize that a subgroup of MDD patients with deficient opioid receptor signaling who have failed previous trials of antidepressants will better respond to pharmacological interventions specifically targeting this biological mechanism. In this application, Investigators propose to target the mu-opioid receptor (MOR) in TRD patients by using the antidepressant tianeptine. Although not available in the United States, Tianeptine is an atypical antidepressant that has been used clinically in Europe, Asia, and South America since the late 1980s in millions of patients. Until recently tianeptine's molecular mechanism of action had remained unknown. Tianeptine is a different type of antidepressant than those currently approved in the United States in that it has a different mechanism of action than other antidepressants. Tianeptine is an opioid antagonist; it binds at the mu-opioid receptor. Currently approved antidepressants act on other systems of the brain that primarily affect serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine. Work in our laboratories has shown that tianeptine acts as a selective agonist of MOR, signaling in a manner analogous to enkephalins and endorphins, the endogenous opioid peptides. The investigator applied for and received an IND to import and use tianeptine for this study. The studies will be conducted in parallel at two sites: the the Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (MSSM), and Stanford Depression Research Clinic at Stanford University School of Medicine (SUSM). In addition, MRI studies for the MSSM patients will be carried out at the New York State Psychaitric Institute (NYSPI). The following procedures will be approved by the local Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) at each site, where the site PIs (Alla Landa, PhD, NYSPI, James Murrough, MD at MSSM, and Alan Schatzberg, MD at SUSM) will be responsible for overseeing conduct of the study at their respective site. Dr. Jonathan Javitch is the scientific leader of this program and holds the IND for tianeptine use in this study. Investigators will recruit 75 participants with current unipolar MDD, non-delusional, between 21-60, who have failed at least 2 two adequate treatment trials with a standard antidepressant. MSSM patients will also undergo structural and task-based magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) that will be performed under Dr. Steven Landa's direction at NYSPI in order to maintain the internal validity of the data set. MSSM subjects will be transported to NYSPI to complete neuroimaging procedures as described below. Participants will be screened for MRI clearance during their screening visit and again at NYSPI on the day of the scan. Subjects will be asked MRI screening questions to ensure that are scanning eligible. Participants will also have additional tubes of blood drawn for human whole-genomic testing. This microarray will be used to identify regions of the human genome that contribute to disease susceptibility and phenotypes. The Illumina human whole-genome array will be used to provide a comprehensive view of the genome, detects single nucleotide polymorphisms and other variations across the genome. The major goals of this project are (1) to determine if tianeptine is an effective antidepressant in patients who have failed two previous trials, (2) to define the relationship between opioid signaling deficits and response to tianeptine treatment, and (3) to develop a comprehensive assessment battery capable of identifying endogenous opioid signaling deficits to explore biological heterogeneity in the TRD population.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 75
Est. completion date June 1, 2025
Est. primary completion date June 1, 2025
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 21 Years to 60 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: 1. Age 21 - 60 years, male or female 2. Current diagnosis of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) without psychotic features 3. 24-item Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) = 16 4. At least two previous antidepressant treatment failures (adequate trials within current episode) with a SSRI, SNRI, bupropion, tricyclic antidepressant, mirtazapine, nefazodone, or monoamine oxidase inhibitor, or transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), or IV ketamine or nasal ketamine. 5. Capable of providing informed consent and complying with study procedures 6. Currently using or willing to use contraception, if woman of childbearing potential (such as condoms, IUD, or oral contraceptive), for duration of the study. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Any history of opioid-use disorder 2. Any history of moderate- non-opioid (except for Nicotine) substance-use disorder. 3. Any severity of alcohol use disorder (including mild) 4. Past or current psychosis, psychotic disorder (including psychotic MDD), mania, or bipolar disorder 5. Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) suicide item > 2 or Clinical Global Impressions (CGI)-Severity score of 7 at baseline 6. Previous or current treatment with Tianeptine 7. Current treatment or currently taking an opioid. 8. Failed depression treatment with electroconvulsive therapy. 9. Acute, severe, or unstable medical illness 10. Weight > 300 lbs, or girth size incompatible with scanner bore. 11. Any physical or intellectual disability adversely affecting ability to complete assessments. MMSE <26 12. for MSSM site - Having contraindication to MRI scanning (such as metal in body) or inability to tolerate the scanning procedures (e.g., severe obesity, claustrophobia) 13. Current pregnancy or currently breast feeding. 14. Abnormal baseline liver function tests 15. Currently being treated with an antidepressant medication, an antipsychotic or mood stabilizer. a) If a participant is taking a protocol dis-allowed medication at the time of screening and despite medication treatment still meets the inclusion criteria of an HRSD>16, the participant may discontinue the medication under the supervision of their treating physician or the study clinician. 16. Positive urine toxicity at screening (except for cannabinoid)

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Tianeptine Sodium
At baseline, and following 8 weeks of treatment with tianeptine(12.5 mg, 3x daily), participants will be assessed in a number of procedures to evaluate their emotional and physical pain state and pain stimulus response and the relationship of such states/responses to endogenous opioid signaling. To further assess emotional pain, participants will also undergo fMRI while performing a validated social rejection and social acceptance paradigm known to induce endogenous opioid release in control subjects and blunted release in MDD. Examining both rejection and acceptance is important because the MOR system regulates both social distress and social reward in animals and humans, and tianeptine may also act on abnormal MOR-mediated responses to social acceptance in MDD. Likewise, a second fMRI scan will be used to explore physical pain response using an established thermal pain sensitivity task. The protocol at Stanford University will not include pain testing or imaging studies.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai New York New York
United States New York State Psychiatric Institute New York New York
United States Stanford Depression Research Clinic at Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
New York State Psychiatric Institute Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, Stanford University

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) Our target is depressive symptomatology as measured by the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD). The HRSD is a 24-item questionnaire used as an indication of depression and a guide to evaluate recovery. Total scores range from 0-74, not including atypical symptoms sub-scale. A score of 16 or above is typically considered to indicate the presence of depressive symptoms. Higher scores indicate greater severity. Baseline
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