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Clinical Trial Summary

Background:

- Previous research has shown that a person s genes can influence how they respond to alcohol. But researchers do not yet know all the genes that might be involved.

Objectives:

- To identify genes that are related to how non-alcoholic individuals respond to alcohol.

Eligibility:

- Healthy people between 21 and 30 years of age who have no history of alcohol or drug dependence.

Design:

- The study requires one or two 9-hour visits to the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center.

- Participants must not take any medicines (except birth-control pills for women) for at least 3 days before the visit. They must not drink alcohol for at least 2 days before the visit.

- Screening includes a medical history, physical exam, and a urine test for drugs of abuse.

- Participants will be given alcohol over about 2.5 hours. This will have about the same effect as having three to four drinks. Frequent breathalyzer tests will check breath alcohol level during the infusion.

- Before and during the infusion, participants will complete questionnaires about mood and feelings. Other tests will study thinking, balance, judgment, and risk-taking. Blood samples will be collected four times during the infusion.

- Participants will have breakfast at the start of the visit (around 8:00 AM). They will have a snack before the start of the alcohol infusion (around 10:45 AM). Lunch will be served after the alcohol infusion is complete (around 2:20 PM). After the tests, those in the study will have to stay in the Clinical Center until their breath alcohol level falls below 0.02%. This can take up to 2.5 hours. A final blood sample will be drawn at that time. Participants will not be able to drive themselves home after the study visits. Also, they should not take any medicines or operate any machinery for at least 2 hours after leaving NIH.


Clinical Trial Description

Previous research, including our prior studies using the alcohol clamp, has shown substantial genetic influences on alcohol pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. While the influence of several individual genes on alcohol pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics has been examined, there has not been a comprehensive evaluation of genetic influences on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of alcohol in humans.

Objectives: To evaluate the genetic underpinnings of the pharmacodynamics of alcohol using candidate gene analysis of measures of the initial and adaptive acute response to alcohol in humans.

Study Population: Subjects will be 21-30 year-old non-smoking, male and female non-dependent drinkers in good health, as determined by medical history, physical exam, and ECG and lab tests. Subjects with Axis-I psychiatric diagnoses, including alcohol or substance dependence, will be excluded.

Design: The study will be conducted in two phases. In phase I, 40 subjects (20 with positive family history of alcoholism (FHP) and 20 with no family history of alcoholism (FHN)) will undergo two ethanol infusion sessions to compare different breath alcohol concentration exposures. In one session (Clamp session), participants will be infused with 6% ethanol in saline using an individualized infusion profile to achieve and clamp breath alcohol concentrations (BrAC) at 60 mg% for 2 hours. In the other session (Oral-mimic session), participants will be infused with 6% ethanol and saline using another individualized infusion profile to achieve a BrAC-time profile that would be typically obtained after oral administration (ascending limb to peak BrAC followed by descending limb). During each session, serial BrACs will be obtained, and heart-rate and skin blood flow will be continuously recorded. A battery of subjective (self-rating questionnaires) and objective measures (psychomotor performance, behavioral disinhibition tasks) will be obtained at baseline and two points during the infusion to assess the initial response and adaptive response to alcohol. The measures of initial response and adaptive response will be compared between sessions to determine which provides greater sensitivity (higher effect size) for detecting family history differences.

In phase II, 160 participants will undergo a one session study. Participants will receive an ethanol infusion to achieve the BrAC-time profile (Clamp or Oral-mimic) that provides the greater sensitivity to family history of alcoholism in phase I of the study. The same battery of subjective and objective measures will be obtained to assess the initial response and adaptive response to alcohol. These response measures will be used as endophenotypes for examination of genetic association with a set of candidate genes, based on previous clinical and pre-clinical studies.

Outcome measures: Initial response to alcohol and adaptive response to alcohol measures will be obtained for a battery of assessments, including subjective ratings of alcohol effects, psychomotor performance, behavioral disinhibition tasks and autonomic measures. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01375556
Study type Interventional
Source National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase Phase 1
Start date May 26, 2011
Completion date January 20, 2016

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