Amphetamine-Related Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
Investigation of Serotonin Neurotransmission in "Ecstasy" Users Employing Combined Dexfenfluramine Challenge and Positron Emission Tomography: a Functional Probe to Assess MDMA Neurotoxicity
Illicit use of the psychostimulant "Ecstasy" (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine, MDMA) is
considered a major public health issue. In Switzerland, MDMA and congeners are - after
cannabis and cocaine - number three in the ranking of the most popular illicit drugs.
Worldwide, Ecstasy is estimated to be even the second most popular illicit drug, used by
millions of regular users.
On the basis of animal data, it is likely that MDMA at high or cumulative doses damages
serotonin (5-HT) neurons in the human brain. However, because of a multitude of
methodological problems and a limited number of studies conducted in human subjects, no firm
conclusions can yet be established whether chronic MDMA exposure produces a long lasting
5-HT deficiency syndrome, with consequent neuropsychiatric risks. To further address the
putative neurotoxicity of MDMA in the human brain, we propose that novel functional assays
of serotonergic neurotransmission may be useful to clarify this issue. We suggest that a
5-HT challenge study using positron emission tomography (PET) in conjunction with the 5-HT
releaser dexfenfluramine [(+)FEN] may test the functional integrity of the 5-HT system in
the living human brain.
Specifically, in a placebo-controlled study, the 5-HT release capacity of serotonergic
neurons shall be investigated by assessing [18F]-altanserin binding to 5-HT2A receptors
following (+)FEN challenge in former and continuing MDMA users, and age and sex-matched
MDMA-naïve controls. (+)FEN is a potent serotonin releaser without relevant affinity for
5-HT, dopamine (DA) or norepinephrine (NE) receptors, and devoid of acute adverse effects in
man. This makes (+)FEN an ideal pharmacological probe to explore functional integrity of
serotonin neurotransmission.
A second aim of our investigation is to detect possible impairments of cognitive functions
and to study their relationship to serotonin neurotransmission as indexed by PET. In the
course of the neuroimaging study, the investigators therefore also measure cognitive (e.g.
attention, visual and working memory, learning, executive function) and affective functions
(e.g. anxiety, impulsivity), suspected to be altered due to chronic MDMA use. Using
correlational analyses, the investigators aim to determine if circumscribed regions of
altered 5-HT function are associated with specific impairments in cognitive and/or
behavioural parameters.
We hypothesize that (+)FEN-evoked 5-HT release will discernibly alter availability of 5-HT2A
receptors to [18F]-altanserin, with a pattern revealing the spatially heterogeneous
vulnerability of 5-HT innervations to MDMA. The investigators predict that [18F]-altanserin
volume of distribution (DV) will decline following (+)FEN challenge to a lesser extent in
current MDMA users compared to MDMA-naïve control subjects. On the basis of animal data and
recent neuroimaging studies in humans, the investigators hypothesize that functional
recovery in former MDMA users will be manifest by a normalization or overshoot of the 5-HT
release capacity.
Our methodology will allow us to quantitatively assess serotonergic functions in the living
human brain. The novel combination of (+)FEN-induced release of 5-HT from intracellular
storage vesicles and subsequent PET assessment of competitively altered [18F]-altanserin
binding at postsynaptic 5-HT2A receptors will provide a more direct biological marker of in
vivo serotonin function than has been hitherto available. By applying this new
pharmacological challenge/PET neuroimaging approach to groups of current and former users of
MDMA, the investigators shall be able to gain important new insight in the debated
functional consequences of MDMA use, especially concerning the controversy about the
reversibility of 5-HT changes following cessation of MDMA use. Successful completion of this
project should have useful implications for public education and harm reduction with respect
to MDMA use, and may also facilitate the development of possible treatment options for
chronic MDMA users.
Introduction: Illicit use of the psychostimulant 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA,
"ecstasy") is considered a major public health issue. In Switzerland, the proportion of
teenage MDMA users has increased continuously in recent years. According to a representative
survey from 2002, approximately 3.3% of the 15-16 year old students in Switzerland have
taken MDMA at least once. Compared with the corresponding data from 1994 (1.8%) and 1998
(1.9%), the increase of MDMA use among is evident. In another survey from the Swiss
Institute for the Prevention of Alcoholism and Drug Addiction (SFA/ISPA) 2.2% of the
anonymously interviewed subjects between 15 to 39 years reported experiences with MDMA. Also
worldwide, MDMA has become one of the most widely used illegal psychoactive drugs, with
millions of regular users.
Acute administration of MDMA produces a rapid and marked release of serotonin (5-HT) via
inhibition and reversal of the 5-HT transporter. Since the late 1980s, studies in non-human
primates have provided convincing evidence that high doses of MDMA cause a substantial and
sustained long-term neurotoxic loss of exclusively 5-HT nerve terminals with an associated
depletion of up to 95% of 5-HT in several brain regions. In contrast, other neurotransmitter
systems such as dopamine or norepinephrine remain undamaged. Subsequently, two studies with
MDMA users have also shown selective decrements in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentrations
of 5-hydroxy indoleacetic acid, a marker for 5-HT depletion. In contrast, CSF concentrations
of homovanillic acid or 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol, the major metabolites of dopamine
and norepinephrine, were unchanged. Some imaging studies with serotonergic radioligands
showed reduced 5-HT transporter (SERT) densities in cortical and subcortical brain regions
of MDMA users. Moreover, electrophysiological studies have also suggested alterations of the
5-HT system in regular users of MDMA. However, most of these findings in humans have been
strongly criticised for methodological flaws (e.g. small sample sizes or lack of specificity
of the applied radioligands). Consequently, there is as yet no convincing evidence for a
selective serotonergic neurotoxicity of MDMA in humans. Moreover, the mechanism of MDMA
neurotoxicity in animals is still under debate.
In spite of these reservations, it has been consistently shown that MDMA users display
dose-related impairments of verbal and visual-spatial memory, and impairments of executive
functions and decision-making cognition. So far, the neuroanatomical basis of these
neuropsychological deficits, and their relationship with 5-HT depletion, remain unclear.
On the basis of animal data, it is likely that MDMA at high or cumulative doses damages 5-HT
neurons in the human brain. However, because of a multitude of methodological problems and a
limited number of studies conducted in human subjects, no firm conclusions can yet be
established whether chronic MDMA exposure produces a long lasting 5-HT deficiency syndrome,
with consequent neuropsychiatric risks. To further address the putative neurotoxicity of
MDMA in the human brain, we propose that, in addition to the present receptor mapping
studies, novel functional assays of serotonergic neurotransmission may be useful to clarify
this issue. Specifically, we suggest that 5-HT challenge studies using positron emission
tomography (PET) in conjunction with the serotonin releaser dexfenfluramine [(+)FEN] may
test the functional integrity of the 5-HT system in the living human brain.
Aims: To overcome impediments of previous imaging studies we propose to use a more direct
approach to assess the integrity of serotonergic function in the human brain. 5-HT2A
receptor mapping with PET and [18F]-altanserin, in combination with (+)FEN challenge, shall
be used to investigate the 5-HT release capacity in current and former users of MDMA in
comparison to drug-naïve control subjects.
We anticipate that the comparison of changed specific binding of [18F]-altanserin to 5-HT2A
receptors following (+)FEN-induced 5-HT release will reveal whether chronic abuse of MDMA
leads to functional alterations in the human brain, and if MDMA users face an increased risk
of developing a chronic serotonin deficiency syndrome, possibly associated with cognitive
impairment and depression or anxiety. Our biological marker for 5-HT function in vivo shall
enable us to topographically map regional 5-HT release, and hence to determine if the
hypothesized 5-HT depletion has global or focal consequences for the action of (+)FEN. The
putative functional consequences (affect regulation, cognition, and behaviour) can be linked
to regions of reduced 5-HT transmission.
By investigating current and former MDMA users, we shall assess the reversibility of 5-HT
depletion. Furthermore, our (+)FEN challenge/PET imaging technique may reveal regions of
increased 5-HT transmission due to hyperinnervation of 5-HT dendrites ("sprouting"), as
occurs in MDMA-treated primates.
In the course of the PET study, we shall also measure cognitive (e.g. attention, visual and
working memory, learning, executive function) and affective functions (e.g. anxiety,
impulsivity), suspected to be altered due to chronic MDMA use. Using correlational analyses,
we aim to determine if circumscribed regions of altered 5-HT function are associated with
specific impairments in cognitive and/or behavioural parameters.
Current status of the project and pilot data: The radiosynthesis of the tracer
[18F]-altanserin was established and validated according to GMP guidelines. The study and
the use of (+)FEN and [18F]-altanserin has already been approved by the local ethics
committee, Swissmedic and the Swiss Federal Office for Public Health (BAG). Furthermore,
more than 50 present and former MDMA users and 20 drug-naïve control subjects have been
screened, and found to meet general inclusion criteria. We applied our method to four
healthy human volunteers to prove our concept. The PET scans were metabolite corrected and
normalised according to Logans graphical method. The regions of interest-based analysis was
done with PMOD. We found that the apparent distribution volume (DV) of [18F]-altanserin was
strongly decreased in all brain regions by about 11 to 15%. Thus, the proposed method is
suitable to investigate 5-HT release capacity in humans.
Working hypotheses: We hypothesize that (+)FEN-evoked 5-HT release will discernibly alter
availability of 5-HT2A receptors to [18F]-altanserin, with a pattern revealing the spatially
heterogeneous vulnerability of 5-HT innervations to MDMA. We predict that [18F]-altanserin
DV will decline following (+)FEN challenge to a lesser extent in current MDMA users compared
to MDMA-naïve control subjects. On the basis of animal data and recent neuroimaging studies
in humans, we hypothesize that functional recovery in former MDMA users will be manifest by
a normalization or overshoot of the serotonin release capacity.
5-HT neurotransmission will not be homogeneously reduced in chronic MDMA users, but that
toxic effects will be most evident in the frontal cortex and subcortical structures such as
caudate nucleus and thalamus; these regions are innervated by fine fibers arising from the
dorsal raphe nuclei that are especially sensitive to MDMA neurotoxicity in non-human
primates. Based on results of recent human studies, we furthermore anticipate a dose-related
impairment of cognitive functions, especially of memory and learning, as well as an
increased state anxiety in current MDMA users, followed by improvement after cessation of
drug use, although recovery may be incomplete. Finally, we hypothesize that the degree of
impairment of cognitive functions will correlate significantly with the measured reduction
of 5-HT function.
Study design: To compare 5-HT neurotransmission in current MDMA users, former MDMA users,
and MDMA-naïve control subjects, 16 subjects per group will be examined with
[18F]-altanserin PET under two conditions. On two days - separated by an interval of 7 days
- subjects will receive, in random order, placebo or 60 mg (+)FEN. Two hours later subjects
will be positioned in the GE PET/CT with the head partially immobilized. Following
acquisition of a low dose CT transmission scan, [18F]-altanserin (250 MBq, high specific
activity) will be administered intravenously as a bolus over 30 sec, and dynamic PET data
will be acquired during 90 minutes as a series of 36 frames increasing in duration from one
minute to ten minutes. Subsequently, subjects will undergo a series of cognitive tasks from
the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery (CANTAB). Moreover, potential
affective reactions to the 5-HT release, anticipated group differences and the time course
of affective reaction will be assessed by repeated use of psychometric questionnaires,
specifically the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), and Adjective Mood Rating Scale
(AMRS). At intervals during the extended scanning and cognitive testing, venous blood
samples will be collected for assay of (+)FEN, prolactin and cortisol concentrations by
standard clinical procedures. The neuroendocrine responses will be correlated with the
individual PET and neuropsychological test results.
Subjects and screening procedure: Participants for the study are recruited by means of
flyers distributed at locations associated with the "techno" and "rave" scene in Zurich,
with the help of local associations involved in drug prevention/information and harm
reduction. Experimental groups are matched for sex, age, and cannabis use. Sixteen subjects
of both genders, aged 18 to 35, will be recruited for each of the following three
experimental groups: 1) Current MDMA users (self-estimated lifetime use of ≥ 50 tablets of
"Ecstasy", the last intake is dated back within the last 4 weeks), 2) former MDMA users
(self-estimated lifetime use of ≥ 50 tablets, but subjects will have stopped using Ecstasy
for at least one year prior inclusion), and 3) MDMA-naïve control subjects.
Health of subjects will be determined by a general medical examination including
electrocardiogram and standard laboratory parameters. To exclude subjects with current or
past psychiatric conditions, all subjects will be assessed and diagnosed by a clinical
psychologist using the SKID-I. During recruitments, potential subjects will be provided with
extensive background information regarding administration of (+)FEN, neuropsychological
testing, PET measures, and associated (radiation) risks, and will then be invited to give
their written informed consent. Special liability is covered by hospital insurance for all
subjects participating in this project. Pregnancy is an exclusion criterion; all female
potential test subjects will have to agree to carry out a pregnancy test before entering the
study.
A detailed history of psychoactive drug use, including type of drugs, first and last use,
and estimated total use will be recorded. All subjects will have to agree to abstain from
using any psychoactive drug (except nicotine and cannabis) for at least two weeks before the
first PET scan. At the beginning of each of the two experimental days, urine samples will be
collected and screened for the presence of psychoactive drugs or metabolites.
Relevance of the project: Our methodology will allow us to quantitatively assess
serotonergic functions in the living human brain. The novel combination of (+)FEN-induced
release of 5-HT from intracellular storage vesicles and subsequent PET assessment of
competitively altered [18F]-altanserin binding at postsynaptic 5-HT2A receptors will provide
a more direct biological marker of in vivo serotonin function than has been hitherto
available. By applying this new pharmacological challenge/PET neuroimaging approach to
groups of current and former users of MDMA, we shall be able to gain important new insight
in the debated functional consequences of MDMA use, especially concerning the controversy
about the reversibility of 5-HT changes following cessation of MDMA use. The topographic
mapping of regional 5-HT release following (+)FEN challenge in two groups of MDMA users and
in a drug-naïve cohort will help to assess the contentious issue if chronic MDMA users face
the risk of developing a global 5-HT deficiency syndrome, characterized by cognitive and
affective changes. Successful completion of this project should have useful implications for
public education and harm reduction with respect to MDMA use, and may also facilitate the
development of possible treatment options for chronic MDMA users.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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