Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02948452 |
Other study ID # |
1R01MH105662-01A1 |
Secondary ID |
1R01MH105662-01A |
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
November 2015 |
Est. completion date |
June 30, 2021 |
Study information
Verified date |
May 2023 |
Source |
University of California, Los Angeles |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This study is designed to understand responsiveness to reward in adolescents with
restricting-type anorexia nervosa compared with non-clinical controls, and how it is affected
by potential-threat perception.
Description:
The objective of this study is to understand the effects of anxiety on reward responsiveness
in adolescents with anorexia nervosa (AN), and how this interaction predicts behavioral
outcome subsequent to intensive treatment. Investigators plan to test, for the first time,
how acute activation of threat related emotional circuitry reciprocally alters reward circuit
activity, and to what degree this modulation predicts post treatment relapse. The severity of
AN, its resistance to intervention, potential for quick return of illness, risk for long-term
chronicity, and premature death, are well appreciated. Various forms of intensive treatment
may succeed in at least partial weight restoration, yet early relapse is unusually high. The
appearance early in life of prodromal anxiety phenotypes in individuals who subsequently
develop AN is well documented and nearly universal. Anxiety proneness in concert with rigid
self-discipline may therefore be predisposing substrates for sudden morbid apprehension about
weight gain, and may contribute to subsequent behaviors including vigilant scrutiny of body
size and shape and inflexible cognitive patterns regarding food and eating. In parallel,
persons with restricting-type AN typically exhibit unease and reticence when exposed to
novel, high reward environments. Most studies have found low fun-seeking, low novelty
seeking, and reduced reward responsiveness in those with AN. In line with these observations,
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies demonstrate aberrant reward sensitivity
and reward circuit activation. However the interaction of anxiety and reward circuits has
never been interrogated. There is substantial evidence of distinct yet overlapping neural
systems mediating approach/reward and avoidance/anxiety, which are integrated in balancing
and switching between behaviors related to the predominant valence state. Thus investigators
posit that high degrees of reactivity of cortico-limbic circuits underlying anxiety may
contribute mechanistically and functionally to diminished initial responsiveness to reward
stimuli. This may translate clinically to lower motivation to engage in outpatient treatment
- in effect, a lower drive to change behaviors and thought patterns necessary for maintaining
gains or improving, based on expectancy of benefits of future outcome. The dynamic
interaction between reward and anxiety systems in AN, and how dysregulation of connectivity
within and between these systems mediates behavioral outcomes, has not previously been
tested. Investigators will investigate this interaction using sequential fMRI paradigms and
novel integrated functional-by-structural connectivity in individuals who have completed
standard treatment on an eating disorder unit. Investigators will then investigate how this
neural circuitry may predict degree of relapse during the subsequent 6 months.