Bipolar Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot, Open-label, 8-Week Study Evaluating the Efficacy, Safety, and Tolerability of Adjunctive Minocycline for the Treatment of Bipolar Depression
Long-term studies have emphasized that depressive symptoms and episodes account for majority of the illness burden experienced by individuals with bipolar disorder (BD). Previous studies have shown that blood levels of proteins called pro-inflammatory cytokines are abnormal in individuals with bipolar depression. The investigators hypothesize that preventing the production or release of pro-inflammatory cytokines will result in improvement of depressive symptoms in individuals with bipolar depression. Minocycline is a medication that inhibits the activation of immune cells (i.e. microglia) in the brain and reduces the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Treatment with minocycline has been shown to have antidepressant-like effects in animal studies and improve symptoms of individuals with schizophrenia. In this study, minocycline (100 mg twice a day) will be administered for 8 weeks to determine if it is an efficacious antidepressant for individuals with bipolar depression.
Bipolar disorder (BD) is associated with a high-rate of non-recovery, recurrence, and
inter-episodic dysfunction. Depressive symptoms and episodes dominate the longitudinal
course of BD and differentially account for overall illness burden. During the past decade,
substantial developments have been made in the pharmacological and psychosocial treatment of
bipolar mania and maintenance, with relatively few treatments proven efficacious for bipolar
depression. The absence of an explanatory disease model in bipolar disorder has limited the
development and evaluation of genuinely novel agents for bipolar disorder.
Several lines of evidence implicate the inflammatory system as consequential and causative
to mood disorder. Bipolar disorder is marked by alterations in inflammatory cytokines (e.g.
TNF-alpha, IL-6). Moreover, pro-inflammatory activation in both healthy and medically ill
individuals is associated with disturbances in affective, cognitive, and somatic function.
The clinical use of cytokine-based therapy has been demonstrated to induce and/or intensify
affective symptomatology in non-psychiatric medical patients. Conventional pharmacological
treatments (e.g. lithium) for bipolar disorder affects the production of pro-inflammatory
cytokines as well as their gene expression. The encompassing aim of the study herein is to
develop a novel treatment for bipolar depression based on a model of disease
pathophysiology. Minocycline is a semisynthetic second-generation tetracycline, which exerts
anti-inflammatory effects that are distinct from its antimicrobial properties.
Minocycline is a potent inhibitor of microglial activation and decreases expression of
pro-inflammatory cytokines, chemokines and their receptors and suppresses the activity of
matrix metalloproteinases. Minocycline has been shown to exert antidepressant-like
properties in preclinical studies. Rats treated with minocycline monotherapy as well as
combination treatment with an antidepressant (desipramine) exhibited significantly improved
performance on the forced swim test. Adjunctive minocycline has been shown to be efficacious
for the treatment of schizophrenia in a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study.
Subjects receiving minocycline exhibited a significant improvement in negative symptoms as
well as global improvement as measured with the Clinical Global Impression (CGI).
Significant improvement was also noted on measures of executive function, including
executive function composite score, spatial recognition memory, cognitive planning, and
intradimensional/extradimensional set shifting.
A total of 40 individuals between the ages of 18 and 65 meeting DSM-IV-TR criteria for a
current major depressive episode as part of bipolar I or II disorder will be enrolled into
an 8-week, open-label study with adjunctive minocycline (100 mg every 12 hours).
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Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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