Depression Clinical Trial
— GEMSOfficial title:
Does Modulation of Glutamate Transmission in the Brain Using a Sub-anaesthetic Dose of Ketamine Affect Autobiographical Memory, Emotional Processing and Decision-making in Treatment-resistant Depression?
NCT number | NCT05809609 |
Other study ID # | GEMS |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Recruiting |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | July 1, 2022 |
Est. completion date | December 28, 2024 |
Clinical depression often includes a pessimistic view of things which have happened in the past and an impairment in the ability to experience pleasure or looking forward to things. A licensed drug called ketamine affects the levels of glutamate, a chemical messenger in the brain, and has been used as a treatment particularly for depression which hasn't got better with other types of medication. Glutamate plays a role in learning and memory so the investigators are interested in understanding how ketamine can affect how people with depression remember past negative and positive memories and how they experience reward. The investigators are conducting a study in depressed participants who did not improve with the standard antidepressant treatment to expand our understanding on how ketamine can influence memory, the way people understand emotions and learn from rewards and punishments. Study participants will undergo medical and psychiatric health screening, drug administration (ketamine or saline), questionnaires and computer tasks before and after the administration of the study drug, and an MRI scan after administration of the drug. MRI is a type of brain scan that allows us to see how the brain responds during for example memories of things which have happened in the past. This project will help us understand how NMDA antagonists may work in depression.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 60 |
Est. completion date | December 28, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | November 28, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 20 Years to 60 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Willing and able to give informed consent for participation in the study - Sufficiently fluent English to understand and complete the tasks - Registered with a GP and consents to GP being informed of participation in the study Participants need to meet a number of concurrent clinical criteria: - Current criteria for Major Depressive Disorder, in a current major depressive episode as determined by the SCID-5. - Inadequate response to at least one and no more than three antidepressant treatments. - Currently taking a licensed antidepressant at a therapeutic dose for at least four weeks. - Pre-menopausal women and male participants engaging in sex with a risk of pregnancy must agree to use a highly effective method of contraception from Screening Visit until 30 days after receiving the study medication treatment. Acceptable methods of contraception include: - Condoms - Combined (estrogen- and progestogen-containing) hormonal contraception associated with inhibition of ovulation: oral, intravaginal or transdermal - Progestogen-only hormonal contraception associated with inhibition of ovulation oral, injectable or implantable - Intrauterine device (IUD) - Intrauterine hormone-releasing system (IUS) - Bilateral tubal occlusion - Vasectomy (or vasectomised partner) - Sexual abstinence. [Periodic abstinence (calendar, symptothermal, post-ovulation methods), withdrawal (coitus interruptus), and spermicides only are not acceptable methods of contraception.] - Male participants must not donate sperm until 30 days after receiving the study medication. - Participants taking non-prescription/prescription medication may still be entered into the study, if, in the opinion of the Investigator, the medication received will not interfere with the study procedures or compromise safety - Willingness to refrain from driving, cycling, or operating heavy machinery, until the following morning or a restful sleep has occurred, whichever is later. - Willingness to refrain from drinking alcohol for 3 days before the infusion visit and one day before any of the other visits throughout the study. Exclusion Criteria: - The participant may not enter the study if ANY of the following apply: - History of /or current DSM-5 bipolar disorder, schizophrenia or emotionally unstable personality disorder [co-morbid anxiety disorders (including agoraphobia, generalized anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder and panic disorder) and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) are allowed] - Participants who fulfil current criteria for other comorbid disorders may still be entered into the study, if, in the opinion of the Investigator, the psychiatric diagnosis will not compromise safety or affect data quality - Diagnosis of a major cognitive disorder or evidence of cognitive impairment - Clinically significant risk of suicide - Participants undergoing or who have undergone electroconvulsive therapy for the treatment of the current episode of depression - Substance or alcohol use disorder over the past 6 months - Regular alcohol consumption of more than 21 units a week or excessive alcohol consumption up to three days before any of the in-person study visits or inability to abstain from alcohol for more than 3 days - Moderate cigarette use (> 10 cigarettes per day) - History of, or current general medical conditions that in the opinion of the Investigator may interfere with the safety of the participant or the scientific integrity of the study - Current pregnancy (as determined by urine pregnancy test), breastfeeding, planning a pregnancy, or unwillingness to practice birth control during the course of the study - Clinically significant abnormalities of laboratory tests, physical examination, or ECG. A participant with a clinical abnormality or parameters outside the reference range for the population being studied may be included only if the Investigator considers that the finding is unlikely to introduce additional risk factors and will not interfere with the study procedures - Current or past history of heart rhythm disorders - Clinically significant untreated hypertension - Any contraindication to MRI including claustrophobia, any trauma or surgery which may have left magnetic material in the body, magnetic implants or pacemakers, and inability to lie still for 1 hour or more - Previous participation in a study using the same, or similar, emotional processing tasks in the last three months - Previous lifetime use of ketamine or phencyclidine - Participant with planned medical treatment within the study period that might interfere with the study procedures - Participant who is unlikely to comply with the clinical study protocol or is unsuitable for any other reason, in the opinion of the Investigator. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford | Oxford |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Oxford |
United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in magnitude of negative and positive valence adjectives in the autobiographical memory task using a self-reported questionnaire. | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- negative emotional bias associated with autobiographical memories in TRD patients. Each negative (guilty/ashamed, depressed/sad, angry/frustrated, upset, anxious/worried, worthless) and positive (grateful, energetic/motivated, hopeful, confident, loved, happy) valence adjectives. will be rated on a scale from 0 to 100. Change in magnitude will be assessed calculating the difference in ratings of negative and positive adjectives using a self-reported questionnaire from baseline to after treatment |
-1 and 1 days after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Primary | Brain activation as measured by functional magnetic resonance in a network of areas related to autobiographical memories, including the medial prefrontal cortex and associated networks during the autobiographical memory task. | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- on brain circuit associated with autobiographical memories |
1 days after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Secondary | Accuracy on a computer-based task of facial expression recognition (FERT) | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- emotional processing such as emotional recognition. |
-1 day, and up to 2 hours after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Secondary | Reaction time on a computer-based task of facial expression recognition (FERT) | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- emotional processing such as emotional recognition. |
-1 day, and up to 2 hours after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Secondary | Accuracy to classify positive and negative descriptor words using the Emotional Categorisation Task (ECAT) | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- emotional processing such as classification of positive and negative descriptor words |
Up to 2 hours after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Secondary | Reaction time to classify positive and negative descriptor words using the Emotional Categorisation Task (ECAT) | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- emotional processing such as classification of positive and negative descriptor words |
Up to 2 hours after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Secondary | Number of positive and negative words correctly recalled (hits) and number of words incorrectly recalled (false alarms) using the Emotional Recall Task (EREC) | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- emotional processing such as recall of positive and negative descriptor words |
Up to 2 hours after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Secondary | Accuracy to correctly (hits) and incorrectly (false alarms) recognise positive and negative words using the Emotional Recognition Memory Task (EMEM) | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- emotional processing such as recognition of positive and negative descriptor words |
Up to 2 hours after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Secondary | Reaction time to correctly (hits) and incorrectly (false alarms) recognise positive and negative words using the Emotional Recognition Memory Task (EMEM) | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- emotional processing such as recognition of positive and negative descriptor words |
Up to 2 hours after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Secondary | Change in response choice during gain and loss using the Probabilistic Instrumental Learning Tasks (PILT) | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- reward processing |
1 day after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Secondary | Brain activation as measured by functional magnetic resonance imaging during the Probabilistic Instrumental Learning Tasks (PILT) in reward-related brain areas, including the ventral striatum and associated networks | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- on brain circuit associated with reward processing |
1 days after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Secondary | Explore performance on information processing and monetary win/loss reinforcement learning (RL) decision-making tasks. | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- choice behaviour on win and loss trials |
1 days after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Secondary | Explore performance on information processing and monetary win/loss reinforcement learning (RL) decision-making tasks using pupillometry | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- pupil dilation in context of RL decision making task |
1 days after ketamine/placebo treatment | |
Secondary | Change in choice behaviour (effort and/or reward sensitivity) on accepted offers between session one and two using the Apples Gathering Task (AGT). | To investigate the effects of ketamine on:
- motivation processing |
Up to 2 hours after ketamine/placebo treatment and 7 days after ketamine/placebo treatment |
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