Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Effects of serotonin 2A/1A receptor stimulation by psilocybin on mood and emotion processing in major depressive disorder: a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study


Clinical Trial Description

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is one of the world's greatest contributor to the global burden of disease and MDD affects around 17% of the Swiss population (Tomonaga et al. 2013). It is a chronic condition and can cause the affected person to suffer greatly and function poorly at work, at school and in the family. More than 1'000 suicides were recorded in Switzerland in 2014, about 90% of these fatalities were related to depression or other psychiatric problems. Suicide is the second leading cause of death in individuals 15-24 years of age (Insel & Charney 2003). Current pharmacotherapies, including monoaminergic-acting antidepressants, require prolonged administration (weeks if not months) for clinical improvement. This lag time, as well as a high non-response rate, emphasizes the need for better and faster-acting antidepressant medications. However, psychopharmacological research has largely failed to produce novel and more efficacious treatment options for MDD since decades. Advanced pharmaceutical antidepressants should ideally facilitate the psychotherapeutic process for patients, reduce the time onset of antidepressant efficacy, and prime neuroplastic adaptations relevant to symptom improvement. Such novel therapeutics are much needed and would address this detrimental public health problem, particularly in treatment-resistant patients. Early clinical studies using the psychotropic compound psilocybin (4-phosphoryloxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine) as an adjunct in psychotherapy reported a significant improvement of clinical symptoms in depression and anxiety disorder (Leuner 1961, 1981). Psilocybin is the main psychoactive principle of the group of hallucinogenic fungi (Hofmann 1968), commonly known as magic mushrooms, and acts as partial agonist at cortical and sub-cortical serotonin 5-HT2A and 5-HT1A receptors. At moderate doses, psilocybin produces a dream-like state of consciousness (Kraehenmann et al. 2016) characterized by perceptual alterations, enhanced mood, facilitated autobiographic memory recollection, and a change of perspective on the self (Leuner 1981; Studerus et al. 2011). Recent clinical studies applying placebo-controlled designs support and extend these early findings by showing that a single dose of psilocybin leads to a fast and sustained reduction in anxiety and depression as well as an improvement of quality of life in advanced cancer patients (Griffiths 2015, Grob et al. 2011). Furthermore, a recent open-label feasibility study showed rapid-onset, sustained symptom improvements over 3 weeks in a small sample of treatment-resistant depressed patients following two psilocybin treatment sessions (Carhart-Harris et al. 2016). Accumulating evidence from pharmacological and neuroimaging studies suggests that psilocybin may produce its antidepressant effects via activation of 5-HT2A receptors located in prefrontal-limbic structures that are also implicated in the pathophysiology of depression (Kraehenmann & Vollenweider et al. 2015; Vollenweider und Kometer 2010; Disner et al. 2011). In addition, molecular studies suggest that the enduring symptom improvement after a single dose of psilocybin may be mediated through downstream effects on the glutamate system and a subsequent activation of neuroplastic factors such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) (Catlow et al. 2013, Barre et al. 2016). The present clinical trial aims at investigating the putative antidepressant effects of a single moderate dose of psilocybin (0.215 mg/kg) in patients suffering from MDD by applying a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled design. The specific aims of this project are: 1. To investigate whether psilocybin in combination with short-term focused psychotherapy will reduce core symptoms in patients with MDD. 2. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to longitudinally assess whether a single dose of psilocybin will post-acutely change the negative emotion processing bias in patients with MDD and whether the change in emotion processing bias will predict subsequent symptom improvement. In addition, the investigators will analyze whether psilocybin will lead to sustained changes in functional neuronal network connectivity (FC), e.g. in amygdala-prefrontal FC. 3. To investigate whether psilocybin will increase BDNF plasma concentration and whether the change in BDNF is related to changes in fMRI markers and the subsequent mood improvement. Recent reviews indicate that impaired neuroplasticity is at the core of the pathophysiology moods and stress-related disorders. Current available antidepressants have been developed with the aim of providing symptom relief rather than targeting neuroplastic impairments. In contrast to this, the present proposal builds on promising new findings that single dose of psilocybin, presumably via a 5-HT2A receptor driven glutamatergic mechanism, leads to a rapid enhancement in neuronal resilience and a to a change in the function of neuronal networks underlying depressive symptoms and behavior. Targeting neuroplasticity with such novel approaches appears to be important for reversing cognitive schemata and emotion processing biases, fostering enduring improvements in mood and cognitive flexibility (Krystal et al. 2009). Expected value: this is the first randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial (RCT) of psilocybin treatment in MDD. Using state-of-the art behavioral, neuroimaging, and neuroplasticity methodology, the results of this study will help elucidate urgently needed new treatment mechanisms in MDD. Should it turn out that a single moderate dose of psilocybin vs. placebo in conjunction with psychotherapy may rapidly and sustainedly reduce depressive symptoms, this will be a major breakthrough in finding a novel and fast acting treatment strategy in depressed patients. Therefore, the results of this study will have high impact on the field of pharmacological research into novel antidepressant medication. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03715127
Study type Interventional
Source University of Zurich
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
Start date March 11, 2019
Completion date April 12, 2022

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05915013 - Alpha-Amino-3-Hydroxy-5-Methyl-4- Isoxazole Propionic Acid Receptor Components of the Anti-Depressant Ketamine Response Phase 1
Completed NCT04469322 - Pharmacogenetic Implementation Trial in Veterans With Treatment Refractory Depression N/A
Recruiting NCT05415397 - Treating Immuno-metabolic Depression With Anti-inflammatory Drugs Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05988333 - Psychoeducational Intervention for Families With a Member Affected by Major Depression N/A
Completed NCT02919501 - Study of the Efficacy and Safety of Initial Administration of 17 mg Vortioxetine Intravenously With 10 mg/Day Vortioxetine Orally in Patients With Major Depressive Disorder Phase 2
Completed NCT00976560 - Clinical Study to Test a New Drug to Treat Major Depression Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05518149 - A Study of Aticaprant in Adult and Elderly Participants With Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT06303076 - Tizanidine vs. Zolpidem in Primary Insomnia: A Randomized Trial Phase 4
Not yet recruiting NCT05901571 - Acupuncture and Escitalopram for Treating Major Depression Clinical Study N/A
Completed NCT02452892 - Low Field Magnetic Stimulation (LFMS) in Subjects With Treatment-Resistant Depression (TRD) N/A
Suspended NCT02546024 - Predictors of Treatment Response in Late-onset Major Depressive Disorder N/A
Completed NCT01583400 - Enhanced Collaborative Depression Treatment in Primary Care: The RESPECT-D-E Trial N/A
Completed NCT01407575 - Buprenorphine for Treatment Resistant Depression Phase 3
Completed NCT01152996 - Safety and Tolerability of Vortioxetine (LuAA21004) - Open Label Extension Study Phase 3
Enrolling by invitation NCT00762866 - Psychiatric Genotype/Phenotype Project Repository
Completed NCT00366652 - Study Evaluating the Effects of DVS SR and Duloxetine on the Pharmacokinetics of Desipramine in Healthy Subjects Phase 3
Completed NCT00384033 - Study Evaluating Desvenlafaxine Succinate Sustained Release (DVS SR) In The Treatment Of Major Depressive Disorder Phase 3
Completed NCT00369343 - Study Evaluating Desvenlafaxine Succinate Sustained Release (DVS SR) Versus Placebo in Peri- and Postmenopausal Women Phase 3
Completed NCT00316160 - Sexual Functioning Study With Antidepressants Phase 4
Completed NCT00149643 - Effectiveness of Fluoxetine in Young People for the Treatment of Major Depression and Marijuana Dependence Phase 2