Depressive Symptoms Clinical Trial
— CBDOfficial title:
Evaluation of Cannabidiol for Reduction of Brain Neuroinflammation
This study will investigate whether cannabidiol (CBD), the primary centrally and peripherally active non-intoxicating compound in the cannabis plant, exerts anti-neuroinflammatory effects in patients with chronic low back pain (cLBP) with or without mild-to-moderate depression.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 80 |
Est. completion date | December 15, 2026 |
Est. primary completion date | September 1, 2026 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 75 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: 1. Age = 18 and = 75; 2. The ability to give written, informed consent; 3. Fluency in English; 4. Average worst daily pain of at least 4 on a 0-10 scale of pain intensity, during a typical day. Pain needs to be present for at least 50% of days during a typical week; 5. On a stable pain treatment (pharmacological or otherwise) for the previous four weeks; 6. Diagnosis of chronic low back pain, ongoing for at least 6 months prior to enrollment. 7. High or mixed affinity binding to [11C]PBR28 identified by the Ala147Thr TSPO polymorphism in the TSPO gene (rs6971) Exclusion Criteria: 1. Outpatient surgery within 2 weeks and inpatient surgery within 1 month of the time of scanning (this timeframe may be extended if they are not fully recovered from the surgery); 2. Elevated baseline transaminase (ALT and AST) levels above 3 times the Upper Limit of Normal (ULN), accompanied by elevations in bilirubin above 2 times the ULN; 3. Any interventional pain procedures within 6 weeks prior to scanning procedure or at any point during study enrollment; 4. Surgical intervention or introduction/change in opioid regimen at any point during study enrollment; 5. Contraindications to fMRI scanning and PET scanning (including presence of a cardiac pacemaker or pacemaker wires, metallic particles in the body, vascular clips in the head or previous neurosurgery, prosthetic heart valves, claustrophobia); 6. Implanted spinal cord stimulator (SCS) for pain treatment; 7. Any history of neurological illness or major medical illness, unless clearly resolved without long-term consequences; 8. Current or past history of major psychiatric illness (PTSD, depression, and anxiety are exclusion criteria only if the conditions were so severe as to require hospitalization in the past year); 9. Harmful alcohol drinking as indicated by an AUDIT score = 16; 10. Pregnancy or breast feeding; 11. History of head trauma requiring hospitalization; 12. Major cardiac event within the past 10 years; 13. Regular use of recreational drugs in the past 3 months; 14. Use of cannabis-containing products, such as products containing THC or over the-counter or dispensary CBD, for 2 weeks prior to starting the study medication and during the 4 weeks of taking the study medication; 15. Use of immunosuppressive medications, such as prednisone, TNF medications within 2 weeks of the visit; 16. Current bacterial or viral infection likely affecting the central nervous system; 17. Epilepsy; 18. Use of the medications valproate and clobazam, which may increase risk of hepatic AEs; 19. Safety concerns related to use of any of the following medications will be discussed on an individualized basis with a physician: - Strong and moderate CYP3A4 inhibitors including boceprevir, cobicistat, conivaptan, danoprevir, elvitegravir, ritonavir, indinavir, itraconazole, ketoconazole, lopinavir, paritaprevir and ombitasvir and/or dasabuvir, posaconazole, saquinavir and telaprevir, tipranavir, clarithromycin, diltiazem, idelalisib, nefazodone, nelfinavir, troleandomycin, voriconazole, aprepitant, cimetidine, ciprofloxacin, clotrimazole, crizotinib, cyclosporine, dronedarone, erythromycin, fluconazole, fluvoxamine, imatinib, tofisopam, disulfiram, and verapamil; - Strong and moderate inhibitors of CYP2C19 including fluoxetine and ticlopidine; - Sensitive and moderately sensitive substrates of CYP2C19 including clobazam, lansoprazole, omeprazole, S-mephenytoin, and rabeprazole; - Sensitive and moderately sensitive substrates of CYP1A2 including alosetron, duloxetine, ramelteon, tasimelteon, theophylline, tizanidine, pirfenidone, and ramosetron; - Sensitive and moderately sensitive substrates of CYP2B6 including bupropion and efavirenz; - Sensitive and moderately sensitive substrates of CYP2C8 including repaglinide, montelukast, pioglitazone, and rosiglitazone; - Sensitive and moderately sensitive substrates of CYP2C9 including tolbutamide, celecoxib, glimepiride, and warfarin; - Sensitive and moderately sensitive substrates of UGT1A9 including diflunisal, propofol, and fenofibrate; - Sensitive and moderately sensitive substrates of UGT2B7 including, gemfibrozil, lamotrigine, and morphine; 20. CNS depressants including all antipsychotics, benzodiazepines (except for alprazolam, clonazepam, and lorazepam, which have low binding affinity to TSPO44-48), and non-benzodiazepine sleep aids that have a known unsafe reaction with CBD; 21. Use of opioids = 30 mg morphine equivalents on average per month; 22. Actively suicidal, history of suicide attempt or an aborted attempt within the last 5 years, or engagement in non-suicidal self-injurious behavior within the last year; 23. Allergy to sesame oil, and any other ingredients of EPIDIOLEX; 24. Any other contraindications to CBD administration noted by the study physician; 25. Any significant change in drug use and pain treatment from screening visit; 26. In the opinion of the investigators, unable to safely participate in this study and/or provide reliable data (e.g., unable to reliably rate pain; unlikely to remain still during the imaging procedures, etc). |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Massachusetts General Hospital | Boston | Massachusetts |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Massachusetts General Hospital |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Change in Functional Brain Reward Circuitry [Exploratory] | The Monetary Incentive Delay task will be used to assess striatal response to the anticipation and/or consumption of rewards/losses. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Other | Change in Pain Severity & Interference with Daily Functioning [Exploratory] | The full Brief Pain Inventory - Short Form will be used to assess pain severity and its interference with daily functioning. Pain severity is assessed on a scale from 0 - 10, with a higher score indicating more severe pain. Daily functioning is also assessed on a scale from 0 - 10, with a higher score indicating that pain more greatly interferes with functioning. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Other | Change in Pain Catastrophizing [Exploratory] | The Pain Catastrophizing Scale will be used to assess pain catastrophizing. The scale ranges from 0 - 52, with a higher score indicating greater catastrophic thinking. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Other | Change in Neuropathic Pain Components [Exploratory] | The PainDETECT questionnaire will be used to assess neuropathic components of pain. The scale ranges from -1 to 38, with a higher score indicating more neuropathic-like symptoms. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Other | Change in Disability Related to Low Back Pain [Exploratory] | The Oswestry Disability Index will be used to assess disability related to low back pain. The scale ranges from 0 - 50, with a higher score indicating greater disability. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Other | Change in Widespread Pain and Fibromyalgia Symptom Severity [Exploratory] | The American College of Rheumatology's fibromyalgia survey will be used to assess widespread pain and fibromyalgia symptom severity. The widespread pain subscale ranges from 0 - 19, with a higher score indicating more widespread pain. The fibromyalgia symptom severity subscale ranges from 0 - 12, with a higher score indicating more severe symptoms. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Other | Change in Depression [Exploratory] | In addition to the secondary outcome which uses the BDI-II to assess change in depression, depression will also be assessed daily on a scale from 0 - 10, with a higher score indicating greater depression. | Change from average score of the 7 days prior to initiation of treatment to average score of the 7 days of Week 4 | |
Other | Change in Health-Related Quality of Life [Exploratory] | The Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System(PROMIS)-29 will be used to assess health-related quality of life, including physical, mental, and social health. The scale uses a t-score metric. For positively worded measures, a higher t-score indicates greater health within that domain; for negatively worded measures, a higher t-score indicates poorer health within that domain. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Other | Change in Sleep Quality [Exploratory] | The Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index will be used to assess sleep quality. The scale ranges from 0 - 21, with a higher score indicating less healthy sleep quality. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Other | Change in Widespreadness of Pain Sensation [Exploratory] | The SymptomMapper app, a digital tablet-based application where patients can mark where on the body they are experiencing pain, will be used to assess widespreadness of pain sensation. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Other | Change in Spinal Cord TSPO Signal [Exploratory] | The investigators will test whether reductions in spinal cord [11C]PBR28 PET signal correlate with reductions in clinical pain ratings, as assessed by the "worst pain" item of the Brief Pain Inventory - Short Form. The "worst pain" item's scale ranges from 0 - 10, with a higher score indicating worse pain intensity. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Primary | Changes in Neuroinflammation in the Thalamus | The investigators will test for the presence of a significant treatment effect in the brain [11C]PBR28 signal in the thalamus, in order to test whether patients in the CBD arm will demonstrate significantly larger treatment-related reductions in neuroinflammation, compared to patients in the placebo arm. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Secondary | Changes in Neuroinflammation in Limbic Regions | The investigators will test for the presence of a significant treatment effect in the brain [11C]PBR28 in limbic regions (pgACC, aMCC), in order to test whether patients in the CBD arm will demonstrate significantly larger treatment-related reductions in neuroinflammation, compared to patients in the placebo arm. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Secondary | Correlation Between Reductions in Thalamic [11C]PBR28 PET Signal and Reductions in Clinical Pain Ratings | The investigators will test whether reductions in thalamic [11C]PBR28 PET signal correlate with reductions in clinical pain ratings, as assessed by the "worst pain" item of the Brief Pain Inventory - Short Form. The "worst pain" item's scale ranges from 0 - 10, with a higher score indicating worse pain intensity. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Secondary | Correlation Between Reductions in Limbic [11C]PBR28 PET Signal and Reductions in Depressive Symptoms | The investigators will test whether reductions in pgACC/aMCC [11C]PBR28 PET signal (as measured by Standardized Uptake Value Ratio) correlate with reductions in depressive symptoms, as measured by the Beck Depression Inventory-II. The Beck Depression Inventory-II scale ranges from 0 - 63, with a higher score indicating greater depression. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Secondary | Change in Clinical Pain Ratings | The "worst pain" item of the Brief Pain Inventory - Short Form will be used daily to assess pain intensity. The scale ranges from 0 - 10, with a higher score indicating worse pain intensity. | Change from average score during the 7 days prior to treatment (Baseline) to average score during the final week of treatment | |
Secondary | Change in Pain Bothersomeness | Pain bothersomeness will be assessed daily on a scale from 0 - 10, with a higher score indicating greater bothersomeness. | Change from average score during the 7 days prior to treatment (Baseline) to average score during the final week of treatment | |
Secondary | Change in Depressive Symptoms | The Beck Depression Inventory-II will be used to assess symptoms of depression. The scale ranges from 0 - 63, with a higher score indicating greater depression. | Change from Baseline to Week 4 | |
Secondary | Patient Global Impression of Change | The Patient Global Impression of Change scale will be used to assess participants' perceptions about their global improvement related to their low back pain. The scale ranges from 0 - 7, with a higher score indicating greater overall improvement. | Week 4 |
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