Hormonal Contraception Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of Oral Contraceptive on Stress Reactivity and Mood Homeostasis
Verified date | August 2023 |
Source | University Hospital Tuebingen |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Observational |
For almost 60 years, millions of women globally have relied on oral contraceptive (OC) pills for pregnancy prevention and addressing menstrual irregularities. However, 4-10% of users experience mood-related side effects such as depression and anxiety, often leading to discontinuation of OC use. Previous studies also indicate that OC usage may lead to chronic alterations in brain structure and the regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, a system involved in regulating stress responses. In the proposed study the investigators aim to investigate in more detail how women who start taking oral contraception (OC) and women who stop taking OC differ in their stress reactivity and their mood from long-term OC users. Furthermore, assessing hormones will help to shed light on the connection between OC, stress reaction, sex hormones and the brain. To achieve this, individual biomarkers will be evaluated, including changes in brain anatomy, functional responses and connectivity during acute psychosocial stress and early changes in mood and well-being through ambulatory assessment.
Status | Enrolling by invitation |
Enrollment | 75 |
Est. completion date | December 2025 |
Est. primary completion date | July 2025 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 18 Years to 40 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Women, who want to start using oral contraception (no hormonal contraception use for at least 4 months; regular menstrual cycle (between 25 and 35 days) prior to participation) - Women, who want to stop using oral contraception (OC pill use for at least 6 months; regular intake of OC pill) - Long-term oral contraception user (OC pill use for at least 6 months; regular intake of OC pill) - German language fluency - Normal or corrected vision - Body-mass index (BMI): 18-35 kg/m2 Exclusion Criteria: - Neurological or psychiatric disease - Medical problems such as hormonal, metabolic, or chronic diseases (e.g., severe hypertension, diabetes, or congestive heart failure) - Pregnancy, delivery, and lactation (current and within the last year) - Any kind of steroid hormonal, pharmacological treatment, or psychotropic treatment in the last three months - Shift work - Participants engaging in competitive sports - contraindication for MRI - People with non-removable metal objects on or in the body - Tattoos (if not MRI-incompatible according to expert guidelines) - Pathological hearing or increased sensitivity to loud noises - Claustrophobia - Surgery less than three months ago - Neurological disease or injury - Moderate or severe head injury - Intake of antidepressants or neuroleptics |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Germany | Department of Psychiatry & Psychotherapy, University of Tübingen | Tübingen | Baden-Württemberg |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University Hospital Tuebingen | German Research Foundation, Uppsala University |
Germany,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Stress-induced changes in mood | Change in mood after stress inductions measured by ratings of positive and negative affect before and after the stress task will be measured with the PANAS questionnaire (scale 1-5).
It will be measured twice three months apart; each time: 60min before stress onset, just before stress onset, immediately after stress, 40min after stress onset, 60min after stress onset, 90min after stress onset. |
Pre medication vs. 3 months after medication | |
Primary | Stress-induced changes in the subjective experience of stress | Change in subjective stress experience after stress inductions measured by stress items before and after the stress task will be measured with a visual analog scale (1-10).
It will be measured twice three months apart; each time: 60min before stress onset, just before stress onset, immediately after stress, 40min after stress onset, 60min after stress onset, 90min after stress onset. |
Pre medication vs. 3 months after medication | |
Primary | Stress-induced changes in brain response | BOLD response to stress (changes in amplitude) within regions associated with stress reactivity and regulation (amygdala, hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), middle frontal gyrus (MFG), right superior temporal gyrus (STG), insula, striatum, and praecuneus) will be quantified using fMRI to assess differences between stress vs. control conditions during the stress task. | Pre medication vs. 3 months after medication | |
Primary | Stress-induced changes in functional connectivity | Functional connectivity will be assessed within regions associated with emotional processing (amygdala, hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, hypothalamus, striatum, insula) using fMRI to assess differences between stress vs. control conditions during the stress task. | Pre medication vs. 3 months after medication | |
Primary | Stress-induced changes in skin conductance | Skin conductance [µS] during stress condition vs. no stress condition as indicators of stress during fMRI | Pre medication vs. 3 months after medication | |
Primary | Stress-induced changes in pulse | Pulse oximetry during stress condition vs. no stress condition as indicators of stress during fMRI | Pre medication vs. 3 months after medication | |
Primary | Stress-induced changes in cortisol | Salivary cortisol levels to determine cortisol levels [µg/dL or nmol/L] during stress condition vs. no stress condition and baseline as indicators of stress/Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal-axis activation.
It will be measured twice three months apart; each time: 60min before stress onset, just before stress onset, immediately after stress, 40min after stress onset, 60min after stress onset, 90min after stress onset. |
Pre medication vs. 3 months after medication | |
Primary | Oral Contraceptive induced changes in average mood during transition phase | Changes in positive and negative mood ratings (5 mood and 5 stress items, scale 1-10), measured with ecological momentary assessment after starting vs. stopping oral contraceptive intake. | Over the course of three months regularly (30 times in total), about 5 minutes per day | |
Secondary | Oral Contraceptive induced changes in hormone levels | Changes in endogenous and synthetic hormone levels will be assessed from blood samples before and after starting vs. stopping oral contraceptive use. | Pre medication vs. 3 months after medication | |
Secondary | Oral Contraceptive induced changes in brain volume (structure) | Changes operationalized with a structural T1 scan of the whole brain before and after starting vs. stopping oral contraceptive use. | Pre medication vs. 3 months after medication | |
Secondary | Oral Contraceptive induced changes in chronic stress | Associations of chronic stress, assessed via hair cortisol measures and chronic stress questionnaire (Trier Inventar of Chronic Stress - TICS; value range = [0 228]; higher outcome relates to a higher chronic stress rating) with oral contraception and stress reactivity. To record the cumulative cortisol secretion of the past 3 months (= 3cm of hair) as a marker for chronic stress, a small strand of hair on the back of the head of the participant will be cut as close to the scalp as possible. | Pre medication vs. 3 months after medication | |
Secondary | Oral Contraceptive induced organic changes in reproductive organs | Changes operationalized with a transvaginal ultrasound to examine the female reproductive organs (uterus, fallopian tubes and ovaries) before and after starting vs. stopping oral contraceptive use. | Pre medication vs. 3 months after medication | |
Secondary | Oral Contraceptive induced long-term changes in mood | Changes in positive and negative mood ratings measured with the PANAS questionnaire (scale 1-5) | Six months after medication change |
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