Opiate Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effects of Diacetylmorphine (Heroin) on Human Brain Functions and Stress Response
The aims of the study are to investigate the effects of diacetylmorphin (heroin) on brain using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), coupled with measurements of cortisol concentrations and neurophysiological stress parameters during the presentation of emotional and cognitive stimuli in patients with heroin dependence.
Background: Heroin dependence (HD) is a chronic relapsing brain disorder that is defined by
a compulsion to seek and use heroin, and a loss of control in limiting intake.
The prescription of diacetylmorphine (heroin) itself for maintenance has become an
established treatment in several European countries. However, the neurobiological effects of
diacetylmorphine (DAM) on brain function and stress response have not been studied so far.
Imaging the acute effects of DAM administration during stress stimuli would elucidate the
neurocircuitry and neurobiology of substance use in patients with HD.
Working hypothesis: The investigators expect that DAM attenuates the engagement of brain
regions involved in response inhibition (prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortex),
emotional processing (amygdala) and working memory (frontal and mediotemporal cortex).
Additionally, we hypothesize that DAM reduces stress response (cortisol, heart rate, skin
conductance) to emotional and cognitive stimuli.
Methods: Thirty heroin-dependent patients on stable heroin maintenance will be examined in a
randomized placebo-controlled crossover design. They will be compared with 30
heroin-dependent age- and gender-matched but otherwise healthy volunteers receiving saline.
The heroin-dependent patients will administer either their individual dose of prescribed DAM
dose or saline through an indwelling intravenous line. Afterwards they will complete four
experimental paradigms testing response inhibition, emotional processing and working memory
while brain responses are measured with fMRI. Before and after the fMRI investigation
cortisol samples, DAM blood levels, neurophysiological and psychological stress parameters,
such as skin conductance, heart rate, anxiety, anger, and heroin craving will be measured.
Expected value of the proposed project: DAM effects on brain function and stress will
advance our understanding of the mechanisms underlying HD. It is the first neuroimaging
study investigating the neural basis of HD after intravenous DAM administration in humans.
Determining the neurofunctional and neurophysiological basis of heroin dependence may
facilitate clinical diagnosis and improve clinical interventions such as prevention and
treatment.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Pharmacokinetics Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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