Psychological Stress Clinical Trial
Official title:
Acute Effects of Cortisol on Alcohol Craving in Alcohol Dependence
To investigate the effects of cortisol on alcohol craving and stress reactivity in alcohol
addicted subjects.
Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over, single administration of study
medication.
Study hypothesis: Cortisol has an inhibiting effect on alcohol craving and stress reactivity
in alcohol dependent subjects.
Background
Alcohol dependence is a chronically and relapsing disorder with major impact on the persons
psychological, physiological and social functioning. There is extensive evidence from animal
and human studies pointing out the important role of addiction memory in the development and
maintenance of the disorder.
Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) has proven its high effectiveness in the treatment for
addictive disorders. A core element of CBT are exposure techniques that are comparable to
extinction and habituation learning. The repeated exposure to alcohol related cues in the
absence of alcohol ingestion will lead to extinction of conditioned responses, thus reducing
the probability of relapse to alcohol taking behaviour.
Studies have shown that glucocorticoids impair memory retrieval in healthy subjects. In
fact, the investigators could show that cortisol has a fear reducing effect in patients with
post-traumatic stress disorder and in phobic patients, resulting particularly in reduced
symptoms of anxiety and in reduced stress reactivity. Interestingly enough,
pharmacologically induced high levels of glucocorticoids lowered the subjective feeling of
anxiety and stress in situations activating per se the HPA-axis. Further it has been shown
that the combined therapy of glucocorticoid administration and exposition based
psychotherapy leads to better therapy outcome in patients with specific phobias.
Objective
The goal of this study is to examine the acute effects of glucocorticoids administration on
alcohol craving and stress reactivity of abstinent alcohol dependent patients. On the basis
of clinical research in anxiety disorders, the investigators expect that a pharmacologically
increased cortisol level may impair the retrieval of addiction memory, which is indicated by
less craving during the alcohol exposition, while exposition therapy enhances consolidation
of corrective experiences. Similar to the research in anxiety patients, the investigators
aim to examine whether cortisol administration could help improve the effects of exposition
therapy in patients with alcohol dependence. The purpose is to decrease therapy duration
through cortisol administration in addition to already well proven therapies and make the
therapy more efficient as well as a factor in reducing healthcare costs.
Methods
Patients undergo two identical experimental sessions between the 6th and 8th week (one week
in between) of their 12-week inpatient treatment program for alcohol dependence. The
experiment takes place in the experimental rooms of the clinic Südhang between 1 and 6 pm.
One hour before the confrontation with alcohol associated stimuli patients receive either
20mg of hydrocortisone or placebo (oral administration). The experiment consists of a
computer based picture task (alcoholic and neutral pictures) and an in-vivo exposure task.
Psychological (craving, stress, arousal) and physiological (heart rate, saliva cortisol)
parameters are repeatedly measured over the course of the experiment.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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