Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04209387 |
Other study ID # |
D2846-R |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
February 1, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
December 31, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
February 2024 |
Source |
VA Office of Research and Development |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Current practice for diagnosing and managing PTSD relies primarily on subjective clinical
assessments by clinicians as well as patient self-report. An independent, objective and
neuro-physiology based method for directly assessing brain function is not available, but is
much needed to improve diagnosis and management of PTSD. To address this critical need, the
investigators propose to test a set of novel biomarkers which are based on measures of
coherent activity among the regions of cerebral cortex during sleep. In preliminary studies
on EEG acquired during sleep from Veterans with PTSD alone as well as other co-morbidities,
the investigators have shown that the neuromarkers were highly sensitive/specific to the
presence of PTSD, and highly sensitive to the severity of symptoms in PTSD group. The overall
goal of this project is to further validate these novel neurophysiology marker in
retrospective and prospective studies
Description:
The project involves 3 types of research studies :
Study 1. This is a retrospective study where the Neuromarker analyses will be applied to a
large existing database (n=656) containing sleep EEG recordings along with health and
functional outcome measures, from Veterans with PTSD only (n=107), TBI only (n=126), both
PTSD and TBI (n=87), depression only (n=80), and controls (no PTSD/TBI/Depression; n=256).
Study 2. This is a prospective study with n=10 Veterans with PTSD and n=10 controls to
evaluate potential improvement on the performance of the Neuromarkers using a dense array (up
to 64) EEG montage.
Study 3. This is a prospective study with PTSD (n=50) at multiple times during the Veterans
ongoing clinical treatment for PTSD. sleep EEG measures will be collected at pretreatment,
after first session of therapy, immediately after completion of therapy, and at 3-month post
therapy.
Methodology:
For retrospective Study 1, the investigators will evaluate the performance of the PTSD
neuromarker, in terms of sensitivity/ specificity/accuracy, utilizing a database of n=656
Veterans who have previously enrolled in the VA Portland Health Care System Sleep Laboratory
Data Repository. The data repository contains sleep polysomnography (PSG) recordings (EEG and
cardiorespiratory parameters), demographic information, medical history, and the following
validated surveys (1) Epworth Sleepiness Scale, (2) NIH PROMIS, (3) Insomnia Severity Index,
(4) Functional Outcomes of Sleep, (5) Patient Health Questionnaire, (6) PTSD symptoms
checklist (PCL-5).
For prospective study 1, the investigators will perform sleep-EEG studies in n=10 PTSD and
n=10 control subjects using a 64 channel EEG montage and will compare the performance of the
neuromarkers, in distinguishing PTSD from non-PTSD groups, with the accuracy of diagnosis
using only six EEG electrodes as performed in Study 1.
For prospective study 2, n=50 Veterans with PTSD symptoms undergoing the Veterans clinical
treatment at the Bedford VA will be recruited and the following data will be acquired:
Sleep-EEG, Demographic, Medical History, and Use of Medications forms, The Beck Depression
Inventory, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction
Questionnaire-Short Form, NIH PROMIS, PCL-5, and Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS-5).
Primary independent variable will be changes in the Neuromarker and the dependent variables
will consist of the functional and quality of life measures.