Schizophrenia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators (SERMs) - A Potential New Treatment for Women of Child-bearing Age With Psychotic Symptoms of Schizophrenia
The aim of the project is to investigate the use of Raloxifene (a new form of estrogen) in the treatment of young women with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder. Raloxifene is a Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulator (SERM),which means that it can affect the central nervous system (CNS) effects of estrogen (eg. improving emotional symptoms, memory, information processing and concentration), without adversely affecting reproductive tissue/organs such as breast, uterus and ovaries. The investigators are conducting a double-blind, placebo controlled, three month study comparing the psychotic symptom response of women with schizophrenia in both groups. One group will receive standard antipsychotic medication plus 120mg Raloxifene, while the second group will receive standard antipsychotic medication plus oral placebo.
Estrogen is hypothesised to be protective for women against early onset of severe symptoms of
schizophrenia (Hafner, 1991; Seeman, 1992). This 'estrogen hypothesis' was derived from
epidemiological, clinical and animal studies. Following the results of such studies, the
investigators conducted a study (Kulkarni et al 1996) in which a group of premenopausal women
with schizophrenia were given 0.02mg oral estradiol as an adjunct to antipsychotic drug
treatment for eight weeks, and compared their progress with a similar group who received
antipsychotic drugs only. The group receiving estrogen made a significantly more rapid
recovery from acute psychotic symptoms and also reported improvement in their general health
status. Subsequently, the investigators conducted a four week double-blind,
placebo-controlled study, using 100mcg estradiol skin patches. The investigators found that
the 12 premenopausal women who received the estradiol adjunct had a significantly lower total
PANSS and BPRS score than 12 women who received placebo patches plus antipsychotic
medication.
The major potential risks in using estrogen as a longer term adjunctive treatment in
premenopausal women with schizophrenia appear to be the potential harmful effects of estrogen
itself in its action on breast and uterine tissue.
Our studies were brief for this reason, in that the investigators used estrogen without
progesterone over an eight week or four week period.
With the recent advent of Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators, in particular Raloxifene
Hydrochloride, there is the potential to harness the positive estrogenic effect on CNS
neurotransmitter systems without affecting breast or uterine tissue. While the CNS effects of
Raloxifene have not been fully studied, its actions are mediated through binding to estrogen
receptors and can thereby regulate gene expression that is ligand, tissue or gene specific.
By inference then, Raloxifene would be expected to impact on dopamine and serotonin pathways
in a similar fashion to conjugated estrogen. A study (Nickleisen et al 1999) on the effect of
Raloxifene on cognition in healthy, postmenopausal women found a slight increase in verbal
memory performance after one month of high dose treatment, while no other differences were
found after 12 months of treatment. There are no studies in women with cognitive impairment
where a treatment effect would be more likely to be apparent. Similarly, there are no
clinical studies to date investigating the effect of Raloxifene on psychotic symptoms. To
this end, the investigators are putting forward an investigator initiated clinical trial
proposal to investigate the effect of adjunctive Raloxifene on psychotic symptoms in women
with schizophrenia. This is, therefore, a study to follow our Pilot Study in the same area,
but with an increase of Raloxifene from 60mg to 120mg daily.
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