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CompletedNCT03220776

Imaging GABAergic/Glutamatergic Drugs in Bipolar Alcoholics Alcoholics

Imaging Framework for Testing GABAergic/Glutamatergic Drugs in Bipolar Alcoholics

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
54 (actual)
Sponsor
Medical University of South Carolina · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The proposed 3-week, double-blind, crossover, proof of concept study aims to manipulate neurochemical dysfunctions characteristic of individuals with co-occurring BD and AUD (i.e., abnormally low prefrontal GABA and glutamate), using medications that have been shown to normalize cortical GABA (i.e., gabapentin) and glutamate (i.e., NAC) levels in past research, and to evaluate medication-related changes in response inhibition and alcohol cue-reactivity fMRI tasks as well as drinking and mood in individuals with AUD+BD.

Detailed description

Bipolar disorder (BD) is the Axis I psychiatric condition most strongly associated with substance use disorder (SUD); diagnostic co-occurrence is particularly high between BD and alcohol use disorder (AUD). Individuals with co-occurring SUD and BD (SUD+BD) have substantially worse clinical outcomes than those with either BD or SUD alone. Nonetheless, little is known about optimal treatment for individuals with SUD+BD; response to lithium appears to be poor, and only one double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of valproate has demonstrated improved drinking outcomes in this population. Traditionally, treatment trials for SUD+BD have investigated medications that have been FDA approved to treat either BD or SUD in hopes that such medications would prove efficacious in individuals with SUD+BD. A different approach to selecting, and ideally developing, medications for SUD+BD treatment trials would be to target neurochemical dysfunctions characteristic of individuals with both BD and SUD. Recent research by the current investigator has demonstrated unique disturbances in prefrontal gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glutamate concentrations in this population using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-MRS), with individuals with co-occurring alcohol dependence (AD) and BD having significantly lower levels of GABA and glutamate relative to individuals with BD alone, AD alone, or healthy controls. Lower levels of prefrontal GABA and glutamate were in turn associated with elevated impulsivity and alcohol craving. The proposed 3-week, double-blind, crossover, proof of concept study will evaluate: a) whether medications that have been demonstrated to normalize cortical GABA (i.e., gabapentin) and glutamate (i.e., N-Acetylcysteine \[NAC\]) concentrations in individuals with epilepsy and cocaine dependence, respectively, may similarly act to normalize prefrontal GABA and glutamate levels in individuals with AUD+BD, and b) whether normalization of prefrontal GABA and glutamate levels will be associated with improvements in functional brain activity to tasks that assess core neurobehavioral deficits of AUD and BD (i.e., response inhibition, alcohol cue-reactivity), as well as drinking and mood symptoms. Positive results may support investigation of gabapentin and/or NAC as adjunctive treatments for AUD+BD in large-scale, randomized clinical trials. Most importantly, the proposed study may provide successful demonstration of a neuro-behavioral, multimodal neuroimaging platform for evaluating the potential promise of GABAergic and glutamatergic drugs for AUD and/or BD, as well as other conditions marked by GABAergic/glutamatergic dysfunction.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGN-Acetylcysteine5 day trial of N-acetylcysteine with titration to 2,400mg
DRUGGabapentin5 day trial of gabapentin with titration to 1,200mg
DRUGPlacebo Oral Tablet5 day trial of matched placebo

Timeline

Start date
2017-08-07
Primary completion
2022-11-21
Completion
2022-11-21
First posted
2017-07-18
Last updated
2023-12-13
Results posted
2023-12-13

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03220776. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.