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Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT06002633

Approach-Avoidance and Alcohol Challenge Study in PTSD

Alcohol, Approach-Avoidance, and Neurocircuitry Interactions in PTSD

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
200 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Texas at Austin · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years – 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) have greater prevalence of alcohol use disorders (AUDs), with this comorbidity associated with worse illness outcomes, yet there remains limited mechanistic understanding of how PTSD confers risk for AUD. Understanding risk factors that associate with and predict the development of AUDs in PTSD could inform interventions and prevention efforts to reduce the rate of this comorbidity and improve outcomes of both disorders. Identifying predictors of risk requires longitudinal studies in PTSD aimed at capturing the mechanisms leading to the emergence of AUDs. There is growing evidence PTSD is related to biased decision-making during approach-avoidance conflict. Alcohol is also suggested to alter approach-avoidance decision-making. AUDs and acute alcohol intoxication is associated with a bias to seek out reward despite the possibility of threat (e.g., contributing to relapse following alcohol cue exposure and risky behavior during intoxication respectively). Alcohol-induced changes in approach-avoidance decision-making have not been investigated in the context of PTSD, but emerging data support the investigators' hypothesis that an interaction between alcohol and approach-avoidance conflict in PTSD may occur and contribute to risk for alcohol misuse and development of alcohol problems. No current data, cross-sectional or longitudinal, have tested the role of alcohol-induced changes in approach-avoidance conflict as a mechanism of risk for AUD among individuals with PTSD. To address this gap, the investigators propose to leverage the group's expertise in placebo-controlled alcohol administration procedures, longitudinal modeling, functional neuroimaging, and computational neuroscience approaches to investigate the effects of acute alcohol on approach-avoidance decision-making and mediating changes in multivariate neurocircuitry patterns in limbic, striatal, and salience networks.

Detailed description

The proposed study will test the conceptual model positing that acute alcohol alters the relative bias in computational mechanisms for threat vs reward, thereby decreasing avoidance to threat and increasing approach to reward in adults with PTSD, and through this mechanism increases risk for heavier alcohol use over time. Research aims are to identify alcohol-induced changes in approach-avoidance decision-making and mediating neural networks that predict alcohol use and symptoms of AUDs over a one-year follow-up period in adults with PTSD, compared to adults with interpersonal violence exposure but no PTSD and healthy comparison adults. Essential to successfully improving clinical prognosis in PTSD are research results that enable better prediction, diagnosis, and treatment based on the individual. There is a paucity of human clinical research investigating interactions between acute alcohol exposure and PTSD that may drive risk for development of AUDs following trauma. Data could identify brain and behavioral mechanisms explaining how alcohol alters an important domain of PTSD contributing to risk for alcohol misuse and development of alcohol problems. Results could pave way for development of novel behavioral and pharmacological methods to treat PTSD and decrease risk for developing comorbid AUDs.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERAlcoholParticipants will consume beverages containing alcohol.
OTHERPlaceboParticipants will consume beverages containing a very low dose of alcohol (placebo condition).

Timeline

Start date
2023-10-23
Primary completion
2028-05-31
Completion
2028-05-31
First posted
2023-08-21
Last updated
2026-04-15

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06002633. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.