Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT06044090

Brain and Stress Study

Neuroinflammatory Mechanisms Linking Chronic Stress to Motivational Deficits

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
10 (actual)
Sponsor
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
25 Years – 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Motivational deficits such as anhedonia are core to several psychiatric disorders and underlie significant functional impairment. This double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial of minocycline, an anti-\[neuro\]inflammatory agent, examines links between chronic stress and responses to a reward-related motivation task. It will evaluate the effects of pharmacologically attenuating neuroinflammation on behavioral responses to a reward-related motivation task in individuals experiencing unemployment. Understanding the effects of neuroinflammation on reward function among individuals experiencing chronic stress represents a critical first step in identifying novel neuroimmune targets for future clinical trials.

Detailed description

This study seeks to conduct translational work that extends rich preclinical findings to the clinical domain to validate whether neuroinflammatory dysregulation is strongly tied to anhedonia. This project addresses critical gaps in the scientific literature by recruiting a chronically stressed sample of individuals-employment seeking individuals who report significant stress-- and will use an experimental therapeutics approach to attenuate neuroinflammation and assess behavioral changes in motivation. One major obstacle in understanding how neuroinflammation influences motivation involves technological challenges such that conventional approaches are invasive, expensive, and/or lacking specificity. Although static levels of neuroinflammation in humans have been measured via cross sectional studies, capturing behavioral shifts following experimental manipulation has not been done. This gap limits the ability to develop a more precise understanding of how neuroinflammation causes motivational deficits in humans. The proposed project will employ a mechanistic clinical trial of the anti-\[neuro\]inflammatory agent, minocycline, to address these limitations. In animal models, minocycline has attenuated the deleterious effects of neuroinflammation on neurogenesis, long-term potentiation, and neuronal survival. This study will extend research to humans to examine whether links between neuroinflammation and behavioral responses to a reward-related motivation task differ among chronically stressed individuals taking minocycline and the placebo control. The proposed project will provide preliminary evidence for potential neural targets that have relevance for motivational deficits due to neuroinflammation. Once screening is complete, participants will come to UNC to complete quality-of-life surveys, learn about the full study schedule, and receive the first dose of medication. This visit will last about 90 minutes. Participants will be asked to participate in two medication periods, meaning they will take both minocycline (antibiotic medication) for 5-days, and an inactive substance (placebo sugar pill) for 5-days. This will investigate whether there are changes in their responses to negative and positive information. After taking the first medication for five days, participants will come in to complete a computer task (Probabilistic Reward Task) and some follow-up surveys (Snaith-Hamilton Pleasure Scale and Motivation and Pleasure Scale). This visit will last about 90 minutes. Participants will then get at least a 2-week break before taking the second medication for five days. Then, they will come back for another 90-minute visit to complete the same computer task and follow-up surveys. The total study duration including the break is about one month. The total time in study sessions on campus over the month will be 4.5 hours.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGMinocyclineParticipants will take 2 pills of 100 mg totaling a 200 mg dose of minocycline per day.
DRUGPlaceboA placebo is a sugar pill that has no therapeutic effect and will be administered orally. Participants will receive 2 placebo tablets matching the Minocycline tablets daily for 5 days.

Timeline

Start date
2022-09-12
Primary completion
2023-12-19
Completion
2023-12-19
First posted
2023-09-21
Last updated
2024-12-18
Results posted
2024-12-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06044090. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.