Effects of Duloxetine on Fear Conditioning in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Psychiatric |
Therapuetic Areas: | Psychiatry / Psychology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - 65 |
Updated: | 4/13/2015 |
Start Date: | February 2007 |
End Date: | April 2009 |
Contact: | Sue Kasserman, BSN |
Email: | sue.kasserman@va.gov |
Phone: | 203-932-5711 |
Effects of Duloxetine on Fear Conditioning in PTSD
Chronic posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating disorder and treatment
response to pharmacological interventions has been modest for these patients. Chronic
elevated anxiety and associated psychophysiological parameters including increased heart
rate and alterations in skin conductance are key symptoms of chronic PTSD. Selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SRIs) are considered treatment of first choice for these
patients, however a substantial portion of patients treated with SRIs do not respond
sufficiently. Therefore, there is a need to establish novel and effective treatment
strategies for these patients. Recently, duloxetine has received considerable attention
since it was shown in multiple controlled trials to be an effective treatment for people
with major depressive disorder (MDD), a condition which is often co-morbid with PTSD. In
chronic PTSD, the psychophysiological responses at baseline and in response to treatment
with duloxetine have been inadequately studied and may provide novel insight into
antidepressant and anxiolytic mechanisms of this compound.
Primary Aim 1: Evaluate the anxiolytic and antidepressant effects of duloxetine in patients
with chronic PTSD.
Secondary Aim 2: Evaluate the effects of duloxetine on fear conditioned psychophysiological
responses (including startle eyeblink, skin conductance, and cardiovascular inter-beat
interval) at baseline and after 8 weeks of naturalistic treatment in chronic PTSD patients.
response to pharmacological interventions has been modest for these patients. Chronic
elevated anxiety and associated psychophysiological parameters including increased heart
rate and alterations in skin conductance are key symptoms of chronic PTSD. Selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SRIs) are considered treatment of first choice for these
patients, however a substantial portion of patients treated with SRIs do not respond
sufficiently. Therefore, there is a need to establish novel and effective treatment
strategies for these patients. Recently, duloxetine has received considerable attention
since it was shown in multiple controlled trials to be an effective treatment for people
with major depressive disorder (MDD), a condition which is often co-morbid with PTSD. In
chronic PTSD, the psychophysiological responses at baseline and in response to treatment
with duloxetine have been inadequately studied and may provide novel insight into
antidepressant and anxiolytic mechanisms of this compound.
Primary Aim 1: Evaluate the anxiolytic and antidepressant effects of duloxetine in patients
with chronic PTSD.
Secondary Aim 2: Evaluate the effects of duloxetine on fear conditioned psychophysiological
responses (including startle eyeblink, skin conductance, and cardiovascular inter-beat
interval) at baseline and after 8 weeks of naturalistic treatment in chronic PTSD patients.
Inclusion criteria:
- Patients with PTSD (age range 18-65 years) as determined by the Structured Clinical
Interview for the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth
Edition, non-patient version (First et al., 1996)
- Willingness to participate in a naturalistic treatment study using duloxetine and in
two fear conditioning tests, one at baseline and one at the end of the 8 weeks
treatment study. We will include PTSD subjects on medications (possible medications
include antidepressants, benzodiazepines, and neuroleptics) who have no or only
partial treatment response or PTSD patients who are untreated. Treatment will be
switched to duloxetine and the previous antidepressant medication will be
discontinued.
- PTSD subjects will have a minimum score of 50 on the Clinician-Administered PTSD
Scale (CAPS; Blake et al, 1995).
- Participants will be enrolled until the number of 20 subjects who complete the study
is reached.
- All subjects are required to be in a medically stable condition as determined by a
thorough physical examination, including ECG, blood work and urine analysis.
- No vulnerable subjects will be recruited for this study.
Exclusion criteria:
- comorbid diagnosis of bipolar illness, schizophrenia or other psychotic disorders or
presence of psychotic symptoms
- acute or chronic suicidality
- acute or chronic unstable medical conditions (including severely impaired hepatic
function as indicated with abnormal PT and PTT, abnormal CBC, and liver enzymes more
than 50% above the upper normal range, not well controlled blood pressure)
- current diagnosis of substance abuse or dependence
- unsuccessful treatment history with duloxetine, known hypersensitivity to duloxetine
or any of its inactive ingredients
- administration of any investigational drug up to 90 days before entry into the study
- intake of monoamino oxides inhibitors up to 90 days before entry into the study or
during the study
- subjects with a positive screen for drugs of abuse
- no startle or skin conductance response, or excessively high startle response to the
startle probe (100 dB acoustic stimuli) during the pretest
- patients with uncontrolled narrow-angle glaucoma
- Pregnant as indicated by urine pregnancy test or unwillingness to prevent conception
during the course of the study.
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