Oxytocin Aging Study
Status: | Recruiting |
---|---|
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 55 - 100 |
Updated: | 10/25/2018 |
Start Date: | February 2016 |
End Date: | December 2019 |
Contact: | Natalie Ebner Lab |
Email: | ebnerlab@gmail.com |
Phone: | 352-273-2141 |
Effects of Oxytocin on Physical and Cognitive Functioning in the Elders
The life expectancy of older Americans continues to increase, with persons aged > 65 years
representing the fastest growing segment of the US population (Manton et al., 1995). While
prolongation of life remains an important public health goal, a goal of even greater
significance is that extended life should involve preservation of the capacity to live
independently and to function well physically, cognitively, and socioemotionally (Katz et
al., 1983). Therefore, identification of proven interventions to maintaining functioning
across these domains and prevent disability is a major public health challenge (Branch et
al., 1991). Greater physical and cognitive independence in older adults has been shown to
crucially influence social integration in old age (Cornwell & Waite, 2009), resulting in
significant increase in quality of life and reduction of risk for morbidity and mortality,
social stress, anxiety, and depressive symptoms (Bassuk et al., 1999; Seeman, 1996). A
promising candidate to promote functional levels across physical, cognitive, and
socioemotional domains is the neuropeptide oxytocin (OT) (Barraza et al., 2013; Bartz et al.,
2011; Feifel et al., 2012; Meyer-Lindenberg et al., 2011; Szeto et al., 2012). Combining
neuroendocrine with behavioral approaches (e.g., performance-based measures of physical and
cognitive function), the proposed multidisciplinary research therefore sets out to clarify
the extent to which intranasal administration of OT over a period of 4 weeks can reduce
inflammation and improve physical and cognitive function in older men. Constituting a
complementary piece to the IRB approved currently ongoing Faces Study (IRB # 39-2013), this
project will also allow examination of interactions between OT's effect on physical health,
cognition, and socioemotional function.
representing the fastest growing segment of the US population (Manton et al., 1995). While
prolongation of life remains an important public health goal, a goal of even greater
significance is that extended life should involve preservation of the capacity to live
independently and to function well physically, cognitively, and socioemotionally (Katz et
al., 1983). Therefore, identification of proven interventions to maintaining functioning
across these domains and prevent disability is a major public health challenge (Branch et
al., 1991). Greater physical and cognitive independence in older adults has been shown to
crucially influence social integration in old age (Cornwell & Waite, 2009), resulting in
significant increase in quality of life and reduction of risk for morbidity and mortality,
social stress, anxiety, and depressive symptoms (Bassuk et al., 1999; Seeman, 1996). A
promising candidate to promote functional levels across physical, cognitive, and
socioemotional domains is the neuropeptide oxytocin (OT) (Barraza et al., 2013; Bartz et al.,
2011; Feifel et al., 2012; Meyer-Lindenberg et al., 2011; Szeto et al., 2012). Combining
neuroendocrine with behavioral approaches (e.g., performance-based measures of physical and
cognitive function), the proposed multidisciplinary research therefore sets out to clarify
the extent to which intranasal administration of OT over a period of 4 weeks can reduce
inflammation and improve physical and cognitive function in older men. Constituting a
complementary piece to the IRB approved currently ongoing Faces Study (IRB # 39-2013), this
project will also allow examination of interactions between OT's effect on physical health,
cognition, and socioemotional function.
Overview:
- Initial screening visit
- 3 baseline study visits
- 4-week treatment phase
- 3 study visits after treatment
- Follow-up phone contact
All study visits will be conducted at the Institute on Aging or the McKnight Brain Institute
at the University of Florida. The treatment phase will take place in the participant's home.
The participant will be assigned by chance to receive either the oxytocin or the placebo. The
placebo is a substance, like salt water, that looks like and is given in the same way as the
oxytocin but contains no oxytocin. Neither the participant nor the research assistant will
know which type of dose they are getting. This information is coded and securely stored away
until the data is analyzed, but that information is available if it is needed.
Screening Visit: Together with the information obtained in the phone pre-screening that the
investigators have already conducted, the main purpose of the screening visit is to find out
if the participant is eligible to participate in the study.
- The investigators will ask the participant questions about their health condition and
recent activities and the investigators will review the participant's current and past
medical health as well as their education and living situation.
- The participant will then have a short physical exam by a licensed physician including
measurement of blood pressure and pulse, and a brief consultation to go over the
participant's medical review. This will not be a clinical doctor visit for routine
medical care, but a visit to confirm the participant's eligibility to participate in the
study. Next, the participant's vision will be tested. The participant will be asked to
view a rotating C-shape and identify the direction of the break in the C faces. The C
will get larger and smaller depending on the participant's response and in another task
the shade of grey for the C and the background will vary.
Then the physical status of the participant will be determined based on the following
activities:
- The participant will be asked to walk at his/her usual pace for a distance of 13 feet (4
meters) two (2) separate times.
- The participant will be asked to stand from a sitting position, without using their
arms. If they are able to perform this task, they will be asked to stand up from and sit
down on a chair five (5) times as fast as they can.
- The participant will be asked to maintain their balance while standing in three
different positions, 1) with feet together, 2) with the heel of one foot beside the big
toe of the other foot, and 3) the heel of one foot in front of and touching the toes of
the other foot.
- A blood draw (~30milileters or ~2 tablespoons) and urine collection (~2mL or ~0.14 tbs)
will follow. Result of blood or/and urine testing may indicate that the participant
should not participate in the study. The blood test will also be used to determine the
level of oxytocin occurring normally in the participant's blood and to determine level
of inflammation in their body. If any incidental or clinically significant findings
occur, the investigator will inform you of this and give you a copy of the lab results.
The participant will also be encouraged to see their primary care physician.
- Some of the blood and a saliva sample (~2mL or ~ 0.14 tbs) that the participant will be
asked to provide will help to find out how the activity of their genes may impact how
they perform on some tests. All samples will be stored in a locked space at the
Institute on Aging.
Baseline Visit 1:
- The investigator will ask the participant to engage in a series of tests and answer
questionnaires related to physical, auditory (hearing), and social and emotional
functioning.
- The first test is a learning and remembering task.
This is followed by a Physical Test Battery:
- The participant will be asked to walk for 6 minutes.
- The participant will also be asked to walk a distance of 33 feet (10 meters) three
times. They will be asked to walk the same distance another three times while counting
out loud.
- The participant will be asked to perform upper- and lower-body muscle strength and
endurance assessment
- The participant will be asked to respond to various questionnaires related to their
physical health.
Auditory Test Battery o The participant will be asked to complete tasks that require them to
listen and attend to desired stimuli in the presence of a competing message or noise.
Socioemotional Test Battery
o The participant will be asked to complete questionnaires to measure their social and
emotional health, which will include questions to measure their current mood, their general
level of trust, their level of loneliness, and their drive to identify emotions and thoughts
in others and to respond to these with an appropriate emotion. These questions will also
measure the participant's selflessness and concern for the well-being of others, their
emotional attention and clarity, their anxiety level, and personality.
Baseline Visit 2:
- At the beginning of this visit, we will ask the participant about recent activities.
- The participant will then be asked to participate in an electroencephalography (EEG)
recording session, that is a recording of electrical activity along their scalp. An EEG
cap, selected for the participant's head size, will be placed on their head. The cap
contains small electrodes that record brain electrical activity. During this part of the
study, the participant will sit in a chair while watching pictures on a computer screen
and listening to sounds through headphones, or resting.
- While recording EEG, the participant's eye movements will be monitored with an eye
tracker. The eye-tracking camera will be placed in front of them and after a brief
calibration procedure will track the participant's eye movements while viewing stimuli
on the screen and hearing sounds.
- Before the tasks start, the participant will receive detailed information and have a
chance to ask any questions that they may have about the tasks or about the EEG and eye
tracking procedures. The participant will also have the chance to work on some practice
trials.
- After the EEG and eye tracking recording, the investigator will then ask the participant
about the amount of pain they experienced in the last 6 months.
- This will be followed by brief sensory testing. In particular, the investigator will
apply pressure to several sites on the participant's face and body. The pressure will be
slowly increased, and the participant will be asked to tell the investigator when they
begin to feel discomfort or mild pain. As soon as the participant indicates that they
feel pain, the pressure will be removed. Also, the investigator will tap the participant
with a small nylon tip on their knee and the back of their hand and will ask the
participant to indicate how painful this feels. The investigator will do that twice at
each site.
Baseline Visit 3:
- At the beginning of this visit, the investigator will ask the participant about their
recent activities.
- If the participant is assigned to the MRI/MRS portion of the study the investigator will
ensure that they are eligible and safe to participate in the scanning session that day.
- The participant will then practice the tasks that they will work on while in the MRI
scanner. The tasks will involve viewing geometrical shapes, faces, and images of objects
and scenes. The participant will receive detailed information and have a chance to ask
any questions that they may have about the tasks or about the MRI procedure before they
go into the scanner.
- At this point, the participant will be shuttled to the McKnight Brain Institute, and get
settled into the MRI scanner, all with the assistance of the trained researcher.
- While the participant is resting comfortably in the scanner, the investigator will ask
them to work on the tasks mentioned above and while they do the MRI machine will produce
images of their brain, as well as scan their brain at rest. The participant will be in
the scanner for less than 60 minutes.
- The investigator will ask the participant to engage in a series of tests and respond to
questionnaires related to their memory and thought process.
- This Cognitive Test Battery comprises:
- Tasks that ask the participant to attend to, respond to, or remember various stimuli on
the computer screen and on paper.
Intervention Phase:
- The participant will self-administer either oxytocin or a placebo into their nose by
using a nasal spray bottle. The spray will be administered twice a day over 4 weeks. The
investigator will give the participant guidance about how to administer the spray and
will ask them to keep a log book of their oxytocin/placebo administration.
- In addition, during the treatment phase the investigator will ask the participant to
fill in a short diary about social activities they engaged in during their day as well
as emotions they experienced.
- In Week 1 and 4 of the intervention phase, the participant will be fitted with a device
(i.e., bio-harness) that allows the investigator to measure physiological functions of
the participant's body such as their heart rate and breathing rate, for over a period of
24 hours while the participant engages in their daily activities. The participant will
be asked to wear it on a typical day, representative of their normal daily activity. The
24-hour period will be one in which the participant is not traveling out of town. A
trained research assistant will visit the participant in their home to fit them with and
take off the bio-harness. The bio-harness will be comfortably fitted with a chest strap
around the participant's upper body. It generally will not affect the clothes the
participant can wear, it is water resistant, and the participant will be able to pursue
the large majority of their daily activities in the usual manner.
- During the treatment phase, research assistants will call the participant once a week to
ask whether they experience any drug side effects or any problem with their health.
Post-Treatment Visit 1:
- The investigator will ask the participant questions about their health condition and
recent activities.
- The participant will again be physically examined (including vitals) under the
supervision of a licensed physician.
- Another blood draw (~30mL or ~2 tbs) will be conducted to run blood tests and determine
the level of oxytocin after the treatment phase as well as the level of inflammation in
the participant's body. Urine (~2mL or ~0.14 tbs) will be collected again to ensure that
no adverse changes have occurred during the treatment phase. The samples will be stored
in a locked space at the Institute on Aging.
- The investigator will again ask the participant to engage in a series of tests and
respond to questionnaires related to recent activities as well as physical, auditory
(hearing), and their social and emotional functioning. These measures will be very
similar to the ones they did before the intervention phase.
Post-Intervention Visit 2:
- At the beginning of this visit, the investigator will ask the participant about recent
activities.
- The investigator will ask the participant to participate in ERP and eye tracking
recordings similar to the ones before the treatment phase.
- The investigator will also ask the participant to engage in a series of tests and
respond to questionnaires related to their memory and thought process. These measures
will be very similar to the ones they did before the treatment phase.
- This will be followed by brief sensory testing, similar to the one that took place
before the treatment phase.
Post-Intervention Visit 3:
- At the beginning of this visit, the investigator will ask the participant about recent
activities.
- If the participant is assigned for the MRI/MRS portion of the study the investigator
will ensure that the participant is eligible and safe to participate in the scanning
session that day.
The participant will then practice the tasks that they will work on while in the MRI scanner,
which will be similar to the ones they engaged in before the treatment phase.
- At this point, the participant will be shuttled to the McKnight Brain Institute, and get
settled into the MRI scanner, all with the assistance of the trained researcher.
- The participant will again be in the scanner for less than 60 minutes.
- The investigator will ask the participant to engage in a series of tests and respond to
questionnaires related to their memory and thought process, similar to the ones they
engaged in before the treatment phase.
- Upon completion of the study, the investigator will tell the participant about the
general goals of the study and answer any questions that they may have
1-Week Follow-Up Phone Call:
- A research assistant will call the participant about one week after the participant's
last study visit to inquire whether they experienced any drug side effects or any health
problems.
The genetic material that is obtained from the blood, saliva, and urine samples will be
stored until the end of the study. By temporarily storing the genetic material, the
investigator will be able to examine the importance of different oxytocin genes as well as
other genes that are not yet known as being involved in how people think and behave.
When there is no longer sufficient amounts of blood, saliva, and urine samples for analysis,
or samples become degraded, or the participant requests in writing that the sample be
destroyed, any remaining genetic material will be destroyed. The genetic material will only
be accessible to the research staff and will be labeled only by an identification number, not
the participant's name. The University of Florida will not sell the samples and will not use
the DNA for cloning.
- Initial screening visit
- 3 baseline study visits
- 4-week treatment phase
- 3 study visits after treatment
- Follow-up phone contact
All study visits will be conducted at the Institute on Aging or the McKnight Brain Institute
at the University of Florida. The treatment phase will take place in the participant's home.
The participant will be assigned by chance to receive either the oxytocin or the placebo. The
placebo is a substance, like salt water, that looks like and is given in the same way as the
oxytocin but contains no oxytocin. Neither the participant nor the research assistant will
know which type of dose they are getting. This information is coded and securely stored away
until the data is analyzed, but that information is available if it is needed.
Screening Visit: Together with the information obtained in the phone pre-screening that the
investigators have already conducted, the main purpose of the screening visit is to find out
if the participant is eligible to participate in the study.
- The investigators will ask the participant questions about their health condition and
recent activities and the investigators will review the participant's current and past
medical health as well as their education and living situation.
- The participant will then have a short physical exam by a licensed physician including
measurement of blood pressure and pulse, and a brief consultation to go over the
participant's medical review. This will not be a clinical doctor visit for routine
medical care, but a visit to confirm the participant's eligibility to participate in the
study. Next, the participant's vision will be tested. The participant will be asked to
view a rotating C-shape and identify the direction of the break in the C faces. The C
will get larger and smaller depending on the participant's response and in another task
the shade of grey for the C and the background will vary.
Then the physical status of the participant will be determined based on the following
activities:
- The participant will be asked to walk at his/her usual pace for a distance of 13 feet (4
meters) two (2) separate times.
- The participant will be asked to stand from a sitting position, without using their
arms. If they are able to perform this task, they will be asked to stand up from and sit
down on a chair five (5) times as fast as they can.
- The participant will be asked to maintain their balance while standing in three
different positions, 1) with feet together, 2) with the heel of one foot beside the big
toe of the other foot, and 3) the heel of one foot in front of and touching the toes of
the other foot.
- A blood draw (~30milileters or ~2 tablespoons) and urine collection (~2mL or ~0.14 tbs)
will follow. Result of blood or/and urine testing may indicate that the participant
should not participate in the study. The blood test will also be used to determine the
level of oxytocin occurring normally in the participant's blood and to determine level
of inflammation in their body. If any incidental or clinically significant findings
occur, the investigator will inform you of this and give you a copy of the lab results.
The participant will also be encouraged to see their primary care physician.
- Some of the blood and a saliva sample (~2mL or ~ 0.14 tbs) that the participant will be
asked to provide will help to find out how the activity of their genes may impact how
they perform on some tests. All samples will be stored in a locked space at the
Institute on Aging.
Baseline Visit 1:
- The investigator will ask the participant to engage in a series of tests and answer
questionnaires related to physical, auditory (hearing), and social and emotional
functioning.
- The first test is a learning and remembering task.
This is followed by a Physical Test Battery:
- The participant will be asked to walk for 6 minutes.
- The participant will also be asked to walk a distance of 33 feet (10 meters) three
times. They will be asked to walk the same distance another three times while counting
out loud.
- The participant will be asked to perform upper- and lower-body muscle strength and
endurance assessment
- The participant will be asked to respond to various questionnaires related to their
physical health.
Auditory Test Battery o The participant will be asked to complete tasks that require them to
listen and attend to desired stimuli in the presence of a competing message or noise.
Socioemotional Test Battery
o The participant will be asked to complete questionnaires to measure their social and
emotional health, which will include questions to measure their current mood, their general
level of trust, their level of loneliness, and their drive to identify emotions and thoughts
in others and to respond to these with an appropriate emotion. These questions will also
measure the participant's selflessness and concern for the well-being of others, their
emotional attention and clarity, their anxiety level, and personality.
Baseline Visit 2:
- At the beginning of this visit, we will ask the participant about recent activities.
- The participant will then be asked to participate in an electroencephalography (EEG)
recording session, that is a recording of electrical activity along their scalp. An EEG
cap, selected for the participant's head size, will be placed on their head. The cap
contains small electrodes that record brain electrical activity. During this part of the
study, the participant will sit in a chair while watching pictures on a computer screen
and listening to sounds through headphones, or resting.
- While recording EEG, the participant's eye movements will be monitored with an eye
tracker. The eye-tracking camera will be placed in front of them and after a brief
calibration procedure will track the participant's eye movements while viewing stimuli
on the screen and hearing sounds.
- Before the tasks start, the participant will receive detailed information and have a
chance to ask any questions that they may have about the tasks or about the EEG and eye
tracking procedures. The participant will also have the chance to work on some practice
trials.
- After the EEG and eye tracking recording, the investigator will then ask the participant
about the amount of pain they experienced in the last 6 months.
- This will be followed by brief sensory testing. In particular, the investigator will
apply pressure to several sites on the participant's face and body. The pressure will be
slowly increased, and the participant will be asked to tell the investigator when they
begin to feel discomfort or mild pain. As soon as the participant indicates that they
feel pain, the pressure will be removed. Also, the investigator will tap the participant
with a small nylon tip on their knee and the back of their hand and will ask the
participant to indicate how painful this feels. The investigator will do that twice at
each site.
Baseline Visit 3:
- At the beginning of this visit, the investigator will ask the participant about their
recent activities.
- If the participant is assigned to the MRI/MRS portion of the study the investigator will
ensure that they are eligible and safe to participate in the scanning session that day.
- The participant will then practice the tasks that they will work on while in the MRI
scanner. The tasks will involve viewing geometrical shapes, faces, and images of objects
and scenes. The participant will receive detailed information and have a chance to ask
any questions that they may have about the tasks or about the MRI procedure before they
go into the scanner.
- At this point, the participant will be shuttled to the McKnight Brain Institute, and get
settled into the MRI scanner, all with the assistance of the trained researcher.
- While the participant is resting comfortably in the scanner, the investigator will ask
them to work on the tasks mentioned above and while they do the MRI machine will produce
images of their brain, as well as scan their brain at rest. The participant will be in
the scanner for less than 60 minutes.
- The investigator will ask the participant to engage in a series of tests and respond to
questionnaires related to their memory and thought process.
- This Cognitive Test Battery comprises:
- Tasks that ask the participant to attend to, respond to, or remember various stimuli on
the computer screen and on paper.
Intervention Phase:
- The participant will self-administer either oxytocin or a placebo into their nose by
using a nasal spray bottle. The spray will be administered twice a day over 4 weeks. The
investigator will give the participant guidance about how to administer the spray and
will ask them to keep a log book of their oxytocin/placebo administration.
- In addition, during the treatment phase the investigator will ask the participant to
fill in a short diary about social activities they engaged in during their day as well
as emotions they experienced.
- In Week 1 and 4 of the intervention phase, the participant will be fitted with a device
(i.e., bio-harness) that allows the investigator to measure physiological functions of
the participant's body such as their heart rate and breathing rate, for over a period of
24 hours while the participant engages in their daily activities. The participant will
be asked to wear it on a typical day, representative of their normal daily activity. The
24-hour period will be one in which the participant is not traveling out of town. A
trained research assistant will visit the participant in their home to fit them with and
take off the bio-harness. The bio-harness will be comfortably fitted with a chest strap
around the participant's upper body. It generally will not affect the clothes the
participant can wear, it is water resistant, and the participant will be able to pursue
the large majority of their daily activities in the usual manner.
- During the treatment phase, research assistants will call the participant once a week to
ask whether they experience any drug side effects or any problem with their health.
Post-Treatment Visit 1:
- The investigator will ask the participant questions about their health condition and
recent activities.
- The participant will again be physically examined (including vitals) under the
supervision of a licensed physician.
- Another blood draw (~30mL or ~2 tbs) will be conducted to run blood tests and determine
the level of oxytocin after the treatment phase as well as the level of inflammation in
the participant's body. Urine (~2mL or ~0.14 tbs) will be collected again to ensure that
no adverse changes have occurred during the treatment phase. The samples will be stored
in a locked space at the Institute on Aging.
- The investigator will again ask the participant to engage in a series of tests and
respond to questionnaires related to recent activities as well as physical, auditory
(hearing), and their social and emotional functioning. These measures will be very
similar to the ones they did before the intervention phase.
Post-Intervention Visit 2:
- At the beginning of this visit, the investigator will ask the participant about recent
activities.
- The investigator will ask the participant to participate in ERP and eye tracking
recordings similar to the ones before the treatment phase.
- The investigator will also ask the participant to engage in a series of tests and
respond to questionnaires related to their memory and thought process. These measures
will be very similar to the ones they did before the treatment phase.
- This will be followed by brief sensory testing, similar to the one that took place
before the treatment phase.
Post-Intervention Visit 3:
- At the beginning of this visit, the investigator will ask the participant about recent
activities.
- If the participant is assigned for the MRI/MRS portion of the study the investigator
will ensure that the participant is eligible and safe to participate in the scanning
session that day.
The participant will then practice the tasks that they will work on while in the MRI scanner,
which will be similar to the ones they engaged in before the treatment phase.
- At this point, the participant will be shuttled to the McKnight Brain Institute, and get
settled into the MRI scanner, all with the assistance of the trained researcher.
- The participant will again be in the scanner for less than 60 minutes.
- The investigator will ask the participant to engage in a series of tests and respond to
questionnaires related to their memory and thought process, similar to the ones they
engaged in before the treatment phase.
- Upon completion of the study, the investigator will tell the participant about the
general goals of the study and answer any questions that they may have
1-Week Follow-Up Phone Call:
- A research assistant will call the participant about one week after the participant's
last study visit to inquire whether they experienced any drug side effects or any health
problems.
The genetic material that is obtained from the blood, saliva, and urine samples will be
stored until the end of the study. By temporarily storing the genetic material, the
investigator will be able to examine the importance of different oxytocin genes as well as
other genes that are not yet known as being involved in how people think and behave.
When there is no longer sufficient amounts of blood, saliva, and urine samples for analysis,
or samples become degraded, or the participant requests in writing that the sample be
destroyed, any remaining genetic material will be destroyed. The genetic material will only
be accessible to the research staff and will be labeled only by an identification number, not
the participant's name. The University of Florida will not sell the samples and will not use
the DNA for cloning.
Inclusion Criteria:
- males and females aged 55 years or older
- generally healthy physically and cognitively
- blood pressure < 160/90 mm Hg
- willing and able to give informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria:
- participants will be extensively screened for study eligibility aligning with study
and safety requirements related to drug application and Magnetic Resonance Imaging
(MRI)/Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS)
We found this trial at
1
site
Gainesville, Florida 32611
Principal Investigator: Natalie Ebner, PhD
Phone: 352-273-2141
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