Stanford Regulating Circuits of the Brain Study- Ketamine

Brief Summary

This study is a biomarker study designed to characterize how ketamine impacts the reward circuits of the human brain.

Intervention / Treatment

  • Ketamine (DRUG)
    Acute administration

Condition or Disease

  • Healthy

Phase

Study Design

Study type: OBSERVATIONAL
Status: Recruiting
Study results: No Results Available
Age: 18 Years to 55 Years
Enrollment: 40 (ESTIMATED)
Funded by: Other|NIH
Time Perspective: Other
Observational Model: Other

Masking

Clinical Trial Dates

Start date: Jul 30, 2019 ACTUAL
Primary Completion: Jul 01, 2024 ESTIMATED
Completion Date: Dec 01, 2024 ESTIMATED
Study First Posted: Mar 23, 2018 ACTUAL
Results First Posted: Aug 31, 2020
Last Updated: Apr 11, 2023

Sponsors / Collaborators

Lead Sponsor: Stanford University
Responsible Party: N/A

The investigators will assess the effect of acute ketamine modulation on the functioning of reward-related human brain circuits. Reward-related brain circuits will be assessed using functional magnetic resonance imaging.

Participants will include volunteers who report more than two prior uses of ketamine (also known as "Special K"), when they were 18 years or older.

The investigators will recruit individuals who have previously tried ketamine rather than those who are ketamine-naïve.

Participants will receive an IV infusion of ketamine (\~.05mg/kg and 0.5mg/kg) or placebo (saline). Following established procedures, these three sessions will be randomized in a blinded protocol in order to limit expectancy effects.

Throughout each session, participants will be monitored. Functional imaging will commence after the drug has reached peak levels, following previously established time courses for ketamine infusion. Participants will also be monitored after the functional imaging session. Secondary effects of ketamine on behavior and self-reported experience will be assessed.

In the assessment of the acute effects of ketamine, the investigators will take into account the cumulative effects of prior drug exposure.

Participant Groups

  • Participants will receive an IV infusion of ketamine (\~.05mg/kg and 0.5mg/kg) or placebo. Ketamine is an FDA-approved dissociative anesthetic. The study doses are in the subanesthetic range. During the infusion, an ACLS-certified psychiatrist or anesthesiologist will provide continuous monitoring. Afterwards, patients will be monitored on-site by an ACLS-certified MD or highly skilled research nursing staff, and an on-call emergency response team for 4 hours (ketamine's half-life is 15 min; 4 hrs= 16 half-lives).

Eligibility Criteria

Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Maximum Age: 55
Age Groups: Adult
Healthy Volunteers: No

Inclusion Criteria:

* Ages 18-55 years
* At least 2 prior uses of ketamine when aged 18+
* BMI within healthy range (18-30)
* Ability to speak, read, or understand English

Exclusion Criteria:

* Current active suicide ideation or history of suicide attempts
* Current mood, anxiety, eating, psychotic, or substance use disorder
* Lifetime psychotic or bipolar disorder
* Schizophrenia in a first degree relative
* Current use of psychotropic medication
* Prior adverse ketamine response
* Allergy or hypersensitivity to ketamine
* Use of ketamine in past 7 days
* Cannabis use in the past 7 days, illicit recreational drug use in the 48 hours prior to sessions, and/or alcohol use in the 24 hours prior to sessions
* Concurrent use of any medications that might increase the risk of participation (e.g., drug interactions)
* History of epilepsy, convulsions, seizures, LOC \>10 min
* Renal/hepatic impairment
* Hypertension (Stage 1 defined as systolic blood pressure \>140 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure \>90 mmHg on 2 of 3 measurements at least 15 min apart at initial screening; systolic blood pressure \>155 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure \>99 mmHg on 2 of 3 measurements at least 15 min apart during infusion visits)
* Heart rate \<50 bpm or \>150 bpm at initial screening
* Chronic congestive heart failure, tachyarrhythmias, myocardial ischemia assessed via EKG at initial screening
* EKG QTcF intervals \>430 ms for men and \>470 ms for women
* Direct physical access to or routine handling of addicting drugs in the regular course of work duties
* MRI contraindication
* Pregnant or nursing females

This clinical trial is recruiting

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Primary Outcomes
  • During functional magnetic resonance imaging the reward and negative affect circuits will be engaged by reward and related emotional tasks, and circuit activation will be quantified by blood flow in regions of interest and the extent of functional connectivity between them

Secondary Outcomes
  • Accuracy data are quantified as number of errors and lower values indicate better performance

  • Responses are quantified on a 4-point scale and summed for total DASS score and for each Depression, Anxiety and Subscale score. Higher scores indicate more severe symptoms of depression, anxiety and stress

  • Responses will be quantified in intervals of 10 on a visual analogue of 1 to 100

  • Responses are quantified as a summed score from 0 to 23 and determine the degree to which a person perceives an outcome as being contingent on their own actions or those of external forces. Higher scores indicate greater levels of external locus of control.

  • Responses are quantified on a 5-point Likert scale and is a measure of emotional self-regulation. Scores measure three core domains: negativity bias, emotional resilience, and social skills. Higher scores indicate higher functioning and better coping.

  • Responses are quantified on a 4-point scale and measures anhedonia, the inability to experience pleasure. Scores measure domains of social interaction, food and drink, sensory experience, and interest/pastimes. An "abnormal" score is defined as 3 or more.

  • Responses are quantified on a 4-point scale and measure demotivation in three domains: executive apathy, emotional apathy, and initiation apathy. Higher scores indicate higher apathy level.

  • Responses are quantified on a 5-point Likert scale and assesses an individual's motivation and pleasure. Higher scores indicate higher levels of motivation and pleasure.

  • Responses are summed on a 5-point scale. Scores assess interest, motivation, effort, and consummatory pleasure across four domains: hobbies, food/drink, social activities, and sensory experiences. Lower scores represent a higher level of anhedonia.

  • Responses are recorded on a sliding scale with one side reading 'No, not more than usually' and the opposite reading 'Yes, much more than usually'. More agreeance to the statements represents that the individual is experiencing higher levels of altered states of consciousness.

  • Responses are summed on a 5-point scale in rating one's agreeance to the dissociative statements as 'not at all' to 'extreme'. Scores assess individual's dissociative state. A higher score represents more dissociation.

  • Responses are summed on a 7-point scale in rating one's severity to the statements as 'not assessed' to 'extremely severe'. Scores assess psychiatric symptoms like anxiety, depression, and psychoses. A higher score means the individual is presenting more extreme symptoms.

  • At 5 different time points throughout infusion visits the participant chews on a cotton swab for 30 seconds to collect saliva. A steroid hormone assay is conducted to collect data on cortisol, testosterone, progesterone, and estradiol levels.

More Details

NCT Number: NCT03475277
Acronym: RBRAIN
Other IDs: 41173
Study URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03475277
Last updated: Sep 29, 2023