CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
Phase 4Completed· 34 enrolled
Drug / intervention
Mifepristone +3 moredrug
Likely dose
Mifepristone 1800 mgfrom record
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Standardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.

Search/NCT01490697
NCT01490697Phase 4Completed

Developing Memory Reconsolidation Blockers as Novel PTSD Treatments

Roger K. Pitman, MD·interventional·Posted Dec 13, 2011·Updated Jun 29, 2017

In Brief

A Phase 4 clinical trial evaluating Mifepristone, d-Cycloserine, and 2 other interventions for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder. Completed, enrolled 34 participants across 2 sites.

Detailed Summary

Despite substantial therapeutic advances, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) remains difficult to treat. One promising new area of research is in post-reactivation pharmacologic intervention, which is based upon the concept of blockade of memory reconsolidation. Recent animal research suggests that reactivation (retrieval) of a stored memory can return it to a labile (alterable) state from which it must be restabilized in order to persist. This process is called "reconsolidation," and various drugs have been found to block it in animals. This blockade may lead to a weakening of the original memory trace. The aim of this study is to pilot the effect of mifepristone on physiologic responding during traumatic imagery. Although mifepristone is widely and safely used to cause a medical abortion, it is also a powerful stress hormone receptor blocker. These stress hormones, called glucocorticoids, may enhance memory (re)consolidation. Indeed, a recent study in animals reported that mifepristone blocked reconsolidation of context-conditioned fear in rats. Reconsolidation blockade is a two-stage process. First, the memory must be destabilized by recalling it. Second, reconsolidation of the memory must be blocked by a drug. Memory traces formed under stressful conditions may resist destabilization and thus are inaccessible to reconsolidation blockers. However, when a reconsolidation blocker was paired with d-cycloserine (DCS) in animals that had been trained under stressful conditions, reconsolidation blockade became successful. These results suggest that DCS promotes the destabilization of resistant memory traces. The traumatic memories of individuals with PTSD may be particularly resistant to destabilization. Therefore, this study will compare mifepristone paired with DCS to placebo controls. The same script-driven traumatic imagery method validated in previous studies of propranolol in this lab will be used. Briefly, subjects with PTSD will describe their traumatic event during a script preparation session, which will reactivate the memory. They will then receive a) mifepristone and DCS or b) placebo. A week later, they will engage in script-driven mental imagery of their traumatic event while physiologic responses (heart rate, sweating, etc) are measured. This is a pilot study so there are no formal hypotheses. The aim is to estimate effect sizes for mifepristone and to compare them with effect sizes for propranolol from this lab's previous work.

Study Details

Study Typeinterventional
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
CountriesUnited States
Collaborators--

Timeline

Phase 4CompletedFinished
200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202420252026
First PostedDec 13, 2011
Enrollment StartMar 1, 2009
Primary CompletionSep 1, 2015
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 6.5 yearsPosted 14.6 years ago

Interventions

Mifepristonedrug

1800 mg tablet, single dose 90 minutes prior to script preparation on Day 7.

d-Cycloserinedrug

100 mg capsule, single dose, taken 4 hours prior to to mifepristone on Day 7.

Placebo-matching Mifepristonedrug

Placebo-matching mifepristone tablets

Placebo-matching d-Cycloserine (DCS)drug

Placebo-matching DCS capsules