CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
Phase 2Completed· 29 enrolled
Drug / intervention
Transdermal Nicotine patchdrug
Likely dose
Transdermal Nicotine patch 3.5 mgfrom record
Structured eligibility isn't available for this trial yet — see the full criteria in the Eligibility tab below.

Standardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.

Search/NCT04433767
NCT04433767Phase 2Completed

Nicotinic Modulation of the Cognitive Control System in Late-life Depression

Vanderbilt University Medical Center·interventional·Posted Jun 16, 2020·Updated Dec 6, 2023

In Brief

A Phase 2 clinical trial evaluating Transdermal Nicotine patch for Depressive Disorder. Completed, enrolled 29 participants across 1 site.

Detailed Summary

Deficits in cognitive control are core features of late-life depression, contributing both to emotion dysregulation and problems with inhibiting irrelevant information, conflict detection, and working memory. Clinically characterized as executive dysfunction, these deficits are associated with poor response to antidepressants and higher levels of disability. Improvement of cognitive control network (CCN) dysfunction may benefit both mood and cognitive performance, however no current pharmacotherapy improves CCN deficits in LLD. Supported by pilot data, Investigators propose that nicotine acetylcholine receptor agonists enhance CCN function and resultantly improve mood and cognitive performance in late-life depression. The objective of this initial R61-phase trial is to first determine whether transdermal nicotine enhances CCN neural activity in an exposure-dependent fashion during an emotional response inhibition task (the emotional Stroop task). Investigator's approach for the R61 phase is to examine in 36 older adults with Major Depressive Disorder whether transdermal nicotine patches enhance CCN activity over 12 weeks as measured during fMRI with the emotional Stroop task while measuring nicotine and nicotine metabolite levels. Transdermal nicotine has a mechanism of action that is distinct from current antidepressants, potentially making it a potentially important antidepressant augmentation agent. If hypotheses are correct, as patches are commercially available, this approach could be rapidly moved into definitive studies and may have applicability to other psychiatric disorders characterized by CCN dysfunction.

Study Details

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

Timeline

Phase 2CompletedFinished
202120222023202420252026
First PostedJun 16, 2020
Enrollment StartDec 15, 2020
Primary CompletionOct 7, 2022
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 1.8 yearsPosted 6.0 years ago

Interventions

Transdermal Nicotine patchdrug

Participants will begin a 12- week open label trial of transdermal nicotine patch during the day and remove it at night (16 hours). Dose titration starting at 3.5 mg patch/daily to maximum of 21mg patch/daily. After week 12 , dose will be slowly tapered over 3 weeks.