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Glutamatergic Adaptation to Stress as a Mechanism for Anhedonia and Treatment Response With Ketamine
NCT05327699 · Emory University
In plain English
Click the button to translate this study into plain language — what it is, who qualifies, and what participation looks like.
About this study
The main purpose of this study is to understand the effects of sub-anesthetic ketamine doses on varying functional domains of depression such as anhedonia, decision-making, and emotion processing in subjects diagnosed with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). The study will evaluate these effects using a combination of questionnaires, neuroimaging techniques, and behavioral tasks. The clinical trial portion will only include subjects with MDD (Major Depressive Disorder). A separate group of healthy controls, n=60, will be invited to only complete a behavioral/interview session and one neuroimaging session.The healthy controls group will not be randomized nor receive any study intervention and will only serve to collect performance baseline measures. The primary aims of this study are to evaluate 1) the glutamate stress response in MDD patients and matched controls by whole-brain imaging, 2) the multi-modal associations between glutamate stress response and neuroimaging and behavioral assessments of motivation and valuation, and 3) the effect of ketamine versus placebo on glutamate stress response in MDD subjects.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
MDD Patients:
* willing and able to give written informed consent
* men or women, 18-65 years of age
* primary diagnosis of DSM-V MDD, current, as diagnosed by the SCID-I
* score of ≥20 on the Beck Depression Inventory, which will include patients characterized as having "moderate/severe" (20-28) or "very-severe" (29-63) depressive symptoms
* off all antidepressant therapy for at least 8 weeks prior to the baseline visit
Healthy Controls:
* willing and able to give written informed consent
* men or women, 18-65 years of age
Exclusion Criteria:
MDD Patients:
* history of any bipolar disorder or psychotic disorder
* active psychotic symptoms of any type
* substance abuse/dependence within 6 months of study entry (as determined by SCID)
* unstable cardiovascular, endocrinologic, hematologic, hepatic, renal, or neurologic disease (as determined by physical examination and laboratory testing), including upper respiratory disease or asthma, glaucoma or porphyria.
* active suicidal ideation as determined by a score ≥3 on the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSR)
* use of any recreational drugs as confirmed by urine drug screen at the time of scanning
* pregnancy or lactation
* use of glucocorticoids at any time during the study
* Raynaud's disease that may interfere with the cold-pressor
* contraindications for MRI
* MMSE score \<28
* elevated blood pressure prior to infusion (systolic \> 160 or diastolic \>100)
* history of treatment resistance as determined by ATRQ
* prior adverse reaction to ketamine
* use of antipsychotic medications
* use of greater than 2mg daily of lorazepam or similar benzodiazipine.
* Regular smoker as self-reported
Healthy Controls:
* evidence of any psychiatric disorder with exception of specific phobia, and no history of any psychiatric disorder except mild past substance use disorder as diagnosed by the SCID-I
* history of any substance abuse within the last 6 months
* use of any recreational drugs as confirmed by urine drug screen at the time of scanning
* pregnancy or lactation
* use of glucocorticoids at any time during the study
* Raynaud's disease that may interfere with the cold-pressor
* contraindications for MRI
* MMSE score \<28
* Regular smoker as self-reported
Study design
Enrollment target: 140 participants
Allocation: randomized
Masking: triple
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2022-11-08
Estimated completion: 2026-12-31
Last updated: 2025-04-20
Interventions
Drug: KetamineOther: Placebo
Primary outcomes
- • Change in glutamate concentration in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) (Baseline, 24 hours post-infusion, 14 days post-infusion)
Sponsor
Emory University · other
With: National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Contacts & investigators
ContactMichael Treadway, PhD · contact · ketaminestudy@emory.edu · (404) 727-7541
InvestigatorMichael Treadway, PhD · principal_investigator, Emory University
All locations (1)
Emory UniversityRecruiting
Atlanta, Georgia, United States