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This study will determine if allopregnanolone (ALLO) improves depression and pain symptoms in patients who have a history of mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) [primary endpoints]. The investigators will also determine if ALLO improves functional outcome [secondary endpoint]. Participants in this study will receive an intravenous infusion of either ALLO or placebo. Behavioral assessments will be conducted during the infusion and at several time points post-infusion.
Full description
ALLO is a neurosteroid that exhibits multiple actions highly relevant to the treatment of chronic complex TBI. The investigators' recent human data suggest that ALLO is decreased in patients with TBI, suggesting that ameliorating deficits of this neurosteroid may be clinically therapeutic. In addition, multiple groups have reported ALLO reductions in patients with conditions that frequently co-occur with TBI, including depression and pain disorders. 132 Veterans with a history of mild TBI with co-occurring depression and pain symptoms (chronic complex TBI) will be randomized to either intravenous placebo or ALLO (3 groups/44 participants per group: placebo, lower dose ALLO, higher dose ALLO). Following a loading dose, Veterans will receive placebo or ALLO infusion targeted to achieve serum ALLO levels of 0 nM (placebo), 50 nM (ALLO lower dose), or 150nM (ALLO higher dose). Behavioral assessments will be conducted during the infusion, post-taper, and 24 hours post-infusion. In addition, the investigators will conduct behavioral assessments 7 days and 14 days post-infusion.
The investigators hypothesize that ALLO will be well-tolerated in patients with complex TBI, and that this intervention may reduce depression and pain symptoms (in addition to potentially improving function).
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
21-62 years of age, any ethnic group, either sex
History of mild TBI since 2001 and service in the U.S. Military since 9/11/01 (OEF/OIF/OND era)
The investigators will adhere to the operational definition of mild TBI suggested by the World Health Organization Task Force, with the exception of seizure and Glasgow Coma Scale score criteria (not available for these participants) with 1 or more of the following:
Ability to participate fully in the informed consent process
HAM-D score 14 (HAM-D range for moderate depression=14-18)
Participants will meet DSM-5 criteria for major depressive disorder (by SCID)
BPI (Brief Pain Inventory, Short Form) 'current' pain intensity rating item score 4 (scale of 0-10)
No anticipated need to alter psychiatric medications for 14-day duration of study involvement
No changes in psychotropic or behavioral interventions during the study or in the 2 weeks prior to study enrollment
Concomitant medications for co-occurring medical conditions are permissible for stable medical conditions that are reasonably well-controlled
Exclusion criteria
Participants with current suicidal or homicidal ideation necessitating clinical intervention or representing an imminent concern
Medications that could potentially confound study outcomes (for example, prednisone) are exclusionary
Current DSM-5 diagnosis of bipolar disorder, schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder, or cognitive disorder due to a general medical condition other than TBI
Female participants who are pregnant or breast-feeding
Known allergy to study medication
Benzodiazepine, barbiturate, or opioid use within the last 2 weeks is exclusionary
Substance use disorder (DSM-5), other than nicotine use disorder
A serious medical illness, defined as an illness that requires hospitalization for additional care at the time of screening or one that has required hospitalization in the last month.
Report of a history of seizures, a history of stroke, a history of prostate cancer (or any other cancer other than non-melanoma skin cancer), a history of myocardial infarction, the presence of congestive heart failure, or any other serious health condition that would likely preclude safe study participation in the medical opinion of the PI or in consultation with the participant's PCP/other health care provider
Use of oral contraceptives, a hormone-releasing IUD, or other hormonal supplementation such as estrogen or progesterone, as there is a theoretical risk that a metabolite such as ALLO could potentially impact efficacy of oral contraceptives or estrogen replacement
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
132 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Christine E Marx, MD MA
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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