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Escitalopram for the Treatment of Self-Injurious Skin Picking

Mass General Brigham logo

Mass General Brigham

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Impulse Control Disorders

Treatments

Drug: Escitalopram

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT00115011
1200-211220
2002-P-000888
LXP-MD-36

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to determine the effectiveness of escitalopram in treating self-injurious skin picking.

Full description

Purpose: Self-injurious skin picking is a problem documented to occur in 2 % of dermatology patients (Gupta, Gupta and Haberman, 1986) , and approximately 4% of the general population (Keuthen et al., 2000). It is widely under recognized, with medical sequelae that can include scarring, infections, lesions, and potentially life-threatening outcomes (O'Sullivan et al., 1999). In a prior study, fluoxetine was shown to be superior to placebo in treating self-injurious skin picking in a modest-sized double blind trial (Simeon et al., 1997). Similarly, open-label trials of other SSRIs, including sertraline (Kalivas, Kalivas and Gilman, 1996) and fluvoxamine (Arnold et al., 1999) resulted in reductions in skin-picking behavior. Escitalopram is a new SSRI that may have superior efficacy for the treatment of major depression and fewer side effects than other SSRIs. This study aims to assess the efficacy of escitalopram in patients who suffer from self-injurious skin-picking.

Comparisons: Subjects' initial scores on the CGI, HAM-D, SPTS, SPS, SPIS, BDI, BAI, QLESQ, & BDDQ will be compared to subjects' final scores.

Enrollment

30 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Repetitive skin picking resulting in noticeable tissue damage and associated emotional distress and/or functional impairment.
  • Age 18-65 years old.
  • Duration of skin picking symptoms ≥ 6 months.
  • MGH Skin Picking Scale score ≥ 10.
  • Written informed consent.
  • Females of childbearing potential must have a negative serum or urinary beta-HCG test and be willing to use acceptable methods of birth control during study tenure.

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnant women or females of childbearing potential who do not consent to use of a medically acceptable method of contraception.
  • Women who are breastfeeding.
  • Subjects who pose a serious suicidal or homicidal risk in the judgment of study investigators.
  • Serious or unstable medical illness including cardiovascular, hepatic, renal, respiratory, endocrine, neurologic, or hematologic disease.
  • Subjects with a dermatologic disorder that causes pruritis.
  • Patients on anticoagulant therapy.
  • History of seizure disorder.
  • Comorbid bipolar disorder, psychosis, organic mental disorder, borderline personality disorder or developmental disorder. Subjects with obsessive compulsive disorder (with primary symptoms other than compulsive skin picking).
  • History of substance dependence. If there is a history of substance abuse, subjects should be in remission for ≥ 6 months.
  • Current treatment with cognitive behavioral therapy for skin picking.
  • Current use of another SSRI medication.
  • Other medications for medical disorders that might interfere with escitalopram.
  • Current major depression or prescribed an antidepressant for major depression within the past 12 months.
  • More than 1 adequate trial (at least 10 weeks at maximally tolerated dose) with another prior SSRI.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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