The goal of this study is to examine whether measurements of inflammation from brain scanning and blood tests can predict how much benefit patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) will have from treatment with an anti-inflammatory medication, celecoxib, when adding to ongoing medication-based treatment for OCD.
Existing evidence-based treatments for adults with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), including cognitive behavioral therapy and first-line medication-based treatment, do not fully resolve symptoms for a majority of patients. This study proposes to test a new treatment strategy for OCD, examining inflammation as one factor that may contribute to the development of OCD and that may be targeted with medication-based treatment. Recent findings using both brain imaging and analyses from blood samples suggest that some individuals with OCD have increased levels of inflammation in the brain, which may have negative effects on brain function, contributing to symptoms of OCD. Moreover, early clinical studies suggest that some medications with anti-inflammatory properties may be beneficial in treating OCD symptoms. An important and untested question is whether the degree of inflammation assessed using these biological tools can predict how much benefit individuals with OCD will derive from treatment with an anti-inflammatory medication. The investigators will measure inflammation in the brain using PET imaging and measures of inflammation in the body using blood tests in adults with OCD. Patients will then undergo 8 weeks of treatment with an anti-inflammatory medication with some evidence of clinical effectiveness in OCD, celecoxib. The investigators predict that OCD patients with greater evidence of inflammation at baseline, assessed by brain imaging and blood tests, will derive the greatest benefit from anti-inflammatory treatment. In addition, the investigators will compare these inflammatory markers with data from a group of healthy volunteers (collected as part of another protocol, IRB #6786), to extend earlier work finding elevated inflammatory markers in adult OCD. Finally, the investigators will examine whether celecoxib treatment in OCD patients results in reductions in measures of inflammation measured from blood samples and whether the degree of anti-inflammatory effect observed biologically is related to improvement in OCD symptoms. The ultimate goal of this line of research is to pave the way for more individually-tailored, effective treatments for adult OCD based on improved understandings of pathological targets, and to validate an anti-inflammatory approach to the treatment of OCD in individuals with evidence of inflammation.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
21
Patients will receive standardized pharmacotherapy with celecoxib 100mg twice daily for the first week, and will then, if well-tolerated, will be increased to 200mg twice daily for the next seven weeks.
New York State Psychiatric Institute
New York, New York, United States
Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale
The Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS) is a clinician-administered interview that measures the presence and severity of symptoms of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder. It consists of 10 questions with scores ranging from 0 to 4, with a possible score ranging from 0 to 40. The primary measure of clinical improvement in this study is the Week 8 YBOCS score. In statistical models, we will co-vary for the Week 0 YBOCS score to account for baseline symptoms severity, but the Week 8 value is the primary outcome.
Time frame: Week 8
TSPO Volume of Distribution assessed by PET imaging with [11C]ER-176
We will perform PET imaging with the \[11C\]ER-176 radiotracer to quantify TSPO binding, a marker of neuroinflammation, quantified as the outcome measure Volume of Distribution (VT).
Time frame: Baseline
MILLIPLEX MAP Human Cytokine/Chemokine Magnetic Bead Panel
This assay from Millipore Sigma simultaneously quantifies 41 cytokine and chemokine biomarkers from serum.
Time frame: Baseline
MILLIPLEX MAP Human Cytokine/Chemokine Magnetic Bead Panel
This assay from Millipore Sigma simultaneously quantifies 41 cytokine and chemokine biomarkers from serum.
Time frame: Week 8
PGE2
prostaglandin E2 levels will be measured in serum.
Time frame: Baseline
PGE2
prostaglandin E2 levels will be measured in serum.
Time frame: Week 8
PGF2-alpha
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Prostaglandin F2-alpha levels will be measured in serum.
Time frame: Week 0
PGF2-alpha
Prostaglandin F2-alpha levels will be measured in serum.
Time frame: Week 8
CRP
C-reactive protein levels will be measured in serum.
Time frame: Week 0
CRP
C-reactive protein levels will be measured in serum.
Time frame: Week 8