The purpose of this study is to test if the combination of ketamine, vs midazolam, with an intensive trauma-focused psychotherapy will be more effective in relieving post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This week-long treatment has the potential to produce a significant therapeutic effect that otherwise would take months to occur. The study will also focus on learning about the neurophysiological changes produced by the proposed clinical trial.
Based on the current research findings on the therapeutic effectiveness of trauma focus psychotherapy and of ketamine combining the two treatments may yield a promising new rapid week-long treatment for PTSD. As PTSD symptoms' structure is comprised of several unique clusters which include re-experiencing, avoidance, depression and hypervigilance the investigators hypothesize that by combining Ketamine with trauma-focused psychotherapy the proposed intervention can address these PTSD symptoms clusters more effectively than existing treatments. This proposed clinical trial has the potential to produce a significant therapeutic effect that otherwise would take months to occur by tapping on the enhanced neuroplasticity and the antidepressant effect of ketamine (which lasts between 24hrs to 7 days), to promote rapid changes in learning and memory when applying psychotherapy within a unique "window of opportunity" of neurophysiological changes produced by the investigative drug. During the first visit participants will undergo a clinical interview to establish a PTSD diagnosis and other eligibility criteria. If found eligible participants will be invited to take part in this 7-day rapid treatment trial for PTSD. On the first therapy visits, participants will be educated about the psychological treatment that will be provided and the potential benefit of ketamine or midazolam that may enhance the psychotherapy outcomes. On the second day of the study, participants will receive an infusion of ketamine or midazolam and will undergo a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to assess their brain reactivity to PTSD before the treatment. On days 3-6 participants will attend a 60-90 minutes psychotherapy session to address their PTSD symptoms. A second ketamine or midazolam infusion will take place on day 4 of the study to enhance the drug therapeutic effect for the study duration. Day 7 will include another MRI scan to assess treatment effect on PTSD. Participants will need to attend one follow up MRI scan and clinical evaluation at 30 days and then a clinical evaluation at 90 days post-treatment to assess the long-term effectiveness of the intervention.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
162
Yale University School of Medicine
New Haven, Connecticut, United States
RECRUITINGTel Aviv University
Tel Aviv, Israel
RECRUITINGAmygdala activation to trauma memory (Phase 1; R61)
Phase 1 (R61) investigators will analyze the first 60 participants (20 per arm). Using MRI scan data, the investigators will compare changes in the amygdala bold activation from baseline to 30-day post treatment in response to the trauma scripts between the the 3 study arm. Greater activation of the amygdala is an indicator of a greater distress. Investigators will also measure the effect size resulting from the mean changes in amygdala activation from pre to post treatment between each of the experimental groups and the active comparator to determine the dose that will be carried to phase 2.
Time frame: Changes from baseline to 30-day post-treatment in amygdala activation to the trauma memory
To determine if ketamine + exposure therapy results in clinical improvement in PTSD symptoms which are significantly greater than midazolam + exposure therapy (Phase 2; combined R61/R33 data)
Change in PTSD symptoms from baseline up to 90-day post treatment. PTSD Symptoms severity will be evaluated overtime using PTSD Check List (PCL-5). Evidence for the PCL suggests that 10 points difference in the measure is a reliable indicator for a clinically meaningful change. The PCL scores ranges from 0 (no symptoms) to a maximum score of 80 (PCL Score \> 33 indicates probable PTSD diagnosis).
Time frame: Baseline, 7 days, 30 days and 90 days
To determine if ketamine + exposure therapy results in more profound changes in task-based connectivity in region of interest than midazolam + exposure therapy (Phase 2; combined R61/R33 data)
Using MRI brain activation data, the investigators will compare changes in the connectivity between participants' different brain regions (brain network connectivity) from baseline to end of treatment and 30-day post treatment. Investigators will examine the neural connectivity between the amygdala, hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, striatum and insula and other major brain areas associated with PTSD.
Time frame: Baseline, 7 days and 30 days (no MRI scan at 90 days post-treatment)
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Change from baseline to 90 days post treatment in Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II)
The self-report BDI-II will be used to assess severity of depressive symptoms. A higher score is associated with higher severity of depression. The score is interpreted as follows: 0-13 indicates minimal depression, 14-19 indicates mild depression, 20-28 indicates moderate depression and 29-63 indicates severe depression
Time frame: Baseline, 7 days, 30 days and 90 days
Measure the changes in psychophysiological distress to trauma reminders as a result of the proposed intervention
Using wrist mobile galvanic skin responses (GSR) device the investigators will measure changes in GSR from pre to post treatment during exposure to avoidance cue. Investigators will compare the magnitude of these changes between the study arms. Higher GSR indicate a greater level of distress.
Time frame: Baseline, 7 days and 30 days