PTSD affects approximately 22% of Veterans who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Symptoms of PTSD may include re-experiencing, avoidance of trauma reminders, negative thoughts or feelings, and hyperarousal, such as increased startle reactivity and disturbed sleep. Treatments for PTSD are based on fear extinction principles in which individuals are repeatedly exposed a feared cue in the absence of danger, resulting in diminishing physiological reactions, a process believed to underlie recovery from PTSD. Studies suggest that orexin, a wake-promoting neuropeptide, may enhance fear extinction. This study will examine whether suvorexant, a selective orexin-receptor antagonist, will enhance fear extinction in Veterans with PTSD and insomnia. Finding a role for orexins in fear extinction will support the rationale for its further evaluation in the treatment of PTSD. Suvorexant is an accessible, safe medication that has been well-established in treating insomnia. It has outstanding promise for treating common and distressing symptoms in Veterans with PTSD.
PTSD is a common consequence of combat manifested in part by trauma-related arousal and reactivity, seen in increased startle and impaired sleep that result from central and autonomic nervous system alterations. Impaired fear extinction may explain prolonged physiological alterations in PTSD. Preclinical evidence suggests that orexin, a wake-promoting neuropeptide, may be a shared mechanism underlying both sleep and fear extinction. While rodent studies have shown that pharmacological manipulations that block orexin in rodents facilitate fear extinction, no studies have tested this in humans with PTSD. In line with the CSRD Combined Proof of Concept and Clinical Trial Merit Review Award mechanism, the investigators propose a proof-of-concept study leading to a clinical trial. During the initial phase, the investigators will develop and establish feasibility of the task and recruitment in 40 eligible participants with PTSD and insomnia. The task will involve a home-based multi-day remote fear conditioning experimental study, in which Veterans with PTSD and insomnia will receive nightly doses of suvorexant or placebo following extinction training over the subsequent 6 nights. Primary Aims of the proof of concept will be to: 1) establish remote fear conditioning procedures collaboratively with Veteran stakeholders; 2) evaluate enrollment, tolerability, adherence, and retention; 3) demonstrate fear conditioning and extinction learning using remote procedures; and 4) determine task feasibility of the home-based remote fear conditioning task. Go/No go milestones include: 1) the ability to enroll and randomize 40 participants by the end of month 23; 2) most participants (\> 80%) will take medication as prescribed over 7 nights; 3) no SAEs during the course of treatment as determined by the data monitoring committee review (DMC); 4) \< 10% of post-randomization participants will drop out (\<4 participants), resulting in 36 individuals who complete all study procedures by month 23; 5) successful demonstration of measurement of fear conditioning (greater skin conductance (SC) responses to CS+ cues vs CS- cues) and fear extinction (differential SC responses to CS+ and CS- cues that diminish over trials) in the combined sample; 6) feasibility of the remote task demonstrated by \<15% data loss due to recording issues (e.g., technical malfunction or UCS non-response in \<6 participants). If milestones are met, the investigators will advance to a clinical mechanistic trial to evaluate suvorexant in facilitating fear extinction using a double-blind randomized, placebo-controlled experimental design in Veterans with PTSD and insomnia. A total of 120 male and female Veterans with PTSD and insomnia will be randomized to either the suvorexant or placebo condition (n=60 in each condition). Participants will be trained in multi-day remote procedures involving fear conditioning (Day 1) and extinction 3 days later (Day 4), followed by 10 mg. suvorexant or placebo. A flexible dose titration of suvorexant (10-20 mg.) or matching placebo will be administered over the next 6 nights. Participants will then undergo extinction retention and fear reinstatement tests one week after extinction (Day 11). Primary outcome measures will be differential skin conductance responses to CS+ and CS- cues during extinction retention and reinstatement phases. Primary Aims of the Clinical Trial will be: 1) To examine whether suvorexant facilitates fear extinction, seen as greater extinction retention compared to placebo. 2) To examine whether the facilitative effects of suvorexant are more resistant to reinstatement compared to placebo. Pending an effect of suvorexant on fear extinction retention and reinstatement, the investigators will evaluate whether improvement in insomnia mediates these effects. In-home sleep recording (including both sleep EEG and indices of sleep-disordered breathing) and sleep diary measures will be examined as secondary mediators. Greater improvement in sleep quality will partially account for greater extinction retention and less reinstatement. If successful, the proposed study will offer proof-of-concept data and meaningful guidance for future studies of suvorexant as an augmentation co-treatment in exposure therapy.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
40,120
Suvorexant pills (10-20 mg)
Matching placebo pills
San Francisco VA Medical Center, San Francisco, CA
San Francisco, California, United States
Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center, Charleston, SC
Charleston, South Carolina, United States
enrollment
Goal of enrolling 40 individuals to achieve a total of 30 completers by the end of month 23.
Time frame: Month 4-23
Medication Adherence
Pill count and adherence to instructions over 7 study nights
Time frame: Month 4-23
side effect reports
SAEs
Time frame: Month 4-23
Post-randomization drop out
Post-randomization drop-out rates
Time frame: Month 4-23
Fear conditioning and extinction
Fear conditioning (greater SC responses to CS+ cues vs CS- cues) and fear extinction (differential SC responses to CS+ and CS- cues that diminish over repeated trials) in the combined sample
Time frame: Month 4-23
Rates of technical malfunction
Rates of technical malfunction (SC levels that are missing or \<.02 microsiemens) and or non-responding to the UCS (e.g., SCR\<.05 microsiemens)
Time frame: Month 4-23
Electrodermal Activity
Differential SC responses to CS+ and CS- cues during extinction retention and 2) during reinstatement.
Time frame: Years 2-7
Insomnia Severity Index
Self-reported sleep
Time frame: Years 2-7
Sleep EEG
Total sleep time, REM
Time frame: Years 2-7
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