Overview

TIMBER Psychotherapy and Ketamine Single Infusion in Chronic PTSD

Status:
Unknown status
Trial end date:
1969-12-31
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
Background: The poor prognosis and public health burden of PTSD necessitates the development of more effective and broader treatment approaches. In the etiopathogenesis of PTSD, trauma memories become ingrained into key brain areas through conditioned learning and are triggered by various situations of daily life. The brain glutamate system plays a key role in the process of trauma learning and trauma memories via long-term potentiation. Ketamine administration modulates the glutamate system and has been used in the treatment of depression and PTSD. Previous studies demonstrate that a single low dose of ketamine rapidly improves symptoms of refractory PTSD and treatment resistant depression. Unfortunately the observed response is short-lived (4-7 days, maximum up to 2 weeks) and multiple doses often produce unacceptable side effects. TIMBER (Trauma Interventions using Mindfulness Based Extinction and Reconsolidation for trauma memory) psychotherapy, is a manualized and translational mindfulness based cognitive behavioral therapy specifically designed to target trauma memories and their expressions in PTSD patients. The placebo controlled pilot study examined the efficacy of a protocol combining a single infusion of low dose ketamine (0.5mg/kg) and TIMBER psychotherapy in subjects suffering from chronic PTSD. The objective of this pilot study was to optimize and individualize treatment of chronic PTSD using a rapid, effective, trauma specific, user friendly and inexpensive approach that uses cutting edge psychopharmacological combined with novel psychotherapeutic approaches. Methodology: The randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled pilot study used a crossover design. Ten subjects with refractory PTSD were assigned to one of two arms: one arm (n=5) received combined ketamine infusion and TIMBER therapy (TIMBER-K arm) and the second (n=5) received combined placebo (normal saline) infusion and TIMBER therapy (TIMBER-P arm). All 10 subjects received a short version of TIMBER therapy after 10 minutes of onset of the infusion in which reactivation of trauma memories was initiated in a controlled manner using standardized scales and scripted narrative of the index trauma. This was followed by a standardized mindfulness based cognitive therapy module to quickly de-escalate the arousal symptoms followed by induction of detached observation and reappraisal of the trauma experience. After completion of the 40-min infusion, all subjects were trained on the full version of TIMBER therapy using methods of mindfulness based graded exposure therapy and a twice-daily schedule of home practice was initiated. The investigators are currently in a process of recruiting fifty more subjects to examine the effects in a larger sample.
Phase:
N/A
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
The Cooper Health System
Treatments:
Ketamine
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

1. Men or women, 21-60 years of age;

2. Patients attending the outpatient psychiatry clinic of Cooper University Hospital will
be screened for this study using DSM-IV diagnostic criteria for PTSD.

3. Participants must have a level of understanding sufficient to agree to all tests and
examinations required by the protocol and must sign a written informed consent
document;

4. Participants must fulfill DSM-IV criteria for current civilian or combat-related PTSD,
based on clinical assessment by a study psychiatrist, on the self-rated PTSD Check
list (PCL-C scores must be at least 51and CAPS score must be at least 50 at screening
on the first 17 items of the scale).

5. Women must be using a medically accepted reliable means of contraception (oral
contraceptive medication etc.) or not be of childbearing potential (i.e., surgically
sterile, postmenopausal for at least one year);

6. Women of childbearing potential must have a negative pregnancy test at screening and
pre-infusion;

7. Throughout this study, the participants will be on stable dosage(s) of medication(s).

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Meet criteria for psychotic disorders, e.g. schizophrenia/ schizoaffective disorder.

2. Women who are pregnant or are breast-feeding (because the medical risk of using
ketamine during pregnancy and breast-feeding are unknown);

3. Serious, unstable medical illnesses such as hepatic, renal, gastroenterologic,
respiratory, cardiovascular, endocrinologic, neurologic, immunologic, or hematologic
disease (including obstructive sleep apnea, history of difficulty with airway
management during previous anesthetics, ischemic heart disease and uncontrolled
hypertension, and history of severe head injury);

4. Clinically significant abnormal findings of laboratory parameters, or physical
examination;

5. Patients with uncorrected hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism;

6. Histories of mental retardation

7. History of one or more seizures without a clear and resolved etiology;

8. Drug or alcohol abuse or dependence within the preceding 3 months: phencyclidine (PCP)
is especially important in this context because of its resemblance with ketamine not
only in structure but also its pharmacodynamic effects on NMDA receptors.

9. Previous recreational use of ketamine;

10. Diagnosis of schizotypal or antisocial personality disorder (since these are known to
reduce the possibility of study completion; other Axis II diagnoses will be allowed).