The effects of esketamine and treatment expectation in acute major depressive disorder (Expect): study protocol for a pharmacological fMRI study using a balanced placebo design
Irina Falkenberg, Florian Bitsch, Wei Liu, Alexandros Matsingos, Laila Noor, Christoph Vogelbacher, Cüneyt Yildiz, Tilo Kircher
Trials August 13, 2023 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1186/s13063-023-07556-x via DOAJ
Summary
The study investigates how treatment expectation influences the antidepressant effects of esketamine in patients with major depressive disorder (MDD). Using a balanced placebo design and fMRI, it will explore the psychological and neural mechanisms involved. The project aims to enhance understanding of how expectations can modulate treatment outcomes, which may improve clinical practices and drug trial designs for MDD.
Study at a glance
| Design | randomized controlled trial |
|---|---|
| Population | patients with major depressive disorder |
| Key finding | The study aims to uncover the neural mechanisms by which treatment expectation affects the antidepressant effects of esketamine. |
Abstract
Abstract Background Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a highly prevalent (8–15%), severely disabling disorder and is associated with enormous socioeconomic impact. Antidepressant medication for the treatment of MDD has proven effective in RCTs; however, placebo response is also substantial. Given the potential benefits of modulating the placebo response in patient care and pharmacological research, understanding the mechanisms underlying placebo response is of high clinical relevance. The placebo response is mediated by treatment expectation, i.e. an individual’s belief about whether and how much they will improve as a consequence of their treatment. The mechanisms and moderators of treatment expectation effects in MDD are poorly understood. Initial brain imaging studies on placebo responses in MDD point towards the relevance of the lateral prefrontal cortex and the rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC). In this project, we will investigate the neural mechanisms underlying the antidepressant effects of treatment expectation associated with the fast-acting antidepressant esketamine in patients with MDD. Esketamine is an NMDA receptor antagonist inducing antidepressant effects within hours. Methods We will employ a fully balanced placebo design with the factors “treatment” (i.v. esketamine / placebo) and verbally induced “expectation” (high / low) combined with fMRI (resting state, emotion and reward processing paradigms) to investigate the psychological and neural mechanisms underlying the antidepressant effects of expectation, and how these interact with the pharmacological effects of esketamine. Discussion The insights gained by this project promise fundamental implications for clinical treatment and future drug trials. Unraveling the mechanisms underlying expectation effects on antidepressant treatment may inform (1) strategies to modulate these effects and thus improve assay sensitivity in RCTs and (2) novel treatment regiments aiming to maximize the synergistic effects of expectation and pharmacological treatment in the clinical care of patients with MDD. Trial registration This trial has been prospectively registered with the EU Clinical Trials Register: EudraCT-No.: 2020–000784-23 (November 17, 2020).