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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| Metiv Israel Psychotrauma Center | OTHER |
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Despite being exposed to a high level of potentially traumatic experiences due to exposure to combat, military veterans have poor response rates to traditional PTSD treatments, in some reports, just 1/3 of veterans recover using traditional treatments. In recent years 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), a psychedelic drug has demonstrated a significant treatment potential for severe and treatment resistant PTSD though not specifically in a veteran population. Additionally, even in groups where participants receive a placebo, the effect of the psychedelic treatment formulation, intensive, focused and respectful structure, appears to have promising effects. Indeed, in the current psychedelic literature, the setting and mind with which participant approach psychedelic therapy, significantly contributes to the treatment effect.
The current study proposes to address the major gaps in the theoretical literature by examining the proposed mechanisms by which MDMA enhances the "window of tolerance" for PTSD therapy, specifically in those with comorbid symptoms of moral injury; namely by reducing hyperarousal and enhancing connection (to self and others) and whether MDMA assisted therapy is more successful in reducing PTSD in veterans compared to a matched somatic experiential PTSD treatment, Somatic Experiental Acceptance Intensive Trauma-based therapy, (SEA-IT) which builds upon the promising placebo results, enhancing them with somatic and acceptance based treatment protocols.
Despite being exposed to a high level of potentially traumatic experiences due to exposure to combat, military veterans have poor response rates to traditional PTSD treatments. In recent years 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) has demonstrated a significant treatment potential for severe and treatment resistant PTSD though not specifically in a veteran population. The current study proposes to address the major gaps in the theoretical literature by examining the proposed mechanisms by which MDMA Assisted Therapy (MDMA-AT) enhances the "window of tolerance" for PTSD therapy, specifically in those with comorbid symptoms of moral injury; namely by reducing hyperarousal and enhancing connection (to self and others) and whether MDMA-AT is more successful in reducing PTSD in veterans compared to a matched somatic experiential PTSD treatment (SEA-IT). Sixty male veterans suffering from military-related PTSD, who have participated in at least one attempt at treatment previously, will be randomly assigned (non-blinded) to receive MDMA-AT or somatic-based therapy. All participants will undergo 3 preparation sessions and then three long (8hour) sessions each followed by 3 integration sessions. Hyperarousal will be studied using EEG (electroencephalogram) to detect significant changes in event-related neural responses and cortisol responsivity to treatment. Additionally measures of PTSD symptoms of hyperarousal and a specific measure of emotion regulation abilities will be studied. Connection will be studied as both mediated by oxytocin responsivity to treatment and as subjective outcome measures of treatment response namely using psychological measures of connection to others and self via interoceptive sensitivity. It is predicted that by using longitudinal modeling and specifically the analysis of mediators of treatment response, the current study will enable both the understanding of the promising effects of MDMA treatment and the refinement of the key contribution of MDMA-AT compared to an intensive, similarly somatic, and experimentally based, non-MDMA treatment.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| MDMA Assisted Therapy | Experimental | This intensive therapy is comprised of 16 sessions of therapy with two therapists including three long sessions of MDMA assisted therapy followed by an overnight stay and then 3 weekly integration sessions. |
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| SEA-IT | Experimental | This intensive trauma focused therapy is comprised of 16 sessions of therapy with two therapists including three long sessions of between 6 to 8 hours followed by an overnight stay and then 3 weekly integration sessions. The therapy is modeled on components of Somatic Experiencing, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and the psychedelic assisted therapy protocols. |
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| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MDMA-AT | Drug | As described above in arm description |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| PTSD | Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale-5 (CAPS-5) will be performed during the intake interview. The CAPS-5 is a structured clinical interview used to assess the presence of a PTSD diagnosis and PTSD symptom levels over the past month. | Enrollment and visit 16, two weeks to one month after the final therapy session, approximately 4 months after first visit. |
| Oxytocin | As this study is designated as a mechanisms of change study, the primary outcome is that of exploring the role of oxytocin in the therapeutic process. The primary outcome measure is thus the hormone assessment of increased oxytocin (primary) as mediating the change in PTSD (and MI-exploratory) symptoms. Saliva collection will be the same for both MDMA-assisted and Somatic-based therapy groups and the collection relevant for the measurement of both oxytocin (primary) and cortisol (exploratory). Four saliva samples will be collected at four time points during each of the experimental (or intense) sessions: prior to commencing the session, +90 minutes +210, +320 minutes following the administration of MDMA or commencement of the Somatic-based arm. To assess oxytocin concentrations, saliva samples will be thawed and then dried using a SpeedVac concentrator. The evaporated samples are then reconstituted with an assay diluent. Oxytocin concentrations will be measured using an ELISA kit | At 4 time points during the 3 long sessions (visit 4, one month after enrollment, visit 8, two months after enrollment and visit 12, three months after enrollment) |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Hyperarrousal- EEG | Mismatch negativity task (MMN) is an event-related potential (ERP) task that examines a pre-attentive brain-response to changes in the acoustic environment (frequent standard tone versus infrequent odd tone).. MMN ERP amplitudes of early N1 components (recorded via scalp-EEG) represent early even-related time-locked difference-waveforms that result from subtracting the standard tone ERP's from the odd-sound ERP's and noting the peak difference in MMN amplitude peak-negativity i.e. MMN amplitudes) around 120 ms after tone-onset. A healthier response is when the infrequent odd sound (change in pitch) produces larger N1 amplitudes (under central prefrontal electrodes) at 100-150 ms post stimulus in comparison to the standard tone early N1 amplitudes, which indicates that automatic "sound-change-detection" registered at auditory and prefrontal cortical networks effectively. |
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Inclusion Criteria:
1. Were assigned male sex at birth and currently identify as a male (e.g. are not transgender nor taking hormone replacement therapy) 2. Are veterans of the Israeli military 3. Are at least 18 years old. 4. Are fluent in speaking and reading Hebrew 5. Are able to swallow pills. 6. Agree to have EEG (three times) and salivary monitoring (during experimental sessions) at multiple occasions throughout the study.
7. Agree to have study visits recorded, including Experimental Sessions, Independent Rater assessments, and non-drug therapy sessions.
8. Must provide a contact (relative, spouse, close friend or other support person) who is willing and able to be reached by the investigators in the event of a participant becoming unwell or unreachable.
8. Must agree to inform the investigators within 48 hours of any medical conditions and procedures.
9. Agree to the following lifestyle modifications: comply with requirements for fasting and refraining from certain medications prior to experimental sessions, not enroll in any other interventional clinical trials during the duration of the study, remain overnight at the study site after each experimental Session and be driven home after, and commit to medication dosing, therapy, and study procedures.
Medical History
10. At Screening, meet diagnostic criteria (Diagnostic Statisticians Manual, 5th version, DSM-5) for current military-based PTSD with a symptom duration of 6 months or longer with a history of at least one attempt at psychiatric or psychological treatment.
11. At Screening, have a PCL-5 total score of 33 or greater and at Screening/Baseline a confirmed diagnosis of PTSD per CAPS-5 and a total severity score of 28 or greater.
12. Have a body weight of at least 45 kilograms. Participants with a body weight of 45 to 48 kg must also have a body mass index (BMI) within the range of 18 to 30 kg/m2.
13. Capable of giving signed informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Medical Conditions
Alanine transaminase (ALT) [or aspartate transaminase (AST)]higher than 2 x upper limit of normal (ULN).
Total bilirubin higher than 1.5 x ULN (isolated bilirubin higher than; 1.5 x ULN is acceptable if total bilirubin is fractionated and direct bilirubin less than; 35%).
Current unstable liver or biliary disease per investigator assessment defined by the presence of ascites, encephalopathy, coagulopathy, hypoalbuminemia, esophageal or gastric varices, persistent jaundice, or cirrhosis.
• Note: Stable chronic liver disease (including Gilbert's syndrome, asymptomatic gallstones, and chronic stable hepatitis B (e.g., the presence of hepatitis B surface antigen or positive hepatitis C antibody test result without evidence of active infection at screening or within 3 months prior to starting study intervention) is acceptable if the participant otherwise meets entry criteria.
Have a recent history of clinically significant hyponatremia or hyperthermia.
Have a marked baseline QTcF (QT interval corrected for heart rate ) interval higher than 450 ms demonstrated on repeated ECG (electrocardiogram) assessments. Participants whose QTcF exceeds this value during screening may be initially enrolled if a pre-study concomitant medication is suspected to be prolonging the QT-interval. ECGs should be repeated after initial enrollment and tapering off the pre-study concomitant medication to ensure the participant meets eligibility criteria prior to enrolment confirmation and to IMP dosing.
• Note: The QTcF is the QT interval corrected for heart rate according to Fridericia's formula. It is either machine-read or manually over-read.
Have a history of any medical condition that could make receiving a sympathomimetic drug harmful because of increases in blood pressure and heart rate. This includes, but is not limited to, a history of myocardial infarction, cerebrovascular accident, heart failure, severe coronary artery disease, or aneurysm.
Have a diagnosis of uncontrolled hypertension, defined as repeated blood pressure readings of ≥140 mmHg systolic or ≥90 mmHg diastolic. The diagnosis may be confirmed by repeated clinic measurements or home blood pressure monitoring if clinically indicated.
• Participants with well-controlled hypertension that has been successfully treated with anti-hypertensive medicines may be enrolled if they pass a risk assessment and potentially additional screening to rule out underlying cardiovascular disease.
Have a history of ventricular arrhythmia at any time, other than occasional premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) in the absence of ischemic heart disease.
Have Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome or any other accessory pathway that has not been successfully eliminated by ablation.
Have a history of arrhythmia, other than premature atrial contractions (PACs) or occasional PVCs in the absence of ischemic heart disease, within 12 months of screening.
• Participants with a history of atrial fibrillation, atrial tachycardia, atrial flutter or paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia or any other arrhythmia associated with a bypass tract may be enrolled only if they have been successfully treated with ablation and have not had recurrent arrhythmia for at least one year off all antiarrhythmic drugs, as confirmed by a cardiologist.
Have a history of additional risk factors for Torsade de pointes (e.g., heart failure, hypokalemia, family history of Long QT Syndrome).
Psychiatric Conditions (for MDMA-AT and somatic-based arms)
Have engaged in a new form of psychiatric or mental health care within 12 weeks of enrollment, including Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT), and ketamine-assisted therapy.
Are likely, in the investigator's opinion and via observation during the Preparatory Period, to be re-exposed to their index trauma or other significant trauma during the study.
Have a current moderate (not in early remission in the 3 months prior to enrollment and meets at least 5 of 11 diagnostic criteria per DSM-5) or severe alcohol or cannabis use disorder within the 12 months prior to enrollment (meets at least 6 of 11 diagnostic criteria per DSM-5).
• May have current mild alcohol or cannabis use disorder (meets 3 of 11 diagnostic criteria per DSM-5) or moderate alcohol or cannabis use disorder in early remission for the 3 months prior to enrollment (meets 4 or 5 of 11 diagnostic criteria per DSM-5).
Have an active illicit drug (other than cannabis) or prescription drug substance use disorder at any severity within 12 months prior to enrollment.
Any participant presenting current serious suicide risk, as determined through psychiatric interview, responses to Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS), and clinical judgment of the investigator will be excluded; however, history of suicide attempts is not an exclusion. Any participant who is likely to require hospitalization related to suicidal ideation and behavior, in the judgment of the investigator, will not be enrolled. Any participant presenting with the following on the Baseline/Screening C-SSRS will be excluded:
Prior/Concomitant Therapy
Unable or unwilling to safely taper-off prohibited psychiatric medication with exceptions described in section on Concomitant Medications in study protocol or require use of prohibited medications during experimental sessions.
Require use of concomitant medications that could prolong the QT interval during Experimental Sessions.
Have used Ecstasy (unregulated material represented as containing MDMA) more than 10 times within the last 10 years, or at least once within 6 months of the first Experimental Session.
Prior/Concurrent Clinical Study Experience
Current enrollment in any other clinical study involving an investigational study treatment or any other type of medical research, unless approved by the study clinician.
Diagnostic Assessments
Have current Personality Disorders assessed via psychiatric assessment (by consultant psychiatrist).
Have a current eating disorder with compensatory behaviors
Have current major depressive disorder with psychotic features
Have a history of, or a current primary psychotic disorder, bipolar affective disorder type 1 or dissociative identity disorder.
Other Exclusions
Sensitivity to any of the study interventions, or components thereof, or drug or other allergy that, in the opinion of the sponsor-investigator or study clinician, contraindicates participation in the study.
Are currently engaged in compensation litigation whereby financial gain would be achieved from prolonged symptoms of PTSD or any other psychiatric disorders.
Lack social support or lack a stable living situation.
Previous participation in a MAPS-sponsored MDMA clinical trial.
Employees (and their immediate family members) of MAPS, MAPS Public Benefit Corporation, or MAPS Europe B.V; or individuals in a personal relationship with the site investigator.
Have any current problem which, in the opinion of the sponsor-investigator or study clinician, might interfere with study participation.
Security Criteria
The current study dealing with intensive treatment of military veterans suffering from PTSD, requires an environment of physical and emotional security for the patients. Safety is critical in the success of the treatment. Since October 7, 2023, we have been in a continuous state of war, which we do not know when it will end. Therefore, we are required at this time to define what security is as a criterion for conducting research at this time, and in relation to the normative reality in the world and in the State of Israel in particular. Therefore:
Identify as male and not taking hormone therapy to transition to female identity
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| Name | Role | Phone | Extension | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moriya Rahmani, PhD | Contact | 0097226264889 | moriya@metiv.org |
| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Anna Harwood-Gross, PhD | Metiv Israel Psychotrauma Center | Study Director |
| Pinhas Danon, Prof | Herzog Medical Center | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| METIV Israel Psychotrauma Center, Herzog Medical Center | Recruiting | Jerusalem | 3090844 | Israel |
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| Label | URL |
|---|---|
| Study recruitment page | View source |
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Protocol is freely available along with access to data assessment plan. Data will be anonymized and available on request and uploaded to open science framework
Available currently
Protocol is available to researchers on request
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| SEA-IT |
| Behavioral |
As described in arm description |
|
| EEG- during visits 3 (three weeks after enrollment), 7 (three weeks after the first long session) and visit 16 (two weeks to a month after the final therapy session) (pre, post 1st long session, post study) |
| Hyperarrousal- cortisol | Cortisol concentrations will be assessed using commercially available ELISA kits (Salimetrics, USA), following the manufacturer's instructions. All samples will be assessed in duplicate. | Cortisol, as outlined in oxytocin collection |
| Moral Injury | MIOS- Moral Injury Outcome Scale. Based on over a decades work in the field, a new measure has been designed with promising measurement capabilities though validation work in Israel is ongoing. The Moral Injury Outcome Scale (MIOS) measures shame-related and trust-violation-related outcomes and thus far has demonstrated good discriminative validity between those who have experienced potentially morally injurious events and those who haven't. A higher score indicates higher moral injury. | visit 1 and visit 16 (two weeks to a month after the final therapy session) (pre-post) |
| Functional Impairment | The Sheehan Disability Scale (SDS) is a clinician-rated assessment of functional impairment. The items indicate degree of impairment in the domains of work/school, social life, and home life, with response options based on an eleven-point scale (0=not at all to 10=extremely), and five verbal tags (not at all, mildly, moderately, markedly, extremely). Per FDA request, for participants who are not able to work for reasons related to PTSD, the functional impairment item will be scored as a 10. The SDS takes 1 to 2 minutes to complete. | Visits 1,7 (three weeks after first long session),11 (three weeks after second long session) and 16 (two weeks to a month after final therapy session) |
| Self Compassion | The Self Compassion Scale (SCS) is a widely used and widely tested measure of self compassion. If consists of 26 questions measuring the six components of self-compassion: Self-Kindness, reduced Self-Judgment, Common Humanity, reduced Isolation, Mindfulness and reduced Overidentification. The SCS has been validated and factors analyzed with over 11,000 participants and is also in use in current MAPS sponsored studies allowing for data collaboration. Higher scores indicate higher self compassion. Total scores are normally used for research and mean scores for interpretation though there are no clinically validated means (mean scores of 1.0-2.49 are considered to be low, between 2.5-3.5 to be moderate, and 3.51-5.0 to be high). The questionnaire takes around 7 minutes to complete. | Visits 1,7 (three weeks after first long session),11 (three weeks after second long session) and 16 (two weeks to a month after final therapy session) |
| Interoception | The Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness 2 (MAIA-2) is a 37 item measure of the ability to notice, be present, not worry, regulate attention to- and trust body experiences. Complementary to the DERS-16, the MAIA-2 focuses on body-related regulation and introspection. It has been used widely in research on mindfulness and compassion based therapies and demonstrated strong relationships to symptom relief and takes around 10 minutes to complete. | Visits 1,7 (three weeks after first long session),11 (three weeks after second long session) and 16 (two weeks to a month after final therapy session) |
| Emotional Regulation | The Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale-16 question version (DERS-16) is a shortened version of the full Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale which is a 36-item self-report questionnaire that measures the extent to which individuals have difficulty responding to distressing emotions. Participants rate items on a 5-point Likert scale (1 = almost never to 5 = almost always) with responses (some reversed) giving a total score in addition to six subscale scores; Awareness, Clarity, Nonacceptance, Impulsivity, Goals, and Strategies. Subscales are scored such that higher scores indicate more difficulties. The shortened version retains the subscales and demonstrates good comparative validity and internal consistency. The subscales of awareness and non-acceptance will be used to assess increased connection to self. The questionnaire takes around 5 minutes to complete. | Visits 1,7 (three weeks after first long session),11 (three weeks after second long session) and 16 (two weeks to a month after final therapy session) |
| Attachment | Experience of Close Relationships (ECR) Scale is composed of two 18-item subscales measuring attachment anxiety and attachment avoidance, using a 7-point Likert Scale. Subscale scores are obtained by summing and computing the mean and demonstrate high reliability and validity. Scores on this measure will be used as predictive of treatment success with lower anxiety and avoidance predicted to be indicative of better treatment potential and also as a mediator variable of enhanced connection to others (reduction in attachment avoidance). The questionnaire takes around 7 minutes to complete and higher scores indicate higher anxiety or avoidance on subscales. | Visits 1,7 (three weeks after first long session),11 (three weeks after second long session) and 16 (two weeks to a month after final sessions. |
| Attachment | In addition to overall attachment characteristics as measured by the ECR, attachment security may fluctuate based on situational factors, which relates to the influence of extrapharmacological factors on experiences with MDMA-AT (i.e., set and setting). To address this, the Security subscale of the State Adult Attachment Measure (SAAM) will be administered. Higher scores indicate higher security in attachment. | During the three long (visit 4, one month after enrollment, visit 8, two months after enrollment and visit 12, three months after enrollment) and three initial integration sessions (the morning after a long session). |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D003130 | Combat Disorders |
| D013313 | Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D040921 | Stress Disorders, Traumatic |
| D000068099 | Trauma and Stressor Related Disorders |
| D001523 | Mental Disorders |
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