Purpose

Anxiety and depression symptoms occur at high rates in Veteran populations and can significantly impact function, compromising the ability to work and to successfully form and maintain valued relationships. Several other symptoms commonly occur with anxiety and depression, including poor sleep quality and chronic pain. Since all these symptoms frequently occur together, they may have a common underlying biological basis. A single medication that could effectively treat all these symptoms would be ideal. Converging data suggest that pregnenolone is a promising pharmacological agent for treating multiple psychiatric symptoms and functional impairment. The investigators thus propose to conduct a clinical trial of pregnenolone in Veterans with anxiety and depression symptoms. Pregnenolone has minimal side effects, and the prior research demonstrates that pregnenolone is well-tolerated by Veterans. Treatment with pregnenolone could thus be an efficacious new therapeutic for Veterans experiencing depression, anxiety, poor sleep quality and chronic pain conditions.

Condition

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Between 18 Years and 65 Years
Eligible Sex
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • Veterans enrolled for care at the Durham VAHCS - Veterans who score a minimum score of 20 or higher (moderate symptoms) on the PHQ-ADS (Kroenke et al 2017) - Oral pregnenolone could reduce the effectiveness of oral contraceptives, thus women will be required to use a medically and study-approved contraceptive or otherwise not be of child-bearing potential. Birth control methods must be non-hormonal - No anticipated need to alter psychiatric medications for duration of study involvement - Ability to participate fully in the informed consent process

Exclusion Criteria

  • History of allergy to PREG - Medical disorders that may preclude safe administration of PREG or exacerbate mental or physical health symptoms - PTSD diagnosis, as per the PCL-5, scores of 38 or higher - Current suicidal or homicidal ideation necessitating clinical intervention or representing an imminent concern - Prior attempts or suicidal ideation that does not require clinical intervention or represent an imminent concern is permitted - Serious unstable medical illness, such as history of cerebrovascular accident, prostate, uterine or breast cancer, others (at the discretion of the PI and medical oversight team) - Standard pharmacological interventions for mental health disorders will not be exclusionary; however, there may be no changes in psychotropic medications for mental or physical health conditions 4 weeks prior to study randomization - Benzodiazepine or opioid use - Current diagnosis of bipolar disorder, schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder, or cognitive disorder due to a general medical condition other than mild TBI (assessed at screening) - Initiation or change in psychotherapy within 3 months of randomization (i.e., psychotherapy must be stable for 3 months prior to study start - Due to lack of safety data in pregnant and breast-feeding women, female participants who are pregnant or breast-feeding will be excluded - As indicated by the DSM-5, moderate or severe Substance Use Disorders (excluding caffeine and tobacco) within 1 month of study entry

Study Design

Phase
Phase 2
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Intervention Model Description
Participants will be randomized to receive the active study medication (pregnenolone) or placebo.
Primary Purpose
Treatment
Masking
Quadruple (Participant, Care Provider, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)
Masking Description
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. All roles will be masked with the exception of the research pharmacist.

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Active Comparator
Pregnenolone
Pregnenolone 250 mg BID x 14 DAYS, followed by Pregnenolone 500 mg BID x 14 DAYS, followed by Pregnenolone 1000 mg BID x thereafter for the remainder of the 8-week trial.
  • Drug: Pregnenolone
    Pregnenolone 250 mg BID x 14 DAYS, followed by Pregnenolone 500 mg BID x 14 DAYS, followed by Pregnenolone 1000 mg BID x thereafter for the remainder of the 8-week trial.
Placebo Comparator
Placebo
Same as active comparator, except placebo dispensed
  • Drug: Placebo
    Same as active comparator, except placebo dispensed

Recruiting Locations

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
VA Office of Research and Development

Study Contact

Jennifer C Naylor, PhD
(919) 286-0411
jennifer.naylor2@va.gov

Detailed Description

Background: Anxiety and depression disorders can be very debilitating and result in substantial disability. These disorders are extremely common, occurring at rates that exceed other common medical illnesses such as hypertension, diabetes or asthma. Further, anxiety and depression disorders often co-occur (more the rule than the exception) and having one diagnosis substantially increases the risk for having the other. The clinical benefits of an intervention that ameliorates both anxiety and depression-related disability and clinical symptoms could be critically important, as odds of Veteran suicide completion significantly increase when depression co-occurs with anxiety disorders. Extensive preclinical and clinical data (from the investigators' group and others) support a novel neurosteroid intervention (pregnenolone/PREG) as a promising new treatment for anxiety and depression disorders. Furthermore, extensive evidence in rodent models and clinical biomarker candidate studies suggests substantial analgesic, anxiolytic, sleep and anti-inflammatory actions. PREG also significantly reduced low back pain in a randomized controlled trial of 94 OEF/OIF/OND-era Veterans compared to placebo, and allopregnanolone (ALLO) levels are inversely correlated with several commonly co-occurring symptoms, including sleep disturbance and pain disorders. Restoration of ALLO levels via a precursor loading strategy with PREG could thus ameliorate ALLO deficits and alleviate multiple functionally impairing and health-related symptoms. Additionally, PREG has been very well-tolerated in multiple clinical trials and exhibits a very favorable side effect profile - potentially supporting a superior safety and side effect profile advantage compared to existing pharmacological interventions. The investigators thus propose to conduct a 10-week double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of PREG versus placebo in Veterans with anxiety and depression. Methods: The primary goal of this proposed project is to conduct a 10-week adaptive, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to evaluate flexibly dosed pregnenolone to improve functional impairment and disability associated with anxiety and depression. Following a 2-week placebo-only lead-in period, 84 subjects will be enrolled and randomly assigned to receive PREG or placebo for 8 weeks (flexible dosing strategy). The investigators hypothesize that treatment with PREG will significantly reduce functional impairment and disability associated with anxiety and depression symptoms. Secondary outcomes include diagnostic improvements in anxiety and depression, pain symptoms and sleep quality. The investigators hypothesize that PREG will improve symptoms of anxiety and depression, pain and sleep quality. Finally, the investigators will quantify serum neurosteroid levels at baseline and post-treatment by highly sensitive and specific mass spectrometry-based techniques to determine if PREG and downstream neurosteroid metabolites such as ALLO are predictors of functional/therapeutic response. The investigators will also examine proinflammatory markers. The investigators hypothesize that changes in PREG and other neurosteroids (as well as proinflammatory markers) will predict improvements in mental health and functional outcomes. Conclusion: Results from the proposed trial could provide rigorous scientific rationale for future pivotal Phase 3 trials to test PREG for the treatment of anxiety and depression disorders (improving functional outcomes and mitigation of pain and sleep disturbance). PREG has been very well-tolerated in multiple Veteran cohorts and could thus be a safe, inexpensive and efficacious new intervention to improve function and multiple behavioral symptoms.

Notice

Study information shown on this site is derived from ClinicalTrials.gov (a public registry operated by the National Institutes of Health). The listing of studies provided is not certain to be all studies for which you might be eligible. Furthermore, study eligibility requirements can be difficult to understand and may change over time, so it is wise to speak with your medical care provider and individual research study teams when making decisions related to participation.