Effects of a Tissue Selective Estrogen Complex (TSEC) on Depression and the Neural Reward System in the Perimenopause"

NCT ID: NCT03740009

Last Updated: 2022-05-10

Study Results

Results available

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Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

PHASE4

Total Enrollment

20 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2019-01-02

Study Completion Date

2021-05-17

Brief Summary

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Using neuroimaging, the investigator will study the effects of estrogen on mood and brain function in perimenopausal women with depression.

Detailed Description

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Despite decades of clinical research, depression continues to affect 20.9 million Americans each year and remains the leading cause of disability worldwide. Women are twice as likely as men to experience depression, and depression symptoms are particularly common during periods of hormone change. Depression risk increases 14-fold in the two years surrounding menopause, suggesting that hormone changes may cause depression during this time. Past research has shown that estrogen, in particular, plays an important role in depression during the transition to menopause ("the perimenopause") for the following reasons: 1) depression begins when estrogen levels plummet, 2) estrogen therapy reduces depression symptoms, and 3) when perimenopausal women who were treated with estrogen are taken off of estrogen (without their knowledge), their depression returns. Despite clear evidence that estrogen plays a role in depression during the perimenopause (DPM), the investigators don't know how estrogen affects the brain, which is important for developing effective medications to treat DPM and also for determining which patients are most likely to benefit from medication that replaces the estrogen lost during menopause (estrogen replacement therapy).

The investigator received a grant from the National Institutes of Health, which received preliminary support from the Foundation of Hope, to characterize the effect of estrogen replacement therapy on the brain in women with DPM and women without depression ("controls"). The brain pathway affected most by depression is the neural reward circuit, which consists of a number of different brain regions that act in concert to determine a person's response to rewards. Activity in the neural reward circuit depends on estrogen levels and is reduced in people with depression. The investigator's NIH-funded study will be the first to examine how the neural reward circuit is affected by DPM and estrogen replacement therapy. While estrogen replacement therapy acts as an antidepressant, many women elect not to take estrogen and many physicians discourage its use because of the risk of long-term negative health effects, including breast and uterine cancer. A new FDA-approved compound, Duavee, combines estrogen with another medication, bazedoxifene, which protects against breast and uterine cancer while reducing hot flashes. Duavee may therefore be more acceptable to women with DPM and their doctors than estrogen replacement therapy. However, the effects of Duavee on depression and the neural reward circuit have never been tested, and one can't infer that estrogen will have the same antidepressant effects in the presence of bazedoxifene (which partially blocks the effects of estrogen in certain tissues).

The purpose of the proposed project is to 1) test the antidepressant effects of Duavee, and 2) quantify the effects of Duavee on the neural reward circuit. The investigators expect that Duavee will reduce symptoms of depression and increase activity in the neural reward circuit. In this study, the investigators will recruit medically healthy, unmedicated women with DPM and administer Duavee for 3 weeks (a duration that has been shown in previous studies of estrogen replacement to be sufficient for treating depression). Eligibility will be assessed by an initial telephone screen and confirmed by a gynecologic exam, laboratory testing, and an interview about their current and past depression symptoms. Only women with depression that began during the menopause transition (i.e., when they started skipping periods) will be enrolled. Both before and after treatment, women will have a fMRI brain scan to determine the effects of the medication on the neural reward circuit. During the 3-week treatment, women will come into the clinic to have their blood drawn, refill their medication, and answer questions about their mood and menopause symptoms.This study is important because untreated DPM contributes to cardiac deaths. Many women are afraid to use estrogen replacement therapy because of the long-term risk of cancer and yet refuse to take antidepressants for fear of side effects and stigma. Because Duavee addresses the main potential problems of estrogen replacement therapy, this research stands to revolutionize treatment for DPM. The use of estrogen replacement therapy to treat DPM is a relatively new area of research and one of great importance given the large and increasing number of women who enter the perimenopause each year and are potentially at risk for depression. Women with DPM seek treatment from gynecologists, psychiatrists, and general practitioners, yet there is neither consensus nor practical guidelines for preventing and treating DPM.

Specific Aims: The investigators currently are assessing the neural reward system in subjects with perimenopausal major depressive disorder (PM-MDD) and those without depression ("controls") using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) at baseline and following estrogen replacement therapy (ERT). The Foundation of Hope (FOH) award will allow us to add a Tissue Selective Estrogen Complex (TSEC) treatment condition in a separate group of PM-MDD. The investigators' central hypothesis is that the neural reward system is hypoactive in PM-MDD, and the antidepressant effects of a three-week TSEC intervention will be associated with increased activity in the neural reward system, assessed using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The investigators will test the hypothesis by executing the following aims: Aim 1: Determine the extent to which TSEC reduces anhedonia and other depressive symptoms in PM-MDD. Anhedonia and other depressive symptoms will be assessed at baseline and following TSEC administration. The investigators also will compare the effects of TSEC and ERT in PM-MDD. Hypothesis 1: Women PM-MDD will report a significant reduction in depressive symptoms following TSEC administration, and the degree of symptom improvement will be associated with the change in frontostriatal responsivity to reward. Aim 2: Quantify the effect of TSEC on the neural reward system in PM-MDD. The investigators will use fMRI at baseline and following TSEC treatment in PM-MDD to probe frontostriatal reward circuitry. The investigator will also compare the effects of TSEC and ERT in PM-MDD. Hypothesis 2: PM-MDD will show increased activation of the frontostriatal circuit in response to reward following TSEC administration (compared with baseline).

Conditions

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Perimenopausal Disorder Depression

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

BASIC_SCIENCE

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Perimenopausal women, depressed

Participants will take Bazedoxifene/Conjugated Estrogen orally for 3 weeks

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Bazedoxifene/Conjugated Estrogen

Intervention Type DRUG

20 mg bazedoxifene/0.45mg conjugated estrogens tablets

Interventions

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Bazedoxifene/Conjugated Estrogen

20 mg bazedoxifene/0.45mg conjugated estrogens tablets

Intervention Type DRUG

Other Intervention Names

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Duavee

Eligibility Criteria

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Exclusion Criteria

MDD Eligibility Criteria: Current diagnosis of MDD with an onset associated with menstrual cycle irregularity. Present or past mania, psychosis, suicide attempts, and alcohol or drug dependence, and current substance abuse, as determined by the Structure Clinical Interview for The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR) for Axis I Disorders (SCID) are exclusionary.

\* Per the STRAW criteria, FSH values are highly variable in the late menopausal transition (stage -1), and clinicians should "carefully evaluate the appropriate FSH value, depending on the assay they use" (Harlow et al, 2012). For nearly two years following the LMP, FSH values can fluctuate between levels characteristic of the early reproductive years and levels characteristic of menopause (Hale et al, 2014). McLendon Labs at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) uses an FSH assay that defines levels consistently above ? 21.5 IU/mL as post-menopausal (McLendon Labs, 2016). As FSH values do not stabilize at consistently high levels until post-menopause, the investigators are setting our minimum required FSH value at \> 14 IU/mL to carefully select for women in the perimenopause transition.


* Patients will not be permitted to enter this protocol if they have any of the following:

1. current medication use (i.e., psychotropics, anti-hypertensives, statins, hormonal preparations, or frequent use of anti-inflammatory agents (\> 10 times/month)). Women will be allowed to enroll who take medications without known mood effects (e.g. stable thyroid hormone replacement and occasional (\< 5 times/month) use of Ambien);

* all reported prescription medications will be reviewed and cleared by a study physician prior to a participant's enrollment;
2. pregnant, breastfeeding or trying to conceive;
3. LMP more than 12 months prior to enrollment;

* women who have recently taken oral contraceptives continuously for relief of perimenopausal symptoms will be exempt from the final menstrual period (FMP) criteria, and instead, the presence of menstrual irregularity prior to the use of oral contraceptives and elevated FSH will be used to determine their perimenopausal status;
4. history of undiagnosed vaginal bleeding;
5. undiagnosed enlargement of the ovaries;
6. polycystic ovary syndrome;
7. history of breast or ovarian cancer;
8. first degree relative with ovarian cancer;
9. first degree relative with premenopausal onset or bilateral breast cancer;
10. 2+ first degree relatives with breast cancer (regardless of onset);
11. 3+ relatives with postmenopausal breast cancer;
12. abnormal finding in a provider breast exam and/or mammogram;

* participants will be given the opportunity to describe these conditions in the online screening survey. Reported conditions that were acute in nature and have resolved completely (as indicated by the medical record or follow-up testing) and/or benign will be reviewed by a study physician prior to enrollment. All chronic conditions will be exclusionary.
13. known carrier of BRCA1 or 2 mutation;
14. endometriosis;
15. blood clots in the legs or lungs;
16. porphyria;
17. diabetes mellitus;
18. malignant melanoma;
19. Hodgkin's disease;
20. recurrent migraine headaches that are preceded by aura;
21. gallbladder or pancreatic disease;

* participants will be given the opportunity to describe these conditions in the online screening survey. Reported conditions that were acute in nature and have resolved completely (as indicated by the medical record or follow-up testing) and/or benign will be reviewed by a study physician prior to enrollment. All chronic conditions will be exclusionary.
22. heart or kidney disease;

* participants will be given the opportunity to describe these conditions in the online screening survey. Reported conditions that were acute in nature and have resolved completely (as indicated by the medical record or follow-up testing) and/or benign will be reviewed by a study physician prior to enrollment. All chronic conditions will be exclusionary.
23. liver disease;
24. cerebrovascular disease (stroke);
25. current cigarette smoking;
26. current suicidal ideation, mania, psychosis, or alcohol/drug abuse/dependence;
27. past suicide attempts, mania, alcohol/drug dependence, or psychotic episodes;
28. chronic depression (i.e., episode(s) lasting 3+ years);
29. depressive episode(s) within 2 years of enrollment;
30. self-reported claustrophobia;
31. peanut allergy;
32. HIV/AIDS
Minimum Eligible Age

44 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

55 Years

Eligible Sex

FEMALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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Foundation of Hope, North Carolina

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Crystal E Schiller, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

UNC Dept of Psychiatry

Locations

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University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine

Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

References

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Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Other Identifiers

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18-2129

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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