deltatrials
Completed NA INTERVENTIONAL 2-arm NCT03966859

7-day Atorvastatin and Emotional Processing

The Effect of Seven-Day Atorvastatin Administration on Emotional Processing, Reward Processing, and Inflammation in Healthy Volunteers

Sponsor: University of Oxford

Conditions Healthy
Updated 6 times since 2019 Last updated: Nov 30, 2020 Started: Jun 19, 2019 Primary completion: Feb 1, 2020 Completion: Feb 1, 2020
This information is for research purposes only and is not medical advice. Consult a healthcare provider before making any medical decision.

A NA clinical study on Healthy, this trial is completed. The trial is conducted by University of Oxford and has accumulated 6 data snapshots since 2019. Longitudinal tracking of this trial contributes to a broader understanding of treatment development timelines.

Study Description(click to expand)

Depression is common and associated with considerable health disability. Traditional antidepressants mainly work by modulating monoamine levels in the synaptic cleft; however, the evidence that depression is caused by impaired serotonin or noradrenaline activity is weak and inconsistent, and indeed current antidepressant strategies remain burdened by partial efficacy, poor side-effects profile, and a slow onset of therapeutic action. Therefore, there is a pressing need to develop antidepressant medications with novel non-monoaminergic mechanisms of action - or, conversely, to identify alternative pathophysiological pathways leading to depression that can be targeted with new drugs. Intriguingly, there is growing evidence that both peripheral and central inflammation play a role in the pathophysiology of depression. Patients with depression consistently show negative biases in emotional processing, which are believed to play a key role in the aetiology and maintenance of their clinical symptoms. Overall, robust evidence suggests that early changes in emotional processing can serve as valid surrogate markers of antidepressant efficacy; for example, seven days' treatment with selective serotonin and noradrenaline reuptake inhibitors (citalopram and reboxetine respectively) compared to placebo decreases the recognition of negative facial expressions and recall of negative versus positive stimuli in healthy volunteers. Conversely, another study using the pro-inflammatory cytokine...

Depression is common and associated with considerable health disability. Traditional antidepressants mainly work by modulating monoamine levels in the synaptic cleft; however, the evidence that depression is caused by impaired serotonin or noradrenaline activity is weak and inconsistent, and indeed current antidepressant strategies remain burdened by partial efficacy, poor side-effects profile, and a slow onset of therapeutic action. Therefore, there is a pressing need to develop antidepressant medications with novel non-monoaminergic mechanisms of action - or, conversely, to identify alternative pathophysiological pathways leading to depression that can be targeted with new drugs. Intriguingly, there is growing evidence that both peripheral and central inflammation play a role in the pathophysiology of depression.

Patients with depression consistently show negative biases in emotional processing, which are believed to play a key role in the aetiology and maintenance of their clinical symptoms. Overall, robust evidence suggests that early changes in emotional processing can serve as valid surrogate markers of antidepressant efficacy; for example, seven days' treatment with selective serotonin and noradrenaline reuptake inhibitors (citalopram and reboxetine respectively) compared to placebo decreases the recognition of negative facial expressions and recall of negative versus positive stimuli in healthy volunteers. Conversely, another study using the pro-inflammatory cytokine interferon-α showed that inflammatory-mediated depression can be associated with an increased recognition of negative facial expressions. Furthermore, depression associated with inflammation is characterised by significant symptoms of anhedonia, which has been linked to diminished neural responses to reward anticipation. Such reward-deficit is particularly refractory to conventional serotoninergic and noradrenergic antidepressants, and even the antidepressant bupropion (a noradrenaline and dopamine reuptake inhibitor), whilst inducing positive changes in emotional processing, appears to worsen reward processing. However, the reversal of this deficit in reward processing is still considered as a valuable marker of target engagement for anti-inflammatory drugs in depression, as a more sensitive outcome measure than traditional rating scales designed to capture the global clinical symptomatology.

The 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase inhibitors or statins are recommended and have been widely used since the '80s for the primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular diseases. It is now established that these medications have significant anti-inflammatory effects that are independent from their lipid-lowering properties, as well as appearing early in treatment only after seven day of administration. Statins are considered extremely safe drugs: their more common side-effect are muscle pain or weakness (usually mild and quickly responding to stopping or switching medication) and elevation of liver transaminases (significant only in case of pre-existing hepatic disease), whereas more serious adverse events include rhabdomyolysis (very rare but severe myopathy associated with elevated creatine kinase and myoglobinuria), new-onset diabetes mellitus (in predisposed individual with pre-existing hyperglycaemia), and haemorrhagic stroke (in patients with prior haemorrhagic stroke or lacunar infarct); however, clinical trials have ultimately concluded that such adverse events attributed to statin therapy in routine practice are not actually caused by it, especially at doses lower than 80mg/day and when used for less than 52 weeks. Other common (≥ 1/100, \< 1/10) but usually mild side-effects include: nasopharyngitis, pharyngo-laryngeal pain, epistaxis, headache, and gastrointestinal disturbances (constipation, diarrhoea, flatulence, dyspepsia, nausea). Importantly, a potential antidepressant effect for statins has been confirmed in animals, as well as clinically in observational and interventional studies. Although their anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant properties have been involved, the mechanisms underlying the antidepressant effects of statins remain unclear, therefore further translational studies have been advocated in order to elucidate this aspect.

In this exploratory study, we will investigate the effect of seven-day administration of atorvastatin 20mg once daily compared to placebo on emotional and reward processing tasks in 50 healthy volunteers. In view of the previous evidence that statins may exert antidepressant effects via anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant pathways, we predict that atorvastatin will have positive effect on emotional and reward processing.

Status Flow

~Jun 2019 – ~Jul 2019 · 30 days · monthly snapshotNot Yet Recruiting~Jul 2019 – ~Jan 2021 · 18 months · monthly snapshotRecruiting~Jan 2021 – ~Jul 2024 · 42 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jul 2024 – ~Sep 2024 · 2 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Sep 2024 – present · 19 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jan 2026 – present · 3 months · monthly snapshotCompleted

Change History

6 versions recorded
  1. Jan 2026 — Present [monthly]

    Completed NA

  2. Sep 2024 — Present [monthly]

    Completed NA

  3. Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]

    Completed NA

  4. Jan 2021 — Jul 2024 [monthly]

    Completed NA

    Status: RecruitingCompleted

  5. Jul 2019 — Jan 2021 [monthly]

    Recruiting NA

    Status: Not Yet RecruitingRecruiting

Show 1 earlier version
  1. Jun 2019 — Jul 2019 [monthly]

    Not Yet Recruiting NA

    First recorded

Eligibility Summary

No eligibility information available.

Contact Information

Sponsor contact:
  • University of Oxford
  • Wellcome Trust
Data source: University of Oxford

For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .

Study Locations