N2O for Acute Suicidality and Depression in the ED
Study Details
Study Description
Brief Summary
Investigators are conducting this double-blind, randomized control trial (RCT), to compare inhaled N2O+ treatment as usual (TAU) versus inhaled placebo+TAU; demonstrating the feasibility and tolerability of the intervention in an emergency department (ED) setting on an acutely suicidal population.
Condition or Disease | Intervention/Treatment | Phase |
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Phase 2 |
Detailed Description
Past studies have shown that a single dose of ketamine, an NMDA- receptor antagonist has fast and long lasting anti-depressant effect. Although a promising antidepressant and potential anti-suicidal agent, ketamine has very significant side effects including: dissociation, hallucinations, delusional thinking, cognitive impairment, and significant sympathetic nervous system activation.
Nitrous Oxide (N2O) is an NMDA-receptor antagonist with a well-known safety profile used as an analgesic. In a proof-of-concept pilot study, this study's investigator recently demonstrated that N2O also has rapid and marked antidepressant effects in patients with severe treatment-resistant depression (TRD); further sub-analyses showed N2O significantly reduced suicidal ideation (SI). While N2O administration may lead to a reduction in SI, it remains unknown whether severely suicidal patients requiring hospitalization on inpatient psychiatric units would benefit. Investigators hypothesize that N2O will rapidly and safely dampen suicidal thinking with minimal side effects in this population.
Participants will be randomized to receive either N2O or placebo. The study intervention is in tandem with prescribed treatment-as-usual (TAU) by emergency department physicians relating to diagnosis (depression, anxiety, suicidal ideation); which typically involves anxiolytic medications and/or brief psychotherapy administered by care team psychiatry providers.
Study intervention response will be assessed using a self-administered psychiatric diagnostic tool (Computerized Adaptive Testing Mental Health [CAT-MH] scores relating to suicide, depression, and anxiety; to determine whether a single 45-minute inhalation of nitrous oxide vs placebo reduces symptoms.
Study Design
Arms and Interventions
Arm | Intervention/Treatment |
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Active Comparator: Treatment; Nitrous Oxide 50% A single 45-minute session of inhaled 50% nitrous oxide. |
Drug: Nitrous oxide gas for inhalation
Administration of inhaled 50% nitrous oxide in oxygen (FiO2 0.5) will be under the direct supervision of a licensed practitioner who is experienced in the use and administration of the study drug, and is familiar with the indications, effects, dosages, methods, and frequency and duration of administration, and with the hazards, contraindications, and side effects and the precautions to be taken (MD, or CRNA); with study patient monitoring of pulse oximetry, heart rate, respiratory, non-invasive blood pressure, and end-tidal carbon dioxide.
Other Names:
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Placebo Comparator: Control; Oxygen-air mixture A single 45-minute session of inhaled Oxygen-air mixture |
Drug: Placebo
Administration of the placebo (oxygen-air mixture [FiO2 ≈0.3]), will be under the direct supervision of a licensed practitioner who is experienced in the use and administration of the study drug, and is familiar with the indications, effects, dosages, methods, and frequency and duration of administration, and with the hazards, contraindications, and side effects and the precautions to be taken (MD, or CRNA); with study patient monitoring of pulse oximetry, heart rate, respiratory, non-invasive blood pressure, and end-tidal carbon dioxide.
Other Names:
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Outcome Measures
Primary Outcome Measures
- Treatment Response Based on Changes in Computerized Adaptive Testing Scores [Up to 24-hours from baseline]
Monitor changes in Computerized Adaptive Testing Mental Health (CAT-MH) scores relating to suicide, depression, and anxiety; to determine whether a single 45-minute inhalation of nitrous oxide vs placebo reduces symptoms. The CAT-MH is a validated self-reporting electronic diagnostic that adaptively selects a small optimal set of items from a large bank of approximately 1,500 items, targeted to individuals current or historical level of severity and likelihood of 'suicide', 'depression', and 'anxiety'. Generated scores include severity and liklihood percentile: suicide = (%) low, intermediate, high depression = (%) normal, mild, moderate, severe anxiety = (%) normal, mild, moderate, severe
Secondary Outcome Measures
- Treatment Compliance [Intervention completion, 45-minutes]
Evaluate compliance of an acutely suicidal population in an Emergency Department (ED) setting, to complete a single 45-minute inhalation of nitrous oxide vs placebo. Determined by 'ability', 'inability', or 'refusal' to complete the entire 45-minute inhalation session (nitrous oxide vs placebo).
- Treatment Response Correlation to Lifetime Predictors Associated with Suicide [Up to 24-hours from baseline]
Evaluate if lifetime predictors (e.g., personal/family history of suicide attempts or suicide, history of alcohol dependence, and worst lifetime suicidal ideation) of eventual suicide correlate with the acute reduction in symptom severity following treatment. Lifetime predictors will be determined by medical and social history, and family history related to mental health. Symptom reduction is determined by changes in CAT-MH scores, over 24-hours from baseline. The CAT-MH is a validated self-reporting electronic diagnostic that adaptively selects a small optimal set of items from a large bank of approximately 1,500 items, targeted to individuals current or historical level of severity and likelihood of 'suicide', 'depression', and 'anxiety'. Generated scores include severity and liklihood percentile: suicide = (%) low, intermediate, high depression = (%) normal, mild, moderate, severe anxiety = (%) normal, mild, moderate, severe
- Rapid Treatment Response [At 30-minutes to 1-hour from intervention conclusion]
Evaluate any acute reduction in symptoms. Based on changes in CAT-MH scores (suicide, depression, anxiety) at 30-minutes to 1-hour following treatment. Study patients ability to complete self-administered CAT-MH following inhalation may impact time-point. The CAT-MH is a validated self-reporting electronic diagnostic that adaptively selects a small optimal set of items from a large bank of approximately 1,500 items, targeted to individuals current or historical level of severity and likelihood of 'suicide', 'depression', and 'anxiety'. Generated scores include severity and liklihood percentile: suicide = (%) low, intermediate, high depression = (%) normal, mild, moderate, severe anxiety = (%) normal, mild, moderate, severe
- Sustained Treatment Response [Up to 24-hours from intervention conclusion]
Evaluation of sustained response based on changes in CAT-MH scores at several time-points or until the patient is transferred or discharged from the ED. The CAT-MH is a validated self-reporting electronic diagnostic that adaptively selects a small optimal set of items from a large bank of approximately 1,500 items, targeted to individuals current or historical level of severity and likelihood of 'suicide', 'depression', and 'anxiety'. Generated scores include severity and liklihood percentile: suicide = (%) low, intermediate, high depression = (%) normal, mild, moderate, severe anxiety = (%) normal, mild, moderate, severe
Other Outcome Measures
- Adverse Events [Through study completion, an average of 1-week]
Monitor adverse events and severity associated with study participation, including nausea and vomiting; or other symptoms determined 'probably', 'possibly', 'unrelated', or 'related' to the study intervention. This includes any unplanned escalation of care including pharmacological therapy for nausea, vomiting. Study patient safety is monitored by the investigators (MD) with experience in critical care anesthesia, as well as an experienced clinical research team responsible for data collection and reporting of events.
Eligibility Criteria
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients 18-65 years of age, acutely suicidal, presenting to the adult emergency department with documented history of non-psychotic major depressive disorder.
Exclusion Criteria:
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Current psychotic or catatonic symptoms as determined by the hospital care team.
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Unable or unwilling to give consent for study participation (ability to provide consent will be established by treating physician)
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Lifetime DSM-V (medical history) diagnoses of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorders, bipolar disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and panic disorders.
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Meets current DSM-V substance use disorder of greater than mild severity (other than nicotine or marijuana)
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Significant pulmonary disease and/or requiring supplemental oxygen.
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Administration of other NMDA-receptor antagonist treatment (e.g., ketamine) within two weeks of entry into study.
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Contraindications for N2O (pneumothorax, bowel obstruction, middle ear occlusion, elevated intracranial pressure)
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Chronic cobalamin and/or folate deficiency treated with folic acid or vitamin B12.
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Women who are pregnant or breastfeeding
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Any other factor that in the investigators' judgment may affect patient safety or compliance.
Contacts and Locations
Locations
Site | City | State | Country | Postal Code | |
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1 | University of Chicago Medicine | Chicago | Illinois | United States | 60637 |
Sponsors and Collaborators
- University of Chicago
Investigators
- Principal Investigator: Peter Nagele, MD, MSc, University of Chicago, Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care
Study Documents (Full-Text)
None provided.More Information
Publications
None provided.- IRB18-1083