Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Alcohol Drinking
  • Alcohol Use Disorder
  • Bipolar Disorder
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Crossover AssignmentMasking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Prevention

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 21 years and 26 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

A total of 60 bipolar and healthy comparison subjects (n=30 per group, 21-26 years of age, 50% women, with no history of a moderate/severe AUD) will be recruited from the greater Austin area. Once recruited and enrolled, subjects will undergo detailed structured clinical evaluations to verify inclus...

A total of 60 bipolar and healthy comparison subjects (n=30 per group, 21-26 years of age, 50% women, with no history of a moderate/severe AUD) will be recruited from the greater Austin area. Once recruited and enrolled, subjects will undergo detailed structured clinical evaluations to verify inclusion and exclusion criteria, comprehensive assessment of alcohol and other drug use history, and cognitive testing, followed by structural MRI assessments. Following standard beverage administration procedures, they will then complete measures of subjective response to alcohol and fMRI scans while under the influence of alcohol or a placebo condition (counter-balanced). For each participant the first beverage session assignment (whether the participant is given alcohol or the placebo beverage first) will be randomized. Alcohol and placebo sessions will occur within 3 days of each other. FMRI assessments will include a continuous performance task with emotional and neutral distractors (CPT-END) and a resting state scan. For both the alcohol and the placebo beverage conditions, the protocol will be the same. The beverage administration sessions will occur in a private room at the University of Texas at Austin in the Imaging Research Center. The table in the testing room will be wiped down with alcohol prior to the participant's arrival (olfactory cue). Study staff will use an algorithm to calculate individual alcohol doses based on the participants' age, sex, height, and weight. Participants fast from food for 4 hours prior to their session. Before beginning consumption of their beverages, they will eat a weight-adjusted, 1 calorie per pound snack of pretzels. While participants eat their pretzels, study staff will mix beverages in front of participants. Vodka and placebo (decarbonated tonic water) will be stored in absolute vodka bottles, measured out, and combined with mixer in front of participants. Mixed drinks will be poured into glasses that have been sitting face down with rims soaking in vodka. Prior to giving the beverage to the participant, all drinks will get an alcohol floater (squirt of absolute vodka on top of the drink). Participants will be given 20 minutes to orally consume two beverages (10 minutes per beverage). Following oral consumption and a 10 minute absorption period, breathalyzer tests will be conducted to identify a .06g% ascending limb breath alcohol concentration (BrAC). Self-report of subjective response to alcohol will be collected and participants will immediately enter the scanner and complete the fMRI scan (acquisition parameters are identical during alcohol and placebo conditions). BrAC will be tracked after the MRI scan and subjective response to alcohol collected again at peak BrAC and at descending BrAC of .06g%. Consistent with NIAAA guidelines for human alcohol studies, BrAC readings will continue every 30 minutes until participants are below 0.04% at which time they will be escorted home. During the placebo condition, participants will be given false BrAC readings. False BrAC readings given to participants during the placebo session will be based on the average BrACs we record during the alcohol sessions. The average time participants stay in the laboratory will be the same for the placebo and alcohol beverage conditions. Participants are debriefed after completing all sessions and the need for deception to ensure the placebo-controlled alcohol session will be explained.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04063384
Collaborators
Not Provided
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Elizabeth Lippard, PhD University of Texas at Austin