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NMDA Receptor Agonist

D-serine 60 mg/kg for Schizophrenia

Phase 2
Waitlist Available
Led By Joshua T Kantrowitz, MD
Research Sponsored by Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research
Eligibility Criteria Checklist
Specific guidelines that determine who can or cannot participate in a clinical trial
Must have
Be between 18 and 65 years old
Timeline
Screening 3 weeks
Treatment Varies
Follow Up 3 weeks
Awards & highlights

Study Summary

Persistent neurocognitive deficits are a major cause of severe disability and impaired long-term psychosocial outcome in schizophrenia (SZ). In particular, within the auditory system, early deficits such as the behavioral and neurophysiological ability to match tones that vary in pitch correlate with impairments in auditory emotion recognition (affective prosody) and general functioning, suggesting that interventions aimed at remediating sensory-level dysfunction may lead to significant improvement in higher order cognitive/emotion processes. Efforts to ameliorate cognitive deficits in schizophrenia utilize either pharmacological agents or behavioral treatments such as cognitive remediation, which generally focus on higher order processes, and not on the early sensory processing which may be key to functioning. Numerous pharmacological agents have been proposed, but accumulating evidence suggests that dysfunction of the N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptor may be one of the root causes of schizophrenia, including sensory and cognitive impairments, suggesting that an NMDA based treatment may be efficacious in reversing these deficits. D-Cycloserine, a synthetic partial NMDA agonist has been used in anxiety disorders to augment learning in cognitive remediation. Because of a tendency to act as an NMDA antagonist at higher doses D-cycloserine is not effective in schizophrenia. In contrast, D-serine (DSR), is a full agonist, and is therefore more ideal for enhancing NMDA function and cognitive remediation. While previous use of DSR was limited by safety concerns in rodents,the investigators have shown that it can safely be used at doses of 60 mg/kg and, moreover, demonstrates converging improvement in symptomatic, cognitive and sensory-based measures in schizophrenia. Evidence also suggests that NMDA receptor dysfunction in schizophrenia may be relative, rather than absolute, suggesting that the enhanced practice of a cognitive remediation paradigm might be able to overcome reduced plasticity and treat cognitive dysfunction. This project will be the first to combine the NMDA based and sensory-based cognitive remediation (SBR) approaches, and will utilize not only DSR, but also a tone matching SBR paradigm has been shown to enhance learning in healthy controls, as well as a paradigm designed to augment visual motion detection. This study will pilot these interventions in a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized crossover design that will use neurophysiology together with cognitive tests to explore the effects on brain activity and cognitive function in 16 patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. The investigators hypothesize that DSR+SBR will lead to improvement. Subjects will have an initial visit to establish baseline performance on cognitive tasks before returning for 3 visits when they will receive blinded study medication [60 mg/kg of DSR (2 days) or placebo (1 day)] in a randomized order. The procedures on the treatment days will include the SBR paradigm and pre/post neurophysiological measurements. Primary outcomes are improvements in neurophysiologic and behavioral sensory processing. The main goal is to establish the preliminary efficacy to use in a follow-up multi-dose study utilizing a multiple session SBR R01 application.

Eligible Conditions
  • Schizophrenia
  • Schizoaffective Disorder

Timeline

Screening ~ 3 weeks
Treatment ~ Varies
Follow Up ~baseline-final
This trial's timeline: 3 weeks for screening, Varies for treatment, and baseline-final for reporting.

Treatment Details

Study Objectives

Outcome measures can provide a clearer picture of what you can expect from a treatment.
Primary outcome measures
Mismatch Negativity (MMN)
Tone Matching threshold
Secondary outcome measures
Auditory Emotion Recognition Task
Contrast sensitivity
Emotion in motion
+5 more

Trial Design

2Treatment groups
Experimental Treatment
Placebo Group
Group I: D-serine 60 mg/kgExperimental Treatment2 Interventions
double blind dose of d-serine
Group II: Placebo D-serinePlacebo Group2 Interventions
Treatment
First Studied
Drug Approval Stage
How many patients have taken this drug
D-Serine
FDA approved

Find a Location

Who is running the clinical trial?

Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric ResearchLead Sponsor
37 Previous Clinical Trials
2,812 Total Patients Enrolled
31 Trials studying Schizophrenia
2,113 Patients Enrolled for Schizophrenia
Columbia UniversityOTHER
1,431 Previous Clinical Trials
2,460,817 Total Patients Enrolled
24 Trials studying Schizophrenia
3,439 Patients Enrolled for Schizophrenia
Joshua T Kantrowitz, MDPrincipal InvestigatorColumbia University/Nathan Kline Institute
2 Previous Clinical Trials
16 Total Patients Enrolled
1 Trials studying Schizophrenia
8 Patients Enrolled for Schizophrenia

Frequently Asked Questions

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~1 spots leftby Apr 2025