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Effect of Social Isolation on the Role of Pavlovian Mechanisms for Control Over Alcohol Use

SFB TRR 265: Losing and Regaining Control Over Drug Intake B03: Role of Pavlovian Mechanisms for Control Over Substance Use WP2: Effects of Social Isolation on PIT in AUD

Status
Not yet recruiting
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT06256952
Acronym
ReCoDe
Enrollment
100
Registered
2024-02-13
Start date
2024-10-01
Completion date
2027-06-30
Last updated
2024-08-28

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Alcohol Use Disorder, Alcoholism, Stress Reaction, Ostracism, Substance Use Disorders

Keywords

Substance use disorder (SUD), Alcohol use disorder (AUD), General and outcome-specific Pavlovian to instrumental transfer, Social exclusion, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Reward, Cues

Brief summary

During the first funding period (1st FP) we investigated the impact of acute and chronic stress (Trier Social Stress Test, TSST) on Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer (PIT). Moreover, we developed a novel full transfer task that allows assessing both general and specific PIT to investigate whether specific PIT differs between alcohol use disorder (AUD) and control subjects. We found that our online version of TSST induced stress and thereby amplified PIT effects in participants. Preliminary analyses of the full transfer task indicate that AUD participants exhibit a stronger specific PIT effect compared to controls. Based on these findings, we want to assess the following aim for this study: Investigate the effect of experimentally induced social exclusion on alcohol-specific and general PIT effects in AUD and control participants.

Detailed description

The projects research aim: The investigators will examine how an experimentally induced social exclusion by the Cyberball task is associated with alcohol specific and general PIT effects by using the newly developed full transfer task from 1st funding period in AUD vs. HCs. The investigators will use the newly developed full PIT paradigm to examine the modifying effect of experimentally induced social exclusion stress on alcohol-specific and general PIT effects. While using the Trier Social Stress Test in the 1st FP, the investigators now want to go one step further by including social exclusion/ostracism to the stress component, which has not been studied in association with PIT effects yet. The investigators here want to shed light on possible underlying mechanisms which can lead to a promotion of alcohol-seeking by alcohol-stimuli in situations of social exclusion. Participants (50 AUD and 50 HC) will be assessed at two time points, once after experimentally induced social exclusion and once after social inclusion in a fully balanced, cross-over within-subject design. Subjects will play an online game tossing a ball to each other with two more virtual co-players (Cyberball). Using a cover story, we make subjects believe that the co-players really exist and that they play a live online game. During social exclusion, subjects will be systematically excluded by one co-player (partial exclusion), and during social inclusion, ball tosses will be balanced between all three players. Cyberball usually induces feelings of social isolation and altered behavioral reactions in the subject, which the investigators want to assess by analyzing ball tossing behavior over time, as well as physiological and subjective measures (concentration of cortisol in saliva, heart rate variability and emotions questionnaires, such as the Need to Belong Scale, Rejection Sensitivity Questionnaire, Need threat scale and Positive and Negative Affect Schedule pre and post Cyberball game and after PIT). After the Cyberball experiment, subjects will undergo the transfer part of the full PIT task (using a parallel version at one of the two days in a randomized order). Hypothesis 1a: Social exclusion will lead to a stronger stress hormone response (concentration of cortisol in saliva), lower heart rate variability and a stronger general PIT effect compared to social inclusion (main effect social exclusion intervention on PIT). Hypothesis 1b: Stronger social exclusion effects in AUD subjects compared to controls will lead to stronger PIT effects compared to social inclusion (interaction effect between group and stress intervention on PIT), especially for alcohol-specific PIT.

Interventions

BEHAVIORALPIT paradigm

The paradigm consists of four parts: In the first part, an instrumental learning task is completed in which subjects must learn which stimuli require a response and which do not. In the second part, a classical (Pavlovian) conditioning task is then completed in which subjects learn by passive viewing which stimuli are associated with certain amounts of money. The third part measures to which instrumental responses (learned in Part 1) are modulated by the presentation of the classically conditioned stimuli (learned in Part 2). At the same time drug-associated stimuli are presented in the background measuring to which extent they conflict with the learned instrumental behavior. In the last part, query trials are implemented in which the participants have to choose between two pictures to assess the relative cue value.

BEHAVIORALsocial exclusion (Cyberball task)

Social exclusion will be assessed using the cyberball paradigm: subjects will play an online game tossing a ball to each other with two more virtual co-players. Using a cover story, we make subjects believe that the co-players really exist and that they play a live online game. During social exclusion, subjects will be systematically excluded by one co-player, and during social inclusion, ball tosses will be balanced between all three players.

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTSaliva samples

Assessing acute stress effects in AUD and HC subjects

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTbasic psychological assessment

* Sociodemographics * ASSIST * Quantity Frequency: Alcohol, tobacco/e-cigarette, Cannabis & other illegal drugs * SCID: AUD criteria and tabak use disorder life time and last year & acute depressive symptoms & symptoms for Mania and psychotic disorder * Edinburgh Handedness Inventory (EHI) * Fagerström Test for Nicotine depend (FTND) * Barratt Impulsiveness Scale - Kurzversion (BIS-15) * Allgemeine Depressionsskala (ADS) * State-Trait-Anxiety Inventory (STAI-T) * Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) * Cannabis Use Disorder Identification Test (CUDIT) * CAS -A (Alkohol) * Fragebogen zur Sozialen Unterstützung (F-SozU K-14) * Oslo-3-Items-Social-Support Scale * Social Skills Rating System (SSRS) * Trier Inventory for chronic stress (TICS) * Rejection Sensitivity Questionnaires (RSQ-9) * Need to belong scale (NTBS) * Fragebogen zu Gedanken und Gefühlen (FGG-14) * Internationale Trauma Questionnaire (ITQ) * Zahlen-Symbol-Test (DST) * Wortschatztest (verbal intelligence)

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTpre and post cyberball task

Positive and Negative Affect Schedule(PANAS)

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTVAS

subjective arousal, subjective stress, valence, perceived ostracisms/loneliness

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTafter cyberball task

* Need Threat Scale * Manipulation check (VAS scale)

BEHAVIORALsocial inclusion (Cyberball task)

Social inclusion will be assessed using the cyberball paradigm: subjects will play an online game tossing a ball to each other with two more virtual co-players. Using a cover story, we make subjects believe that the co-players really exist and that they play a live online game. During social inclusion, ball tosses will be balanced between all three players.

Sponsors

Heidelberg University
CollaboratorOTHER
Zentralinstitut für Seelische Gesundheit Mannheim
CollaboratorOTHER
Technische Universität Dresden
CollaboratorOTHER
Charite University, Berlin, Germany
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
OTHER
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Intervention model description

The study employs a within-group design. The participants of each group (AUD and HC) attend two consecutive sessions (one a day), and on each of these days, they engage in the Cyberball Experiment before undertaking the PIT Task. Within the Cyberball Experiment, participants are randomly assigned to either partial exclusion or inclusion on the first day. On the second consecutive day, they undergo the condition they did not experience previously.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Males and females between 18-65 years of age, * AUD subjects: meet 4 or more criteria for DSM-5 alcohol-use disorder (not requiring withdrawal as assessed by an independent psychiatrist), * Currently using alcohol without a desire for abstinence, * Ability to consent to the study and complete the questionnaires. * Sufficient language skills: German * Availability between 3pm-6pm on 2 consecutive days, * existing health insurance

Exclusion criteria

* Lifetime diagnosis according to DMS-5 for a: Bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, schizophrenia spectrum disorder, substance dependence except for alcohol, nicotine, cannabis, and/or methamphetamine * Currently meeting DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for depressive episode, suicidal ideation, * History of traumatic brain injury or severe neurological disease (such as dementia, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis) * Pregnancy or breastfeeding, * Ingestion of medications known to interact with the CNS in the 10-day period prior to study participation or less than 4 half-lives after last ingestion (rapid urine test), * Color vision deficiency

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Behavioral full-lever specific and general PIT (parallel version) effect day oneDay 1Specific: Average percentage of alcohol choice difference during the presentation of alcohol or non-alcohol pavlovian background. General: Differences in number of button presses during the presentation of positive (+10 Euro) and negative (-10 Euro) pavlovian backgrounds.
Behavioral full-lever specific and general PIT (parallel version) effect day twoDay 2Specific: Average percentage of alcohol choice difference during the presentation of alcohol or non-alcohol pavlovian background. General: Differences in number of button presses during the presentation of positive (+10 Euro) and negative (-10 Euro) pavlovian backgrounds.
Social exclusion/inclusion induced using Cyberball GameDay 1experimentally-induced social exclusion stress by using the cyberball paradigm: Subjects will play an online game tossing a ball to each other with two more virtual co-players. Using a cover story, we make subjects believe that the co-players really exist and that they play a live online game. During social exclusion, subjects will be systematically excluded by one co-player (partial exclusion), and during social inclusion, ball tosses will be balanced between all three players. Effects of the Cyberball manipulation (social exclusion/inclusion) will be assessed via ratings in Positive and Negative Affect Scale (PANAS) and Need-Threat-Scale (NTS).

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Heart rate variabilityAt baseline 5 min AND During experimental part (social inclusion or exclusion) 5 min Day 1 and Day 2
Need Threat Scale (NTS)After Cyberball Experiment on Day 1 and Day 2Scale from 1 to 5, high scores indicate high needs in Belonging, Control, Meaningful existence and self-esteem
Concentration of cortisol in salivaDay 1 and Day 2\[Time Frame: Assessment before, during and after Cyberball game (T1: arrival of subject), T2: right before Cyberball game, T3: right after Cyberball game, T4: after PIT part 3 and T5: at the end of testing day)\]
Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS)Baseline and after Cyberball Experiment on Day 1 and Day 2Scale 1-5, for PA (positive affect) and NA (negative affect) higher scores indicate higher positive and negative affect

Countries

Germany

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026