Clotrimazole and Betamethasone Cream |
Lotrisone Cream |
Clinical Trial: Conditioning, the Placebo Effect, and Psoriasis
This study is currently recruiting patients.
|
Purpose
This study uses the psychological principle known as classical conditioning to try to improve the standard treatment of psoriasis. Classical conditioning is a process of behavioral modification in which a person learns to connect a certain response-in this case, improvement of psoriasis-with a new action, or stimulus-in this case, application of an inactive cream. The goal of this study is to show that people with psoriasis who are maintained on corticosteroid cream part of the time and an inactive (placebo) cream at other times will need a lower total amount of active medication over time than will people who are treated only with the active drug.
| Condition | Treatment or Intervention | Phase |
|---|---|---|
| Psoriasis | Behavior: Conditioning Drug: Corticosteroid cream | Phase I |
MedlinePlus related topics: Psoriasis
Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Treatment, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo Control
Official Title: Role of Conditioning in the Pharmacotherapy of Psoriasis
Expected Total Enrollment: 60
Study start: August 2000; Expected completion: July 2005
The lack of scientific attention devoted to the placebo effect as a phenomenon in its own right probably reflects the paucity of theoretical positions within which to organize the existing data and design new research. This research addresses the clinical significance of behavior-immune system interactions.
This study will capitalize on conditioned immunosuppressive responses to reduce the cumulative amount of corticosteroid medication used in the treatment of psoriasis. We will continue to treat patients with steroid, but will shift experimental patients from their current schedule of continuous reinforcement (active drug whenever medication is applied) to a partial schedule of reinforcement (active drug a percentage of the time and placebo alone at other times). To equate amount of medication, we will treat another group of patients with a reduced dose of steroid in a standard treatment regimen (continuous schedule of reinforcement).
We hypothesize that, holding cumulative dose constant, a partial schedule of reinforcement will enable patients to be maintained on lower cumulative amounts of corticosteroid than patients treated under a continuous schedule of active drug. This is the first attempt to adopt conditioning principles and use schedules of reinforcement to design regimens of drug therapy. If proven effective, this new approach to pharmacotherapy and placebo effects is likely to stimulate new interdisciplinary research in neuropharmacology and behavioral pharmacology for the treatment of autoimmune disorders and a variety of other chronic diseases.
Eligibility
Ages Eligible for Study: 18 Years and above, Genders Eligible for Study: Both
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Psoriasis patients with mild to moderate lesions who are able to attend weekly clinic visits at either the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry in Rochester, NY, or Stanford University in Palo Alto, CA.
- Patients must be in good health (as determined by prescreening examination).
- Patients must not be using systemic treatment (for example, oral medications) or intralesional, UV, or topical therapies except bland emollients for at least 2 weeks before the start date of the study.
- Patients must have chronic, stable plaque psoriasis with a score of greater than or equal to 7 on a routine 9-point Severity Index.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Use of immunosuppressive medication within the past 2 months.
- Pregnant or sexually active women who do not use contraceptives.
- Patients who cannot be monitored regularly.
- History of allergy to corticosteroid or other study ointment components.
- Patients who have more than 10 percent of body surface area covered by psoriatic lesions.
Location and Contact Information
California
Stanford University, Palo Alto, California, 94305, United States; Recruiting
New York
Adult Dermatology Clinic, Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, New York, 14642, United States; Recruiting
Robert Ader, PhD, Principal Investigator, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry
More Information
Publications
Ader R, Cohen N. Behaviorally conditioned immunosuppression. Psychosom Med. 1975 Jul-Aug;37(4):333-40.
Ader R, Cohen N, Felten D. Psychoneuroimmunology: interactions between the nervous system and the immune system. Lancet. 1995 Jan 14;345(8942):99-103. Review. No abstract available.
Giang DW, Goodman AD, Schiffer RB, Mattson DH, Petrie M, Cohen N, Ader R. Conditioning of cyclophosphamide-induced leukopenia in humans. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci. 1996 Spring;8(2):194-201.
Ader R. "The role of conditioning in pharmacotherapy." In The placebo effect: An interdisciplinary exploration, edited by A. Harrington, 138-165. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1997.
Record last reviewed: September 2004
Last Updated: October 13, 2004
Record first received: June 22, 2000
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00005922
Health Authority: United States: Federal Government
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-04-08
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov
Cache Date: April 9, 2005
Resources
- Clotrimazole and Betamethasone Topical (Drug Digest)
- Lotrisone (Drug Digest)

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