- Krystal, Andrew D;
- Pizzagalli, Diego A;
- Smoski, Moria;
- Mathew, Sanjay J;
- Nurnberger, John;
- Lisanby, Sarah H;
- Iosifescu, Dan;
- Murrough, James W;
- Yang, Hongqiu;
- Weiner, Richard D;
- Calabrese, Joseph R;
- Sanacora, Gerard;
- Hermes, Gretchen;
- Keefe, Richard SE;
- Song, Allen;
- Goodman, Wayne;
- Szabo, Steven T;
- Whitton, Alexis E;
- Gao, Keming;
- Potter, William Z
The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) 'fast-fail' approach seeks to improve too-often-misleading early-phase drug development methods by incorporating biomarker-based proof-of-mechanism (POM) testing in phase 2a. This first comprehensive application of the fast-fail approach evaluated the potential of κ-opioid receptor (KOR) antagonism for treating anhedonia with a POM study determining whether robust target engagement favorably impacts the brain circuitry hypothesized to mediate clinical effects. Here we report the results from a multicenter, 8-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial in patients with anhedonia and a mood or anxiety disorder (selective KOR antagonist (JNJ-67953964, 10 mg; n = 45) and placebo (n = 44)). JNJ-67953964 significantly increased functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) ventral striatum activation during reward anticipation (primary outcome) as compared to placebo (baseline-adjusted mean: JNJ-67953964, 0.72 (s.d. = 0.67); placebo, 0.33 (s.d. = 0.68); F(1,86) = 5.58, P < 0.01; effect size = 0.58 (95% confidence interval, 0.13-0.99)). JNJ-67953964, generally well tolerated, was not associated with any serious adverse events. This study supports proceeding with assessment of the clinical impact of target engagement and serves as a model for implementing the 'fast-fail' approach.