TACTICS (278948)

  https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/278948

  FP7 (2007-2013)

  Translational Adolescent and Childhood Therapeutic Interventions in Compulsive Syndromes

  Addictive and/or compulsive behaviour in children and adolescents: translating pre-clinical results into therapies (HEALTH-2011.2.2.1-3)

  obsessive-compulsive disorder  ·  proteomics  ·  substance abuse  ·  paediatrics  ·  machine learning

  2012-01-01 Start Date (YY-MM-DD)

  2018-06-30 End Date (YY-MM-DD)

  € 7,914,883 Total Cost


  Description

Compulsivity is characterized by a repetitive, irresistible urge to perform a behavior, the experience of loss of voluntary control over this intense urge, the diminished ability to delay or inhibit thoughts or behaviors, and the tendency to perform repetitive acts in a habitual or stereotyped manner. Compulsivity is a cross-disorder trait underlying phenotypically distinct psychiatric disorders that emerge in childhood (autism spectrum disorder, ASD; obsessive-compulsive disorder, OCD) or adolescence (substance abuse). Our approach integrates clinical data sets for ‘addictive’ (ADHD high risk for substance use), ‘anxious’ (OCD) and ‘stereotypical’ (ASD) compulsive behaviors with highly predictive animal models for new pharmacotherapy. In a series of ‘proof-of-concept’ studies, the cohesion of structural neuroimaging studies (MRI/DTI), neurochemistry (MRS/microdialysis), behavior, genetics (GWAS), proteomics and (Bayesian) machine learning tools in both male and female paediatric clinical populations and behavioral animal models will seek to better understand underlying mechanisms related to glutamate dysfunction in frontostriatal circuits and its remediation / prevention by early intervention studies with glutamate-based (riluzole and memantine) clinically used drugs. The leading drug-based interventions will be tested in pilot Phase IIb-like studies for ‘proof-of-principle’ efficacy in paediatric OCD and ASD populations. This approach will 1) establish predictive neural, genetic and molecular markers of compulsivity in pediatric populations; 2) provide evidence of disorder modifying pharmacologic strategies as a therapeutic approach; 3) develop a novel animal model for pharmaceutical screening and proof of concept studies, 4) build and valorize a translational biomarker compulsivity database and 5) provide pilot efficacy and safety data in paediatric clinical populations to support future large scale clinical trials according to these strategies.


  Complicit Organisations

1 Israeli organisation participates in TACTICS.

Country Organisation (ID) VAT Number Role Activity Type Total Cost EC Contribution Net EC Contribution
France GENOWAY (999690343) FR49422123125 participant PRC € 0 € 100,605 € 0
United Kingdom THE CHANCELLOR MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE (999977172) GB823847609 participant HES € 0 € 120,000 € 0
United Kingdom WOCKHARDT UK LTD (991377928) nan participant PRC € 0 € 0 € 0
Netherlands STICHTING RADBOUD UNIVERSITEIT (999992110) NL002968721B01 coordinator HES € 0 € 3,103,063 € 0
United States THE GENERAL HOSPITAL CORPORATION (996333755) nan participant OTH € 0 € 325,137 € 0
Netherlands UNIVERSITAIR MEDISCH CENTRUM UTRECHT (999915189) NL004205315B01 participant HES € 0 € 782,734 € 0
Denmark H. LUNDBECK AS (999913249) DK56759913 participant PRC € 0 € 0 € 0
Israel TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY (999901609) IL589931187 participant HES € 0 € 214,800 € 0
Germany ZENTRALINSTITUT FUER SEELISCHE GESUNDHEIT (999889969) DE143845625 participant HES € 0 € 383,480 € 0
Germany CONCENTRIS RESEARCH MANAGEMENT GMBH (995658053) DE264148280 participant PRC € 0 € 300,000 € 0
Ireland UNIVERSITY COLLEGE CORK - NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND, CORK (999975717) IE0006286E participant HES € 0 € 252,181 € 0
United Kingdom KING'S COLLEGE LONDON (999981052) GB627403551 participant HES € 0 € 418,000 € 0