Effects of cannabidiol on fear conditioning in anxiety disorders: decreased threat expectation during retention, but no enhanced fear re‑extinction. decreased threat expectation during retention, but no enhanced fear re‑extinction

  • Caroline Kwee*
  • , Febe van der Flier
  • , Puck Duits
  • , Ton van Balkom
  • , Danielle Cath
  • , Joke Baas
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Rationale: Preclinical research suggests that pharmacologically elevating cannabinoid levels may attenuate fear memory expression and enhance fear extinction. 

Objectives: We studied the effects of cannabidiol (CBD) on fear memory expression and fear re-extinction in 69 patients with panic disorder with agoraphobia or with social anxiety disorder. Moderation by sex, diagnosis, and serotonergic antidepressant (AD) use was explored. 

Methods: A cued fear conditioning paradigm was applied before the first treatment session with 300 mg CBD/placebo augmented exposure therapy. Study medication was administered orally preceding 8 weekly sessions. Fear acquisition and suboptimal extinction took place prior to the first medication ingestion (T0). After the first medication ingestion (T1), we investigated effects on fear memory expression at retention and fear re-extinction. Subjective fear, shock expectancy, skin conductance, and startle responses to conditioned (CS+) and safety stimulus (CS−) were measured. 

Results: Across the sample, CBD reduced shock expectancy at retention under low and ambiguous threat of shock, but fear re-extinction at T1 was unaffected by CBD. However, in AD users, re-extinction of subjective fear was impaired in the CBD condition compared to placebo. In female AD users, CBD interfered with safety learning measured with fear-potentiated startle. Conclusions: The current findings provide no evidence for enhanced fear re-extinction by CBD. However, CBD acutely decreased threat expectation at retention, without affecting other indices of fear. More studies are needed to elucidate possible interactions with AD use and sex, as well as potential effects of CBD on threat expectancies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)833–847
Number of pages15
JournalPsychopharmacology
Volume241
Issue number4
Early online date4 Dec 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.

Funding

This work was supported by ZonMw and the Dutch Brain Foundation, Programme Translational Research, project number 40–41200–98–9269; and by research grants awarded by the Helmholtz Institute, Utrecht University, and Espria/MHC Drenthe (GR 18-130a; GR 18-130b). The authors are indebted to the patients who were willing to participate in this study, and to the following people who assisted with data collection: Elise Boonstra, Inge van Loenen, Kim Veenman, and other research assistants; and analysis: Anaïs Thijssen. We also would like to thank Mirjam Moerbeek for her statistical advice.

FundersFunder number
Dutch Brain Foundation40–41200–98–9269
Helmholtz Institute
ZonMw
Universiteit UtrechtGR 18-130b, GR 18-130a

    Keywords

    • Anxiety disorders
    • Cannabidiol
    • Cannabinoids
    • Fear conditioning
    • Fear extinction
    • Re-extinction
    • Retention

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Effects of cannabidiol on fear conditioning in anxiety disorders: decreased threat expectation during retention, but no enhanced fear re‑extinction. decreased threat expectation during retention, but no enhanced fear re‑extinction'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this