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Neuroscience of Addiction Part 2 Study Workshop: Overcoming Barriers to Engagement with Difficult and Different Clients Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 1 Review Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 2 Addiction is Complex • • • • Psychological Social Spiritual Biological Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 3 Addiction “Addiction at its core is a biological process” Biological Agent Biological Substrate Nestler and Aghajanian, 1997 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 4 Biological Agents • Drugs, which bind to specific receptors • Directly or indirectly increase dopamine transmission Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 5 Biological Target • Brain cells in nucleus accumbens get “rush” of dopamine • Changes in cell after chronic exposure – Decreased dopamine transmission – Other structural and functional changes Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 6 Neuroscience of Addiction • • • • Craving Compulsion Cognitive problems Poor insight Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 7 Review of Workshop Goals • Part 1 Neuroscience – Review brain – Reward circuit – Changes from drug use – Who gets addicted? • Genetics • Environment Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 8 Review of Workshop/ Goals • Part 2 Applied Neuroscience – Understanding craving – Correlates of compulsion – Cognitive aspects of drug use – Emerging pharmacology for treatment of addiction Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 9 Overall Goal • Understanding the neuroscience of addiction will allow you to treat your clients’ behaviors in a new way Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 10 Other Housekeeping • Breaks • Lunch • Evaluations Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 11 Review: Brain Circuits Involved in Drug Addiction PFC CONTROL ACG OFC SCC MOTIVATION/ DRIVE (saliency) Hipp NAc c REWARD VP Amyg Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 MEMORY/ LEARNING 12 Network of Circuits • • • • Reward Pathway Motivation/ Drive Pathway Memory and Learning Pathway Control Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 13 What do these Circuits have in Common? • All receive dopamine directly from dopamine neurons • Connected to each other through direct or indirect neuronal projections – glutamate transmission – No current PET tracers Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 14 Review: Key Structures in these Circuits • • • • Nucleus Accumbens Amygdala Forebrain/ Frontal Lobe Ventral Tegmental Area Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 15 Part 2 Applied Neuroscience – Understanding craving – Correlates of compulsion – Cognitive aspects of drug use – Emerging pharmacology for treatment of addiction Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 16 Craving • “The most persistent and insidious clinical component of addictive illness.” • Dackis and O’Brien, 2005 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 17 Addiction Cycle Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 18 Understanding Craving Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 19 Cue Induced Craving* • Environmental cues can trigger cravings • What examples have you seen or heard? • Have you seen relapse following long abstinence from cue induced craving? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 20 Responses to Cocaine Video Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 21 Environmental Cues Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 22 FIGURE 2 Activation of Orbitofrontal Cortex Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 23 Functional Imaging of Craving • Drug related craving linked to functional natural drives – Sex – Food Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 24 Functional Neuroimaging and Craving • PET, fMRI • Activation of amygdala and anterior cingulate cortex • Degree of cue activation correlated with craving severity • Degree of activation correlated with likelihood of relapse – Cocaine, alcohol, heroin, nicotine Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 25 Cues for Cocaine and Normal Pleasures Activate Brain Sites • Cues for Cocaine – Cocaine abusers may experience a powerful urge to use when they encounter environmental cues associated with use – Brain areas are activated when watching cocaine- related videos Childress, 1999 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 26 Persistent Effects of Drug • As a result of intracellular changes, the previously cocaine addicted brain has persistently altered functioning (craving) Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 27 Treatment Applications for Childress’ Cue-Induced Cocaine Craving Study • Implications for Treatment – Understand the importance environmental cues play in initiating the craving process – Review program educational materials to ensure that potential environmental cues for drug use are eliminated – Normalize cue and craving responses for clients – Teach clients how to “urge surf” and to identify potential environmental cues Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 28 Functional Imaging of Craving • Frontal activation also with: – Cocaine addicted patients watching cue video – Normal subjects watching sexually explicit video – Normal subjects reporting hunger in response to food cues Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 29 “Expected Reward”: Craving • Reward processed by dopamine neurons going to nucleus accumbens • Memory processed by amygdala and hippocampus • Expected reward for drugs far outweighs other reinforcers/ rewards • Resetting of reward thresholds? • What can compete with drugs? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 30 Memory and Craving • Place, person or thing: other wise neutral stimulus that can trigger craving • Conditioned Learning – Paired associations – Nucleus accumbens/ amygdala • Habit Learning – Well learned sequences become automatic – Caudate/ putamen (neighbors to Nucleus accumbens, the “striatum”) Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 31 Applications* • What do you need to look for in your treatment materials (videos, handouts)? • What do you need to listen for in your group therapy sessions? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 32 Sensitization* • Small amounts of substance lead to high levels of craving and relapse – Have you seen this? • Cross-sensitization Rats sensitized with 6 days of amphetamine • 7 days later become hyperactive after 1 minute of sugar • Consume more sugar when allowed to drink it for an hour » Avena and Hoebel, 2003 – Alcoholics relapsing after pain meds • Other examples? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 33 Orbitofrontal Cortex • Low activity during drug withdrawal • Overactivity when craving • Degree of activity proportional to intensity of craving Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 34 Orbitofrontal Cortex and Craving Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 35 Long Term Frontal Brain Changes in Cocaine Abusers • Up to 3 months drug free • Decreased frontal lobe metabolism in cocaine abusers compared to controls • “Clinically silent” brain dysfunction – Craving? – Decreased executive functioning? » Volkow 1992 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 36 Other Aspects of Craving • Neuroadaptation – Depletion of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 37 Exercise* • In groups of 3 or 4, write an essay test question to test knowledge of content on craving Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 38 Part 2 Applied Neuroscience – Understanding craving – Correlates of compulsion – Cognitive aspects of drug use – Emerging pharmacology for treatment of addiction Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 39 Correlates of Compulsion* • Weakened brain “braking” or inhibitory mechanisms • When else do humans pursue pleasure/ desire with a similar lack of rational thought? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 40 Biology of “Drive” • Natural drives: food, water, sex • Romantic love may overlap with addiction – Dopamine – Dark side: depression, stalking, suicide Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 41 Correlates of Compulsion: Loss of control • Hallmark of addiction • Source of societal stigma • Even when the pleasure is gone Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 42 What’s the worst consequence you have seen?* Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 43 Compulsions and Hypofrontality • Reduced baseline metabolism in frontal lobe associated with addiction • Same regions become hypermetabolic during active craving Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 44 Compulsions and Hypofrontality • “Hypo” –less active as measured by blood flow • Frontal Lobes= executive functioning – “Top down” decision making – Risk/ reward assessment – Impulse control Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 45 Compulsions and Hypofrontality • Poor functioning of frontal lobes may contribute to – Poor impulse control – Lack of resolve – Poor decision making – Impaired control even when someone expresses desire to not do something Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 46 Effect of Cocaine on PFC Cells • Changes in branching and the number of spines • Changers in synaptic connections • Related to changes in decision-making or judgment? • Loss of self-directed behavior? • Increase in automatic behavior? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 47 Dopamine Receptors • D2 receptor changes associated with addiction in people and animals • Chronic exposure to stimulants, opioids or alcohol leads to decreased dopamine activity – Downregulation of D2 receptors – Decreased sensitivity to everyday rewards – Increase drug seeking due to reward intensity? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 48 Decreased Sensitivity to Natural Rewards • Dopamine regulated reward centers fail to activate in response to experimental rewards (money) – Opiate addicts – Tobacco smokers – Cocaine abusers Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 49 Decreased Dopamine Function • Correlates with dysfunction of prefrontal regions • Correlates with – Poor judgment, impulse control – Decreased response to natural rewards Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 50 Dopamine Transporter Loss After Heavy Methamphetamine Use (PET analysis) Comparison Subject METH Abuser Neuroscience Addiction 158(3), Day 2 pp. 377-382, 2001. Source: Volkow, N.D. et al., Am J.ofPsychiatry, 51 FIGURE 5 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 52 Phineus Gage: Posterboy for Hypofrontality • Vermont railroad construction • Mild mannered and responsible • Accident with tamping rod and dynamite Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 53 Phineus Gage* Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 54 Phineus Gage • After the accident: Personality Change – Rude – Sexually inappropriate – Poor impulse control Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 55 Animal Models of Relapse • In animals, the most potent stimulus for relapse is a “free” (non contingent) “priming” injection of the training drug – Equivalents in detoxified addicts Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 56 Drug-triggered relapse • In animals, “cross-priming” from one class to another has been widely demonstrated – ie. priming with cocaine can lead to opiate self administration and vice versa – Stewart J: Reinstatement of heroin and cocaine self administration in the rat by intracerebral application of morphine in the ventral tegmental area Pharmacol Biochem Behav 1984:20 917-923 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 57 Effect of Drug Use on Decision Making • Iowa Gambling Task • Compare with patients with damaged Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 58 Correlates of Iowa Gambling task • Oblivious to future positive or negative consequences • Guided by immediate prospects – Bechara Nature Neuroscience 2005 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 59 Iowa Gambling Task Experiments Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 60 Cocaine Addiction and Iowa Gambling Task • 63% of addicts as impaired as brain damaged patients (some variability) • Impaired decision making • Unable to learn from recent feedback Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 61 Iowa gambling task "Bad" decks -£1500 +100 +200 +100 "Good" decks +50 +25 -50 +25 +100 -1000 +500 +100 -50 +50 +25 +50 Normal subject A Bad Decks B C Good Decks D 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 Trial number 70 80 90 100 62 Orbitofrontal lesion A Bad Decks B C Good Decks D 0 10 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 20 30 40 50 Trial number 60 70 80 90 100 63 Skin conductance response Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 64 Impairments in Decision Making • Alcohol, cannabis, cocaine, opioid, methamphetamine – Meth may be more harmful than others – Some people will NOT have impaired decision making – More functional, less likely to “bottom out” and enter treatment Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 65 Back to Stress Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 66 The Stress Hormone Cycle Hypothalamus CRF Stress Responses Pituitary Gland ACTH CRF: Corticotropin Releasing Factor Adrenal Glands CORTISOL Kidneys Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 67 Responses Stress Reliably Reinstates Drug Seeking in * Rats Cocaine-trained rats Alcohol-trained rats 100 80 60 40 Inactive Lever Active Lever * * * 20 Responses 0 Saline Cocaine Footshock Water Alcohol Footshock Nicotine-trained rats Heroin-trained rats * 100 80 60 40 * * * 20 0 Saline Nicotine Footshock Saline Heroin Footshock Neuroscience of 1996, Addiction From: Psychopharmacology, 1998,Day 19992 ; J. Neurosci. 1996 68 Another Look at Stress Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 69 Addiction Cycle Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 70 Part 2 Applied Neuroscience – Understanding craving – Correlates of compulsion – Cognitive aspects of drug use – Emerging pharmacology for treatment of addiction Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 71 Neurobiological Aspects of Chronic Drug Use (Meth) • Cognitive • Psychiatric • Motor Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 72 Neurotoxicity Methamphetamine • Brain changes resulting from prolonged use of psychostimulants, such as methamphetamine may be reflected in compromised cognitive and motor functioning Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 73 Neurotoxicity Methamphetamine Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 74 • • • • • Poor Motor & Memory Performance 33 year old male- 80 days post detox Low Severity- Parkinson Disease Transporter losses may not recover Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 Volkow, et al. 2001 75 MOTOR FUNCTION • Slowed gait •Impaired balance • Impairment correlates with damage to dopamine system Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 76 Psychiatric Effects of Methamphetamine Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 77 Self-Reports of Criminal Behavior • Legal charges (assault and weapons) – 47% “Violent Crime” – Wright 2001 • Aggressive actions – 43% of ER patients using exclusively methamphetamine – Compared: 20% of those with other drug and alcohol-induced disorders – Szuster 1990 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 78 Self Reports of “Anger Problems” in Meth Users – 62% of interviewees “problems with aggression” – Wright 2001 – 50% of patients in psych emergency room : “Aggressive Ideation” • Compare: 24% other drug and alcohol users – Szuster 1990 – 43% entering outpatient program – Zweben 2004 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 79 Implication of Aggression in Meth Users • Experienced aggression may motivate some for treatment • Safety concerns • Violence history • Anger management integrated into treatment programs Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 80 Other Effects of Use Over Time • Brain damage • Long-lasting psychosis • Thinking problems Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 81 Animal Studies of Brain Damage • Repeated low doses or single high dose methamphetamine in rats – Nerve endings die off – Nerve cells dies off • Decreased brain chemicals (dopamine and serotonin) Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 82 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 83 Effects of Damage to Dopamine Receptors • D2 receptor availability decreased – Caudate and putamen • Motor impaired • Cognitive impaired Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 84 Amphetamine and Psychosis • First reported three years after the first clinical trial in 1935 • Paranoia, delusions of reference, vivid hallucinations (esp. visual), formication Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 85 Amphetamine and Psychosis • Experimental induction of amphetamine psychosis – Non-users • Abrupt onset of paranoia (Griffith, 1968) – Amphetamine users • Psychosis in all subjects after 1-90 hours of ad lib use (Bell,1973) • Psychosis in 3 of 4 subjects after 72 hours (Angrist, 1970) Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 86 Methamphetamine and Psychosis • Variable course – Some persistent psychosis – Some recurrent psychosis • With repeat use – Smaller, single doses for some – Low dose Haldol prevented psychosis in some » Sato, 1986 • With significant stress » Yui, 2001 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 87 Cognitive Deficits From Methamphetamine Use • Animal studies • Human studies • Sara Simon 2002, 2004 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 88 Cognitive Effects in Naïve Adults • Improved performance in reaction time, coordination, vigilance • Effects most consistent in fatigued subjects Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 89 Abstinence and Cognitive Changes in Users • Baseline: meth users vs non-users • Meth users vs. early abstinence • Meth users vs. relapse – Relapses between weeks 1 and 14 of abstinence – Relapses lasted between 1 and 14 days » Simon 2004 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 90 Cognitive Tests* • Manipulation of information and perceptual speed • Ability to ignore irrelevant information • Executive Functioning • What do you see clinically that suggests cognitive problems? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 91 Cognitive Tests Cont.** • • • • Mental Flexibility Logical abilities Learning Memory Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 92 Findings • Meth users did worse than non-users – Many of the deficits similar to those in normal aging (episodic vs semantic memory) – Length of use did not seem to correspond to performance – Daily users significantly more impaired • Daily users > 10 times a day did worst » Simon 2000 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 93 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 94 Findings • Active users of methamphetamine did BETTER than newly abstinent subjects – Recall of words and Trailmaking B – Stroop Test – Relapse group did worst Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 95 Stroop Test** Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 96 Impact of Cognitive Changes • Treatment providers can expect cognitive problems to worsen, at least during the first three months of abstinence • Treatment may require strategies to compensate for cognitive problems • Unclear if cognitive performance ever returns to baseline Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 97 • Dopamine transporters decreased • Correlates with cognitive and motor deficits Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 98 Effect of Dopamine transporter decrease on performance Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 99 Impact of Cognitive Changes • Cognitive impairment related to treatment drop out • Neuropsychological testing may help tailor treatment Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 100 Abstinence and the Brain • Higher whole brain metabolism even after 11+ months abstinence – Inflammation? Gliosis? – Volkow, Am J Psychiatry 2001 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 101 Recovery of Dopamine Transporters • PET scan shows levels of dopamine transporters • Lower levels of dopamine transporters were associated with poorer performance on tests of memory and motor skills • Impairments in motor skills and memory continued Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 102 • Volkow, et al. 2001 Implications of Cognitive Impairment* Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 103 Matrix Model Obert, et al. 2002 • Impairment – Word recognition • Patient handouts were created that used primarily pictures • Family education lectures were videotaped Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 104 Brain Imaging Studies Conclude: • In drug addiction, the value of the drug and drug related stimuli is enhanced at the expense of other reinforcers [natural rewards]. Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 105 Brain Imaging Studies Conclude • This is a consequence of conditioned learning and of the resetting of reward thresholds as an adaptation to the high levels of stimulation induced by drugs of abuse. » Volkow, Fowler, Wang 2003 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 106 And more conclusions form imaging studies: • During exposure to the drug (or related cues) the memory of the expected reward results in overactivation of the reward and motivation circuits while decreasing activity in the cognitive control circuit. • An inability to inhibit [no brakes] the drive to seek and consume drugs. Volkow, Fowler, Wang 2003 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 107 Brains… Get Rewired by Drug Use Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 108 Summary • Interactive circuits: craving, drive memory, impulse control • Choices among available alternatives Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 109 Part 2 Applied Neuroscience – Understanding craving – Correlates of compulsion – Cognitive aspects of drug use – Emerging pharmacology for treatment of addiction Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 110 Pharmacology of Addiction • Pharmacologic Targets – Euphoria – Craving – Responsivity to cues – Impulse – Denial Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 111 Pharmacology of Addiction • Additional layer of understanding of the neuroscience of addiction Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 112 Pharmacology of Addiction: Blocking Euphoria* • Each drug of abuse has a specific receptor it needs to bind to for effect • What happens if that receptor becomes unavailable for binding? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 113 Targets of Medication • Methadone and Buprenorphine Activate opioid receptors • Naloxone Block opioid receptors • Nicotine gum/patch Activate nicotinic receptors Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 114 Pharmacologic treatment • Methadone – Slow release synthetic that eliminates w/d. Relieves craving – Some treatment centers have majority Rx opioid patients • Buprenorphine – Mixed agonist/ antagonist • Naltrexone – Long acting – Highly motivated patients – Support abstinence by blocking drug effects • Naloxone – Treat overdoses Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 115 Blocking Euphoria with Naltrexone An opiate receptor antagonist Blocks opiates access to receptor Heroin, methadone, Oxycontin: no where to bind Blocks drug effect Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 116 Naltrexone: Opioid Antagonist • Does not effect craving • Drug cravings leads to stopping Naltrexone and restarting drug • Long lasting Naltrexone injections may help with this • Not in US Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 117 Naltrexone: Opioid Antagonist • Alcohol effects mediated by beta-endorphins (endogenous opioid) • Reduce “reward” from alcohol by blocking receptor so endorphins cannot bind • Significant reduction in daily drinking • May be especially helpful for those with genetic predisposition – Opioid gene variant higher binding and higher risk of alcoholism and heroin addiction Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 118 Pharmacology of Addiction: Craving • Naltrexone decreased alcohol craving • Decreased and slowed alcohol consumption following “priming” compared to placebo Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 119 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 120 Craving as a Biological Event • Withdrawal Craving = GABA, Glutamate • Euphoric Recall = Dopamine, Endorphins, Glutamate • “Stress” = Serotonin, (dopamine) Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 121 Pharmacologic Treatment • Methadone and Buprenorphine require special license • Methadone managed in a program • MD needs training in how to effectively use buprenorphine Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 122 Pharmacology of Addiction: Euphoria and Craving • Buprenorphine for opioid addiction – Partial mu-opioid antagonist: blocks binding – Partial mu-opioid agonist: blocks craving Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 123 Suboxone • Buprenorphine plus Naloxone • Bup absorbed sublingually • Naloxone not absorbed – But if injected– precipitates withdrawal Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 124 Buprenorphine • Partial agonist • Controls cravings – Still some sense of euphoria • Safer than heroin – Not as addictive, little risk of overdose • Longer-lasting than methadone, not as long as LAAM – 24-60 hours • Lowest category drug for treatment of heroin addiction (cat. III) • Easier than methadone to manage Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 125 Buprenorphine • Opioids attach to receptors and lead to dopamine release • Stimulation of reward system Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 126 Buprenorphine • As opioids leave receptors, stimulation ends • Withdrawal and cravings Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 127 Buprenorphine • Bup attaches to empty opioid receptors • Mild stimulation of receptors (agonist) – “Ceiling” to amount of agonist effect • Prevent w/d and craving Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 128 Ceiling Effect Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 129 Buprenorphine • Bup binds tightly • Opioids cannot bind (antagonist) Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 130 Buprenorphine • At maintenance doses, bup remins tightly bound • Mild stimluation • Block other opioids Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 131 Buprenorphine • History – A treatment plan was approved by the FDA in 2003 • It included a buprenorphine pill during the initial tolerance phase • The maintenance phase uses a different pill, containing buprenorphine and naloxone **Not all buprenorphine is approved for heroin addiction treatment! Buprenorphine is not safe in an unsupervised setting! Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 132 Buprenorphine • Problems and Questions – There is little information on the effect of buprenorphine on pregnant women • A few cases have showed no problems – The withdrawal effects are not completely masked by buprenorphine • They are much milder Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 133 Clinical Case Studies Involving Buprenorphine • Buprenorphine is equally effective as moderate (60 mg per day) doses of methadone. • It is unclear if buprenorphine can be as effective as higher doses of methadone. Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 134 Clinical Case Studies Involving Buprenorphine • Buprenorphine is mildly reinforcing, encouraging good patient compliance. • After a year of buprenorphine plus counseling, as many as 75 percent have been retained in treatment compared to none in a placebo plus counseling condition. Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 135 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 136 Bupropion Blocks Binding Sites Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 137 Buprenorphine Taper • Buprenorphine is a partial mu opiate receptor agonist • Withdrawal symptoms are milder and course is shorter • Can be Rx in the community • Difficult to overdose and die • Typically, 3 day dosing than stop Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 138 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 139 Buprenorphine Taper • Still requires specialty training to Rx • In tolerant individuals can cause withdrawal if dose is to high or too low Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 140 Alcohol Dependence Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 141 Medications tried in Alcohol Dependence • • • • • • Naltrexone SSRI’s and other antidepressants Buspirone Ondansterone Acamprosate Valproic acid, carbamazepine, gabapentin • Corticotrophin Releasing Factor • Topiramate Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 142 Naltrexone for Alcohol Dependence • “In the Lab” Subjects reported decreased stimulation from Etoh and decreased craving. “Still needs further study” • Fairly large number of studies. Different methodologies with heterogeneous populations • Results have been mixed, but tend to be positive Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 143 Naltrexone for Alcohol Dependence Most studies in abstinent subjects show: 1. Prolonged time to first relapse 2. Increased % of days abstinence 3. In one study, Increased days to first drink 4. In one study at follow-up, relapse rates approached placebo after study ended Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 144 Naltrexone for Alcohol Dependence Two studies in non-abstinent subjects with relapse as outcome: 1. CBT and naltrexone better than CBT and placebo 2. Supportive therapy and naltrexone no better than supportive therapy and placebo Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 145 Naltrexone for Alcohol Dependence • Eligible: 1. Etoh dependent, medically stable and not on opiates 2. Willing to begin a supportive relationship with health care provider or support group and work toward abstinence 3. Willing to take medication Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 146 Naltrexone for Alcohol Dependence • Not eligible: 1. 2. 3. 4. • Liver failure Acute hepatitis Pregnant or Nursing Possibly the very obese Watch Drug Interactions with NonSteroidals Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 147 SSRI’s for Alcohol Dependence • In the laboratory, alcohol consumption decreased in animals given SSRI’s • But human studies have been mixed and disappointing Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 148 SSRI’s for Alcohol Dependence • In various studies and to various degrees each of the following disorders has been linked to Serotonin Dysregulation: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Alcohol Dependence Major Depression Anxiety Disorders Impulse Control Disorders Compulsive Disorders Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 149 SSRI’s for Alcohol Dependence • Studies involving SSRI treatment of Alcohol Dependence and other disorders which may involve serotonin dysregulation, when taken as a whole showed 1. Poor tolerance 2. Poor outcome 3. In some cases, worse outcome than placebo Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 150 SSRI’s for Alcohol Dependence • Researchers are now hypothesizing that subtypes of Alcohol dependent subjects account for uneven test results and that medications that effect different parts of the serotonin system may be effective for each different subtype. Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 151 Depression In Alcohol Dependence • In some studies, Depressed Alcoholics showed improvement in abstinence commensurate with their improvement in depression • In other studies, mild improvement in abstinence over what would be expected with improved depression • Some only showed improvement in Etoh and depression when naltrexone was added. Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 152 Buspirone and Alcohol Dependence • Buspirone is a partial agonist of a specific serotonin receptor, which has effects on large portions of serotonin system. • Buspirone is used in humans to treat anxiety. Takes several weeks to work. Well tolerated. Approved for doses up to 30mg/day, but higher doses routinely used. • Rats showed less drinking when on 153 buspirone.Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 Buspirone and Alcohol Dependence • Studies in Anxious Alcoholics comparing buspirone to placebo showed: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Better retention Slower return to heavy drinking Fewer drinking days Decreased anxiety Decreased anxiety did not fully account for medication effect Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 154 Ondansteron for Alcohol Dependence • Alcoholic subtypes 1 & 2 or A & B • Type 2 or B show early onset, high impulsivity and consistent serotonin dysregulation • Type 2 or B show increased side effects from SSRI’s and Increase in drinking with SSRI’s Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 155 Ondansteron for Alcohol Dependence • Ondansteron is an antagonist of (blocks) a specific serotonin receptor subtype • In humans it is used for severe nausea and vomiting from radiation or chemotherapy Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 156 Ondansteron for Alcohol Dependence • In several studies comparing ondansteron to placebo: 1. Increased number of days abstinent 2. Decreased number of drinking days • This was true for early onset alcoholics and not nearly as much for late onset Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 157 Disulfuram • Block aldehyde dehydrogenase and leads to build up of toxic metabolites when exposed to alcohol • Flushing, nausea, vomiting, Autonomic dysregulation. Occasionally Death • Does not appear to block biologic effects of Etoh. Thus, can “drink on top of it” if subject can do two things Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 158 Disulfuram • Two VA studies: 1. No better than placebo 2. Beneficial in older, more motivated and more medically ill patient population • “Impaired Impulsivity with Intact Intelligence” Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 159 Disulfuram • Disulfuram has been found to increase dopamine by inhibiting it’s metabolism • One study has shown that disulfuram & naltrexone had better outcome on drinking than each drug alone Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 160 Acamprosate (Campral) for Alcohol Dependence • Acamprosate decreases the effects of glutamate at a specific receptor • Takes a week to achieve “steady state” • Takes weeks to show effect • Usual dose is 2 grams per day • Major side effect is diarrhea • Increase in SI? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 161 Acamprosate for Alcohol Dependence • • • 16 European studies involving 4500 subjects Better consistency of findings compared to Naltrexone database Similar findings to Naltrexone: 1. Increased total abstinence days 2. Increased time to first drink Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 162 Acamprosate for Alcohol Dependence • Abstinence rates remained higher in treated group compared to placebo for up to 12 month after treatment was stopped. • Some other TX effects were lost • In one US study, better outcome if pts wanted abstinence and if not multi drug dependent • Current study in US of naltrexone & acamprosate (COMBINE) Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 163 Topiramate for Alcoholism • Anti-seizure medication • Used in some mood disorders • One study: promising Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 164 “Treating The Disease” • “Ingestion as a problem solving Technique” 1. 2. 3. 4. Can reinforce technique Can perpetuate use Can prevent adaptation and growth Can collude with “the great obsession” Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 165 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 166 Addiction as a Biological Event • Withdrawal Craving = GABA, Glutamate • Euphoric Recall = Dopamine, Endorphins, Glutamate • “Stress” = Serotonin, (dopamine) Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 167 The Stress Hormone Cycle Hypothalamus Stress Responses CRF Pituitary Gland ACTH CRF: Corticotropin Releasing Factor Adrenal Glands CORTISOL Kidneys Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 168 CRF Agonist/ Antagonist • Address the stress / relapse connection • Must avoid disrupting natural axis Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 169 Cocaine • Many medications tested • Recent promise from modafinil – Medication targeting narcolepsy – Wakefulness Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 170 Modafinil • Enhances transmission of glutamate • Appears to decrease reward and craving in cocaine users • Three trials underway Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 171 Methamphetamine Medications in Development Methamphetamine Phase I Bupropion Disulfiram Lobeline Reserpine Selegiline Phase II Baclofen Gabapentin Isradipine Olanzapine Ondansetron Selegiline Venlafaxine Planned Aripiprazole Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 172 Beyond Pharmacology • • • • Natural reinforcers Devaluing drug reinforcers Strengthen inhibitory control Strengthen executive function Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 173 Devaluing drug reinforcers • Even if drug euphoria is blocked, what about the cues that motivate drug seeking? • How to devalue the addicts biologically learned perception of the drug? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 174 Addiction Cycle Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 175 Experimental Drug Vaccines • Antibodies to bind and deactivate drugs • Use animal immune system or manufacture antibodies Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 176 What would a perfect medication be?* • What would be general properties? • What would the neurobiological targets be? • Can you draw a picture of the mechanism of action? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 177 Future of Addiction Pharmacology Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 178 Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 179 Case 1 39 year-old white divorced female – alcohol abuse disorder. History of both inpatient/outpatient detoxification with rehab multiple times. Longest period of abstinence - 4 days. No improvement with AA. Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 180 Design a Treatment Plan • Initial treatment • What assessment tools would you use? • What would be the initial placement? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 181 Treatment Plan • What are the brain structures that lead to relapse? • What would the role of medication be? • What is your chronic care plan? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 182 Case 2 • 24 year old man who began to abuse Rx stimulants in college and progressed to methamphetamine. Now smoking daily, legal problems, homeless, hearing voices and often paranoid. Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 183 Design a Treatment Plan • Initial treatment • What assessment tools would you use? • What would be the initial placement? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 184 Treatment Plan • What are the cues in his environment to watch out for? • What would the role of medication be? • Special challenges? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 185 Case 3 • 54 year old woman who lost her nursing license after she began to abuse narcotic pain medications. Was caught “doctor shopping” and is starting to buy meds off the street. Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 186 Design a Treatment Plan • Initial treatment • What assessment tools would you use? • What would be the initial placement? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 187 Treatment Plan • What would she do if she needed dental surgery? • What would the role of medication be? • Special challenges? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 188 Final Exercise* • Write down two or three ways that information from this workshop will impact your clinical work. • Describe a few specific examples Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 189 Wrap up* • Questions? • Comments? • How close to our goals did we come? Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 190 The End! • Thank you Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 191 Selected Bibliography • Dackis, C. and O’Brien, C. Neurobiology of addiction: treatment and public policy ramifications. Nature Neuroscience 8:11 1431-36 • Everitt, B.J. and Robbins, T.W. Neural systems of reinforcement for drug addiction:frokm actions to habits to compulsion, Nature Neuroscience 8:11 1481-89* • Nestler E. and Aghajan, G. (1997) Molecular and cellular basis of addiction. Science 278; 58-63* • Volkow, N. and Li, T. (2005) The neuroscience of addiction. Nature Neuroscience 8:11 1429-30* • Kreek M.J., Nielsen D.A., Butelman, E.R. and LaForge S. (2005) Genetic Influences on impulsivity, risk taking, stress responsivity and vulnerability to drug abuse and addiction Nature Neuroscience 8:11 1450-57* • Nestler E. and Aghajan G. Molecular and cellular basis of addiction. Science 278; 58-63* • Volkow N., Fowler J., and Wang G. 2003 The addicted human brain: insights from imaging studies. The Journal of Clinical Investigation 111, 1444-51* Neuroscience of Addiction Day 2 192