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Pharmacological Treatment of Addiction David A. Fiellin, M.D. Professor of Medicine Yale University School of Medicine Overview • Epidemiology of opioid dependence • Treatment of opioid dependence – Buprenoprhine – Office-based treatment • Epidemiology of alcohol problems • Treatment of alcohol problems – Naltrexone, acamprosate, disulfiram Opioid Dependence (DSM-IV, 3 or more within one year) • Physical Dependence – Tolerance – Withdrawal • Loss of control (addiction) – Larger amounts/longer period than intended – Inability to/persistent desire to cut down or control – Increased amount of time spent in activities necessary to obtain opioids – Social, occupational and recreational activities given up or reduced – Opioid use is continued despite adverse consequences Epidemiology • Prescription opioids – National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 2006 • > 12 million reported non-medical use of prescription opioids • Estimated 1.6 million met criteria for prescription opioid abuse or dependence • Heroin – National Household Survey on Drug Abuse, 2006 • > 500,000 reported past year heroin use • Approximately 323,000 individuals met criteria for heroin abuse or dependence • Combined, 2 million opioid dependent in U.S. – In 2005 only 331,000 individuals entered treatment for opioid dependence Prescription of Opioids • Between 1994 & 2003, prescriptions for: – Non-controlled drugs increased by 57% – Controlled substances increased by 154%. Trescot et al. Pain Physician, 2008; 11: S5-62. Nonmedical Use of Prescription Drugs Past Month Users, Ages 12 and Older (in Millions) Marijuana 14.6 Prescription Drugs Cocaine 6.2 2.0 (incl. crack) Crack 0.6 Ecstasy 0.7 Meth 0.6 Inhalants 0.6 Heroin 0.2 LSD 0.1 0 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 Source: SAMHSA, 2002 National Survey on Drug Use and Health. 15 Annual sales of prescription opioids and unintentional overdose death 1990 - 2006 8 600 6 400 5 4 300 3 200 2 Deaths per 100,000 Opioid sales (mg per person) 100 1 0 Sales in mg/person 500 '90 '91 '92 '93 '94 '95 '96 '97 '98 '99 '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 Crude rate per 100,000 7 0 Source: Paulozzi, CDC, Congressional testimony, 2007 Brain’s Reward pathways Changes in Neurobiology • Repeated exposure to short acting opioids leads to neuronal adaptations – Mesolimbic dopaminergic system • adaptations in G protein-coupled receptors • up regulation of cyclic cAMP second messenger pathway • changes in transcription and translation • Adaptations – Mediate tolerance, withdrawal, craving, self-adminstration – Provide insight into the chronic and relapsing nature of opioid dependence – Form basis of pharmacotherapies to stabilize neuronal circuits Opioid Treatment Pharmacologic Treatment of Opioid Dependence • Pharmacologic withdrawal - “detoxification” • Opioid antagonist treatment – Naltrexone • Opioid agonist treatment – Methadone – Buprenorphine Poor results with detoxification Remaining in treatment (nr) Kakko, Lancet 2003 20 15 10 Detoxification 5 Maintenance 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 Treatment duration (days) 300 350 Opioid Agonist Treatment • Rationale – Cross-tolerance • prevent withdrawal • relieve craving for opioids – Narcotic blockade • block or attenuate euphoric effect of exogenous opioids How effective is opioid agonist treatment? Buprenorphine, Methadone, LAAM: Treatment Retention Percent Retained 100 80 73% Hi Meth 60 58% Bup 40 53% LAAM 20 20% Lo Meth 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Study Week HIV Seroconversion • Metzger, 1993: – 2 cohorts of patients • 103 out-of-treatment intravenous opiate users • 152 subjects receiving methadone treatment – HIV antibody conversion, 18-months • 22% of those out-of-treatment • 3.5% of those receiving methadone treatment Treatment vs. Addiction Route Methadone or buprenorphine Heroin Oral, sublingual IV, IN 30 minutes Immediate 24-36 hours 3-6 hours Absent Marked Onset Duration Euphoria Buprenorphine • Partial agonist at mu receptor • Low abuse and diversion potential, especially when combined with naloxone • Can be prescribed from the office by a physician • Sub-lingual tablet • Daily or thrice weekly dosing Intrinsic Activity: Full Agonist (Methadone), Partial Agonist (Buprenorphine), Antagonist (Naloxone) 100 90 Full Agonist (Methadone, oxycodone) 80 70 Intrinsic Activity 60 Partial Agonist (Buprenorphine) 50 40 30 20 10 Antagonist (Naltrexone) 0 -10 -9 -8 -7 Log Dose of Opioid -6 -5 -4 Effects of Buprenorphine Dose on µ-Opioid Receptor Availability in a Representative Subject MRI Bup 00 mg Binding Potential (Bmax/Kd) Bup 02 mg 4Bup 16 mg 0- Bup 32 mg Federal Efforts to Increase Access Fiellin and O’Connor, NEJM 2002 • Congress (2000) • Drug Addiction Treatment Act • Allows qualifying physicians to use approved schedule III-V medications • Qualifying physician either certified in Addiction Medicine/Psychiatry or complete 8 hour training • FDA and DEA (2002) • Approves buprenorphine and buprenorphine/naloxone for treatment of opioid dependence, schedule III How effective is office-based buprenorphine treatment? Self-Reported Frequency of Illicit Opioid Use in Opioid-Dependent Patients Receiving Buprenorphine-Naloxone in Primary Care Fiellin D et al. N Engl J Med 2006;355:365-374 Retention among Opioid-Dependent Patients Receiving BuprenorphineNaloxone in Primary Care Fiellin D et al. N Engl J Med 2006;355:365-374 Percent opioid negative 6 Weeks of Opioid Abstinence 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Heroin only Moore, JGIM, 2007 Heroin & Prescription Prescription only 66 Physicians and 31 Treatment Programs listed in Minnesota Trained, Registered and Prescribing Physicians U.S. January 2009 8295 Alcohol Treatment Patterns of Alcohol Use: Epidemiology 1. Abstainers 2. Moderate Drinkers 3. At Risk General Population† 40% 35% General Medical Practice‡ ------- 20% 20-35% 5% 5-10% 4. Alcohol Abuse 5. Alcohol Dependence † National Longitudinal Alcohol Epidemiology Study 1992, National Comorbidity Study, 1992 ‡ Wallace; BMJ 1988;297:663-8, Flemming JAMA 1997;277:1039-45 Terminology For Alcohol Use Behaviors Term Description Moderate Drinking men: women: over 65: < 2 drinks/day < 1 drink/day < 1 drink/day At Risk Drinking men: > 14 drinks/week > 4 drinks /occasion > 7 drinks/week > 3 drinks/occasion women: What is a drink? • 14 grams of alcohol – 12 ounces of beer – 5 ounces of wine – 1.5 ounces of distilled spirits Alcohol Treatment Pharmacotherapy Disulfiram ADH Ethanol ALDH Acetaldehyde Acetate Build up of acetaldehyde causes: -Flushing -Headache -Nausea -Dizziness -Palpitations Disulfiram Efficacy • In a large double-blinded study, disulfiram was no better than placebo in helping patients remain abstinent • A subset of relapsed patients, who were older and more socially stable, drank less frequently when given disulfiram • Greater efficacy has been shown with supervised disulfiram administration Fuller PK, et al. JAMA 1986;256:1449-55 Prescribing Disulfiram • Start at 250mg daily and titrate to 500mg daily • Contraindications: – Recent alcohol use – Pregnancy – Cognitive impairment • Side effects: – Hepatotoxicity – Neuropathy Naltrexone 1. Mechanism of Action: opioid receptor blockade 2. Effects: decreased craving and alcohol consumption 3. Dose: 50 mg/day 4. Side Effects: nausea (10%), headache 5. Contraindications: opioid dependence severe liver disease Combined Analysis of Yale and U Penn Studies of Naltrexone • 12 week, double-blind, placebo controlled • Concurrent Psychotherapy: – Once weekly individual therapy (Yale) – Day Hospital (1 month), twice weekly group (2 months) (U Penn) • Abstinence rates: Naltrexone: 54% Placebo: 31% ------------O’Malley et al., Psychiatric Annals 1995;25:681-88. Naltrexone: Efficacy • Meta-analysis of 14 studies* – Relapse to heavy drinking • Naltrexone 428/1142 (37%), control 445/930 (48%) – Odds ratio for relapse • 0.62 (95% CI 0.52,0.75) • COMBINE Study† (Naltrexone X 16 w, n=302) – Increased abstinence over placebo (81% vs. 75%) – Reduced risk of a heavy drinking day (HR 0.72, p<0.02) *Carmen B, Addiction 2004; † Anton RF, JAMA, 2004 Prescribing Naltrexone • 25 to 50 mg daily taken after a meal for at least 3-4 months • Depot form available doses studied 190-380 mg – 25% reduction in heavy drinking days • Contraindications: – Opioid use – Pregnancy • Side Effects: – Nausea Garbutt JC, JAMA, 2005, Anton R, NEJM, 2008 Project Combine: Design Anton, R. F. et al. JAMA 2006;295:2003-2017. Project Combine: Effect Size Estimates and Hazard Ratios for Primary Outcomes Anton, R. F. et al. JAMA 2006;295:2003-2017. Copyright restrictions may apply. Injectable Naltrexone: Mean Heavy Drinking Event Rate Garbutt, J. C. et al. JAMA 2005;293:1617-1625. Acamprosate • Alcohol is an agonist at the inhibitory GABA receptors and antagonist at excitatory glutamate receptors • Acamprosate modulates alcohol effects: – GABA-analogue – Modulates action at NMDA receptor Acamprosate: Efficacy • Meta-analysis of 7 placebo controlled trials* – Acamprosate (n=1195), placebo (n=1027) – Proportion of patients continually abstinent at one year 23% for acamprosate group, 15% for placebo group • COMBINE study† (Acamprosate arm, n=300) – No significant effect on drinking over placebo *Carmen B, Addiction 2004; †Anton, RF, JAMA 2004 Prescribing Acamprosate • 666 mg po TID; start after a period of abstinence • Contraindications – CrCl < 30 cc/min – Pregnancy • Side effects – Diarrhea Topiramate • Reduces corticomesolimbic dopamine release – Agonist at GABA – Antagonist at glutamate • Not FDA approved Topiramate: Efficacy • N=371, double blind randomized placebo controlled trial • Intention-to-treat analysis Reduction in number of heavy drinking days Increase in abstinence days (baselinewk 14) Johnson BA, JAMA 2007 Topiramate 44% Placebo 52% p 0.002 10% to 38% 9% to 29% 0.002 Summary • Opioid and alcohol problems are common • Effective therapies for opioid dependence and alcohol use disorders exist • Office-based treatment of addictive disorders may help increase access to treatment and decrease stigma