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Section 33: Addiction Medications

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Title: Section 33: Addiction Medications


1
Section 33Addiction Medications
  • Richard A. Rawson, Ph.D., Professor
  • Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human
    Behavior
  • David Geffen School of Medicine
  • University of California at Los Angeles

2
Alcohol and Benzodiazepines
3
(No Transcript)
4
Alcohol
  • Still the most popular drug
  • In some societies over 80 of population drinks
  • 8 drink daily, peak in males 60 yrs (23). 40
    drink weekly
  • At-risk drinking now defined as
  • risks of harm in the long term (chronic harm)
  • risks of harm in the short term (acute harm)

5
Risky Drinking Levels
(for chronic harm)
6
Predisposing Factors for High Risk Drinking
  • Family history of alcohol problems
  • Childhood problem behaviours related to impulse
    control
  • Poor coping responses in the face of stressful
    life events
  • Depression, divorce or separation
  • Drinking partner
  • Working in a male dominated environment

7
Alcohol Effects on Brain
  • No single receptor - interacts with and alters
    function of many different cellular components
  • Primary targets are GABA, NMDA glutamate,
    serotonin and ATP receptors
  • Stimulates dopamine and opioid systems
  • Effects of chronic consumption are opposite to
    acute because of homeostatic compensation.

8
Pharmacokinetics
2 excreted unchanged in sweat, breath urine
  • Rapidly absorbed into blood by stomach (20)
    and small intestine (80)
  • Distributed in body fluids (not fat)
  • 1 standard drink per hour raises BAC by approx.
    0.010.03 g.

Alcohol
9
Effects of Alcohol Intoxication
.01-.02 Clearing of head
.02-.05 Mild throbbing rear of head, slightly dizzy, talkative, euphoria, confidence, clumsy, flippant remarks
.06-1.0 ? inhibitions, ? talkativeness, ? motor co-ord, ? pulse, stagger, loud singing!
0.2-0.3 Poor judgement, nausea, vomiting
0.3-0.4 Blackout, memory loss, emotionally labile
0.4 Stupor, breathing reflex threatened, deep anaesthesia, death
10
Binge Drinking
  • Binge drinking can lead to
  • increased risk taking
  • poor judgment/decision making
  • misadventure/accidents
  • increased risky sexual behaviour
  • increased violence
  • suicide

11
Harms Associated with High-risk Alcohol Use
  • Hypertension, CVA
  • Cardiomyopathy
  • Peripheral neuropathy
  • Impotence
  • Cirrhosis and hepatic or bowel carcinomas
  • Cancer of lips, mouth, throat and esophagus
  • Cancer of breast
  • Fetal alcohol syndrome

12
Alcohol-related Brain Injury
  • Cognitive impairment may result from consumption
    levels of gt70 grams per day
  • Thiamine deficiency leads to
  • Wernickes encephalopathy
  • Korsakoffs psychosis
  • Frontal lobe syndrome
  • Cerebellar degeneration
  • Trauma

13
Interventions and Treatment for Alcohol-related
Problems
  • Screening and Assessment ? individualised
    interventions
  • Brief intervention and Harm Reduction strategies
  • Withdrawal management
  • Relapse prevention / goal setting strategies
  • Controlled drinking programs
  • Residential programs
  • Self-help groups

14
Brief Intervention
  • Consider the patients
  • perspective on drinking
  • attitudes to drinking goals
  • significant others
  • short-term objectives.
  • Provide
  • information on standard drinks, risks, and risk
    levels
  • encouragement to identify positive alternatives
    to drinking
  • self-help manuals
  • follow-up session

15
Two Steps Towards Alcohol Brief Intervention (BI)
  • 1. Screening
  • E.g. the alcohol AUDIT, a 10-item questionnaire
  • 2. Intervention
  • Information
  • Brief counselling
  • Advice
  • Referral (if required)

16
Harm Minimizing Strategies
  • Benefits of cutting down or cutting out
  • save money
  • be less depressed
  • lose weight
  • less hassles for family
  • have more energy
  • sleep better
  • better physical shape
  • Reduce the risk of
  • liver disease
  • cancer
  • brain damage
  • high blood pressure
  • accidents
  • injury
  • legal problems

17
Withdrawal
  • Usually occurs 624 hours after last drink
  • tremor
  • anxiety and agitation
  • sweating
  • nausea and vomiting
  • headache
  • sensory disturbances - hallucinations.
  • Severity depends on
  • pattern, quantity and duration of use
  • previous withdrawal history
  • patient expectations
  • physical and psychological wellbeing of the
    patient (illness or injury)
  • other drug use/dependence
  • the setting in which withdrawal takes place.

18
deCrespigny Cusack (2003) Adapted from NSW
Health Detoxification Clinical Practice
Guidelines (20002003)
19
Home-based Withdrawal
  • Medications for Symptomatic Treatment
  • Diazepam
  • Thiamine ?100 mg daily multivitamins
  • Antiemetic
  • Analgesia (e.g. paracetamol)
  • Antidiarrhoeal.

20
Post-withdrawal Management
  • Treatment options
  • retain in treatment, ongoing management
  • seek referral
  • Considerations
  • patients wants (abstinence or reduced
    consumption, remaining your patient)
  • severity of problems
  • Pharmacotherapies
  • acamprosate
  • naltrexone
  • disulfiram (not PBS listed)

21
Naltrexone and Acamprosate
  • Effective
  • Work well with variety of supportive treatments
    e.g. brief intervention, CBT, supportive group
    therapy
  • Start following alcohol withdrawal proven
    efficacy where goal is abstinence, uncertain with
    goal of moderation
  • No contraindication while person is still
    drinking, although efficacy uncertain
  • Generally safe and well tolerated

22
Clinical Guidelines
  • Naltrexone 50 mg daily
  • indicated especially where strong craving for
    alcohol after a priming dose
  • ? likelihood of lapse progressing to relapse
  • LFTs lt x3 above normal
  • side effects nausea headache.
  • Acamprosate 600 mg (2 tabs) tds
  • indicated especially where susceptible to
    drinking cues or drinking triggered by withdrawal
    symptoms
  • low potential for drug interactions
  • need normal renal function
  • side effects diarrhoea, headache, nausea, itch.

23
Disulfiram
  • Acetaldehyde dehydrogenase inhibitor 200 mg
    daily
  • ? unpleasant reaction with alcohol ingestion
  • Indications alcohol dependence goal of
    abstinence need for external aid to abstinence
  • Controlled trials ? abstinence rate in first 36
    months
  • Best results with supervised ingestion
    contingency management strategies

24
VIVITROL
  • A Brief Clinical Overview

25
Comprehensive Alcohol Dependence Treatment
  • Cortex
  • Role
  • Decision making
  • Thinking
  • Reasoning
  • Rationalizing
  • Psychosocial treatments
  • 12-step fellowships
  • Faith-based support

25
26
Oral Naltrexone Discontinuation Rates
US Department of Health and Human
Services/SAMHSA study (2004)1
Kranzler et al., Addiction 20084
  • Pharmacy claims for NTX-PO 1,4
  • Guidelines recommend treatment from 3-6 months to
    2 years1
  • The vast majority did not persist in refills for
    a reasonable course of treatment 1,4
  • Both analyses show that approximately 50 failed
    to refill even beyond 30 days1,4
  • Two additional independent studies obtained
    similar discontinuation rates2,3
  • 1. Harris KM, et al. Psychiatr Serv. 200455221.
  • 2. Hermos JA, et al. Alcohol Clin Exp Res.
    2004281229-1235.
  • 3. Un H, Addiction Health Services Research
    Conference, Boston 2008
  • 4. Kranzler HR, et al. Addiction.
    2008103(11)1801-1808.

26
27
Medications for Alcohol Dependence
1. Antabuse full Prescribing Information.
Odyssey Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 2. ReVia full
Prescribing Information. Duramed Pharmaceuticals,
Inc. 3.Campral full Prescribing Information.
Merck Santé s.a.s. 4.VIVITROLFull Prescribing
Information. Alkermes, Inc.
Based on a month with 30 days.
27
28
What is VIVITROL?
  • VIVITROL is NOT1
  • Addictive
  • Aversive (e.g. disulfiram)
  • Euphorigenic (i.e. pleasure producing)
  • VIVITROL is1
  • An opioid blocker (i.e. antagonist)
  • Extended-release (30 days)
  • Compatible with psychosocial treatments,
    antidepressants and Alcoholics Anonymous2
  • Administered by a healthcare professional
  • (use can be monitored)
  • VIVITROL Full Prescribing Information. Alkermes,
    Inc.
  • Gromov, I., et al. AMERSA, Washington, DC,
    November 8, 2007.

28
29
VIVITROL Indication
  • VIVITROL is indicated for the treatment of
    alcohol dependence in patients who are able to
    abstain from alcohol in an outpatient setting
    prior to initiation of treatment with VIVITROL.
  • Patients should not be actively drinking at the
    time of initial VIVITROL administration.
  • Treatment with VIVITROL should be part of a
    comprehensive management program that includes
    psychosocial support.

VIVITROLfull prescribing information.
Cambridge, MA Alkermes, Inc May 2009.
29
30
Opioid Receptors and Alcohol Dependence
  • 1.Gianoulakis C. Alcohol Health Res World.
    199822202-210.
  • 2. Woodward JJ. Principles of Addiction Medicine.
    3rd ed. 2003101-118.

30
31
VIVITROL A Targeted Approach
The mechanism by which VIVITROL exerts its
effects in alcohol-dependent patients is not
entirely understood.
  • 1. VIVITROL full Prescribing Information.
    Alkermes, Inc.
  • 2. Oswald LM, et al. PhysiolBehav.
    200481339-358.
  • 3.Kenna GA, et al. Am J Health Syst Pharm.
    2004612272-2279.
  • 4.Gianoulakis C. Alcohol Health Res World.
    199822202-210.

31
32
VIVITROL Eliminates DailyAdherence Decisions1
  • VIVITROL utilizes a delivery system that
  • Provides a month of medication in a single dose
  • Adherence to any treatment program is essential
    for successful outcomes
  • Administration by a healthcare provider
    ensuresthat the patient receives the medication
    as directed

addressing patient adherence systematically
will maximize the effectiveness of these
medications.2 Updated NIAAA Clinicians Guide
1. Dean RL. Front Biosci. 200510643-655. 2.
NIAAA. 2007. NIH publication 07-3769.
32
33
VIVITROL Provided Rapid Results
When VIVITROL was added to counseling Reductions
were rapid1
  • Post hoc analysis of a randomized, double-blind,
    placebo-controlled study. Patients had 2 heavy
    drinking episodes/week during the month prior to
    screening. Inclusion did not require
    detoxification, abstinence or intent to abstain
    from alcohol1
  • VIVITROL is indicated for the treatment of
    alcohol dependence in patients who are able to
    abstain from alcohol in an outpatient setting
    prior to initiation of
    treatment with VIVITROL. Patients should not be
    actively drinking at the
    time of initial VIVITROL administration2
  • Approval of VIVITROL was based on a subset of
    patients who were able to abstain for 7 days
    prior to treatment initiation1

Counseling with PLACEBO (n209)
Counseling with VIVITROL (n205)
The counseling used with all subjects was
BRENDA, a low-intensity intervention designed to
facilitate direct feedback of alcohol-related
consequences. BRENDA consists of biopsychosocial
assessment, reporting the assessment to the
patient, an empathetic approach, identified and
stated patient needs, direct advice regarding
drinking behavior, and assessment of treatment
adherence.
  1. Ciraulo D et al. J Clin Psychiatry.
    200869(2)190-195.
  2. VIVITROL Full Prescribing Information.
    Cambridge, MA. Alkermes, Inc. 2008.

33
34
VIVITROL Significantly Reduces Drinking
Days1,2
Reductions were substantial1
Counseling with VIVITROL (n28)
Counseling with PLACEBO (n28)
Baseline (n56)
  • According to the SAMHSA/CSAT, 4 days is the US
    norm (median duration) for detoxification2
  • Approval of VIVITROL was based on a subset of
    patients who were able to abstain for 7 days
    prior to treatment initiation1
  • These results are from a post hoc subgroup
    analysis of a 6-month, multicenter, double-blind,
    placebo-controlled clinical trial of alcohol
    dependent patients. This subset analysis
    evaluated patients who were abstinent for 4 or
    more days prior to treatment initiation1
  • OMalley SS et al. J ClinPsychopharmacol.
    200727(5)507-512.
  • Drug and Alcohol Services Information System. The
    DASIS report discharges from detoxification
    2000. http//oas.samhsa.gov/2K4/detoxDischarges/de
    toxDischarges.pdf. Published July 9, 2004.
    Accessed January 23, 2008.

.
34
35
VIVITROL Sustained Abstinence1
VIVITROL prolonged initial abstinence
  • Results are from a post hoc subgroup analysis
    of a 6-month multicenter, double-blind,
  • placebo controlled clinical trial of alcohol
    dependents who were abstinent for 4 or more days
  • prior to treatment initiation.
  • The approval of VIVITROL was based on a subset
    of patients who were able to
  • abstain for 7 days prior to treatment
    initiation.

1. OMalley SS, et al. J ClinPsychopharm.
200727507-512.
35
36
VIVITROL Sustained Reduction in Heavy Drinking
Among patients receiving VIVITROL or placebo in
the 6-month trial
Data on file. Alkermes, Inc.
36
37
Summary of Efficacy Results1,2
In clients who were abstinent during the week
before treatment initiation, VIVITROL and
counseling, as compared to placebo and
counseling, provided
  • Rapid results
  • Substantial reduction in drinking days
  • Prolonged initial abstinence
  • Sustained continuous abstinence through the
    6-month study
  • Sustained reduction in heavy drinking days
    through 18 months
  • Substantial reduction in holiday drinking

1. OMalley SS, et al. J ClinPsychopharmacol.
200727507-512. 2. VIVITROL Full Prescribing
Information. Alkermes, Inc.
37
38
Safety Profile
  • During clinical trials
  • Treatment with extended-release naltrexone was
    generally well tolerated
  • Safety profile is based on more than 900 patients
  • Adverse events in the majority of patients were
    mild or moderate
  • Discontinuation rates due to adverse events
  • 9 in patients treated with VIVITROL
  • 7 in patients treated with placebo
  • The safety profile of patients treated with
    VIVITROL concomitantly with antidepressants was
    similar to that of patients taking VIVITROL
    without antidepressants1
  • No significant increase in mean AST or ALT
    levels2
  • VIVITROL Full Prescribing Information. Alkermes,
    Inc.
  • Garbutt JC, et al. JAMA. 20052931617-1625.

38
39
Most Common Adverse Events
Occurring in gt10 of patients
VIVITROL Placebo
Injection site reaction 69 50
Nausea 33 11
Headache 25 18
Asthenic conditions 23 12
Anorexia, appetite decreased NOS, appetite disorder NOS 14 3
Vomiting 14 6
Insomnia, sleep disorder 14 12
Dizziness 13 4
Diarrhea 13 10
Anxiety 12 8
Abdominal pain 11 8
Pharyngitis 11 11
Injection site reaction (ISR) included
tenderness, induration, pain, and pruritus.
The dropout rate due to ISR was 3.
39
VIVITROL Full Prescribing Information. Alkermes,
Inc.
40
Dosage and Administration
  • VIVITROL is given as an intramuscular (IM)
    gluteal injection every 4 weeks or once a month
  • VIVITROL should not be given subcutaneously or in
    the adipose layer
  • VIVITROL must not be administered intravenously
  • VIVITROL should be administeredby a healthcare
    professional, into alternating buttocks each
    month
  • VIVITROL should be injected into the upper outer
    quadrant of the buttock, deep into the muscle-not
    the adipose.

VIVITROL Full Prescribing Information.
Alkermes, Inc.
40
41
Questions? Comments?
42
Benzodiazepines
  • Benzodiazepinesthe opium of the masses
  • Malcolm Lader, Neuroscience, 1978

43
Medical Indications for Use
  • Anxiolytic chronic / phobic anxiety panic
    attacks
  • Sedative and hypnotic sleep disturbance
    anaesthesia / premed
  • Anticonvulsant status epilepticus, myoclonic
    photic epilepsy
  • Muscle relaxant muscle spasm / spasticity
  • Alcohol withdrawal

44
Patterns of Use
  • BZDs are one of the most prescribed drugs
  • 4 of all prescriptions from General
    Practitioners are for benzodiazepines (BZDs)
  • Predictors for BZD prescription include
  • being female
  • being elderly
  • being an established patient
  • attending a busy doctor, or a doctor in inner
    urban area
  • Over 40 of prescriptions given to people gt70
    years
  • Night time use tends to increase with age
  • 58 of current users report daily use for gt6
    months.

45
Benzos and Long-term Use
  • Long-term use is common and associated with
  • altered use patterns (from night time to daytime
    use)
  • excessive sedation
  • cognitive impairment
  • increased risk of accidents
  • adverse sleep effects
  • dependence and withdrawal (even at therapeutic
    doses)
  • BZDs have an additive effect with alcohol / other
    CNS depressants, increasing the risk of harm
  • BZDs have limited long-term efficacy.

46
Pharmacodynamics
  • Rapidly absorbed orally (slower rate of
    absorption IM)
  • Lipid soluble - differences determine rate of
    passage through blood brain barrier i.e.
  • ? lipophilic ? ? speed of onset
  • Duration of action variable
  • ? lipophilic ? ? duration of action due to
    distribution in adipose tissue.

47
Metabolism
  • Metabolised in the liver mostly oxidative
    transformation prior to conjugation with
    glucuronic acid for urinary excretion
  • Elimination half life (drug active metabolites)
    ranges from 8 gt60 hours, if short half life
    no active metabolites rapidly attains steady
    state with minimal accumulation.

48
Neurotransmission
  • Potentiate neurotransmission mediated by GABA
    (main inhibitory neurotransmitter), therefore
    neurons are more difficult to excite
  • Specific neuronal membrane receptors for BZD
    closely associated with synaptic GABA receptors
  • Receptors distributed through CNS, concentrated
    in reticular formation limbic systems, also
    peripheral binding sites
  • Further understanding of the effects of BZDs on
    receptor subgroups may lead to the development of
    non-sedating anxiolytic BZDs.

49
Effects Low Dose
  • Other effects
  • Drowsiness, lethargy, fatigue
  • Impaired concentration, coordination, memory
  • Reduced ability to think and learn
  • Emotional anaesthesia
  • Clumsiness, ataxia
  • Depression
  • Mood swings
  • Blurred vision and/or vertigo
  • Light-headedness
  • Nausea, constipation, dry mouth, loss of appetite.
  • Short term
  • Sedation
  • Anxiety relief
  • Anticonvulsant properties
  • Can usually attend daily business (though should
    not drive in first 2 weeks of treatment).

50
Drug Alcohol Interactions
  • CNS depressants
  • e.g. Benzodiazepines
  • Antipsychotics, antidepressants
  • Opioid analgesics, antihistamines (some)
  • Hypoglycaemics (chlorpropamide), metronidazole,
    cephalosporins (some)

Confusion, depressed respiration Decreased
metabolism, toxicity CNS depression CNS
depression Facial flushing, headache
51
Overdose
  • Benzodiazepines are the most commonly implicated
    drug in overdose cases
  • On their own, unlikely to cause death despite
    causing respiratory depression
  • Serious / potentially fatal implications when
    used in combination with other CNS depressants.

52
Overdose Response
  • Overdose depresses the conscious state and
    respiratory system
  • Flumazenil
  • a BZD antagonist which reverses BZD overdose,
    though contraindicated outside the Emergency
    Department
  • precipitates seizures in
  • chronic BZD users
  • pre-existing epilepsy
  • tricyclic antidepressant users
  • concurrent amphetamine or cocaine users.

53
Assessment
  • Review BZD medication
  • initial reasons for use
  • type of BZD, response to, and patterns of use
  • side-effects reported or observed
  • current / past withdrawal history and symptoms
  • Obtain physical history (concurrent medical
    problems)
  • Mental health history (e.g. depression)
  • Other drug (and alcohol / prescription drug) use
  • Discuss options
  • risks of continued and prolonged use
  • withdrawal potential / risks, management options.

54
Dependence
  • Two groups of patients are especially likely to
    develop dependence
  • 1. Low dose dependence occurs among women and
    elderly prescribed low doses over long time
    periods (up to 40 experience withdrawal
    symptoms)
  • 2. High dose dependence occurs among polydrug
    users.

55
Withdrawal
  • 40 of people on long-term therapeutic BZD doses,
    will experience withdrawal if abruptly ceased
  • Symptoms occur within 2 short-acting to 7 days
    long- acting forms
  • BZD withdrawal
  • is not life-threatening usually protracted
  • initial symptoms/problems re-emerge on cessation
  • issues usually more complicated on cessation
  • Seizures uncommon (unless high dose use or abrupt
    withdrawal, alcohol use)
  • Two main groups of dedicated users
  • prescribed (older women)
  • high level, erratic polydrug use.

56
Withdrawal Severity
  • Severity of withdrawal is dependent on
  • pattern and extent of use (duration, quantity,
    type (half-life))
  • withdrawal experience (prior symptoms, success,
    complications)
  • coexisting physical / mental health problems.

57
3 Areas of BZD Withdrawal
  • Anxiety and anxiety-related symptoms
  • anxiety, panic attacks, hyperventilation, tremor
  • sleep disturbance, muscle spasms, anorexia,
    weight loss
  • visual disturbance, sweating
  • dysphoria.
  • Perceptual distortions
  • hypersensitivity to stimuli
  • abnormal body sensations
  • depersonalisation/derealisation.
  • Major events
  • seizures (grand mal type)
  • precipitation of psychosis.

58
Withdrawal Management
  • Obtain an accurate consumption history
  • Calculate diazepam equivalent and substitute.
    Reduce gradually over 68 weeks (or longer e.g.
    34 months)
  • Reduce dose by a fixed rate at weekly intervals,
    (usually 1020 initially, then 510/week, or
    slower when dose at 15 mg or less)
  • Dose at regular times
  • Regularly review and titrate dose to match
    symptoms
  • If symptoms re-emerge, dose may be plateaued for
    12 weeks, or increased before reduction resumed
  • Provide support, not pharmacological alternatives
    for conditions such as insomnia and anxiety.

59
Inpatient Withdrawal
  • Inpatient withdrawal management is necessary if
    the patient
  • is using gt 50 mg diazepam equivalent for gt14 days
  • has a history of alcohol or other drug use or
    dependence
  • has concurrent medical or psychiatric problem
  • has a history of withdrawal seizures
  • if significant symptoms are predicted
  • is in an unstable social situation
  • has previous poor compliance / doubtful
    motivation
  • is in concurrent methadone stabilisation.

60
Drug Interactions
  • BZDs either potentiate / increase effects or
    interfere with metabolism or absorption of
  • alcohol
  • antidepressants and antihistamines
  • disulfiram, cimetidine, erythromycin
  • anticonvulsants
  • anticoagulants, oral diabetic agents
  • cisapride.

61
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