Scientists find anticonvulsant drug helps marijuana
smokers kick the habit
April 24th, 2012 in
Addiction
Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute have found clinical evidence that the drug gabapentin, currently on the market to treat neuropathic pain and epilepsy, helps people to quit smoking marijuana (cannabis). Unlike traditional addiction treatments, gabapentin targets stress systems in the brain that are activated by drug withdrawal.
In a 12-week trial of 50 treatment-seeking cannabis
users, those who took gabapentin used less cannabis, experienced fewer
withdrawal symptoms such as sleeplessness, and scored higher on tests of
attention, impulse-control, and other cognitive skills, compared to patients
who received a placebo. If these results are confirmed by ongoing larger
trials, gabapentin could become the first FDA-approved pharmaceutical treatment
for cannabis dependence. "A lot of other drugs have been tested for their
ability to decrease cannabis use and withdrawal, but this is the first to show
these key effects in a controlled treatment study," said Barbara J. Mason,
the Pearson Family Chair and Co-Director of the Pearson Center for Alcoholism
and Addiction Research at Scripps Research. "The other nice thing about
gabapentin is that it is already widely prescribed, so its safety is less
likely to be an issue." Mason led the new gabapentin study, recently
published online ahead of print by the journal Neuropsychopharmacology.
Stress Circuits
Addiction researchers have long known that
recreational drugs hook users by disrupting the normal tuning of their brains'
reward and motivation circuitry. But as scientists at Scripps Research and
other institutions have shown in animal studies, cannabis withdrawal after
prolonged heavy use also leads to the long-term activation of basic stress
circuits. "In human cannabis users who try to quit, this stress response
is reflected in reports of drug craving, sleep disturbances, anxiety,
irritability, and dysphoria, any one of which can motivate a person to return
to using, because cannabis will quiet these symptoms," said Mason.
A 2008 study by Pearson Center Co-Director George
Koob and his colleagues found that gabapentin, an FDA-approved anticonvulsant
drug that resembles the neurotransmitter GABA, can quiet this
withdrawal-related activation in stress circuitry in alcohol-dependent rats.
That finding motivated Mason to set up a pilot trial of gabapentin in
cannabis-dependent individuals, whose withdrawal syndrome features a similar
over-activation of stress circuits. She and her colleagues recruited cannabis
users with local newspaper and web ads headlined: "Smoking too much pot?
We want to help you stop." "We needed only 50 subjects, but we
quickly got more than 700 queries from cannabis users who were eager to
quit," Mason said. "Some people deny that cannabis can be addictive,
but surveys show that between 16 and 25 percent of substance use treatment
admissions around the world every year involve people with primary cannabis
dependence."
Twice as Many Abstinent from Cannabis
Use
The trial was based at Mason's laboratory at The
Scripps Research Institute. Half of the 50 recruits were randomly assigned to
take 1,200 mg/day of gabapentin; the rest were given identical-looking placebo
capsules. Over 12 weeks, Mason and her colleagues, including a medical team
from the nearby Scripps Clinic, monitored the subjects with tests. Using
standard behavioral therapy techniques, they also counseled the patients to
stay off cannabis. The subjects' self-reports and more objective urine tests
revealed that gabapentin, compared to placebo, significantly reduced their
continuing cannabis use. "Urine metabolite readings indicate about twice
as many of the gabapentin subjects had no new cannabis use during the entire
study, and, in the last four weeks of the study, all of the gabapentin subjects
who completed the study stayed abstinent," Mason said. Gabapentin also
clearly reduced the reported symptoms of withdrawal such as sleep disturbances,
drug cravings, and dysphoria. And even though gabapentin normally is thought of
as a brain-quieting drug that can cause sleepiness as a side effect, there was
some evidence that it sharpened cognition among the cannabis users. Seven
gabapentin and ten placebo patients sat for tests of attention,
impulse-control, and other executive functions just before the start of the
trial and at week four. While the placebo patients tended to score lower after
four weeks of attempted abstinence, the gabapentin patients generally scored
higher.
Help Resisting Cravings
Addiction researchers now recognize that one of the
effects of repeated drug use is the weakening of executive functions—which can
happen through the over-activation of reward circuitry as well as by
withdrawal-related stress. "That weakening of self-control-related
circuits makes it even harder for people to resist drug cravings when they're
trying to quit, but gabapentin may help restore those circuits, by reducing
stress and enabling patients to sleep better, so that they function better
while awake," Mason said. She is now conducting a larger, confirmatory
study of gabapentin in cannabis users, as well as a new study of a novel drug
that targets the same stress circuitry. "People in the treatment community
have told me that they're eager for these trial results to come out, because
until now nothing has been shown to work against both relapse and withdrawal
symptoms," Mason said. More information: "A
Proof-of-Concept Randomized Controlled Study of Gabapentin: Effects on Cannabis
Use, Withdrawal and Executive Function Deficits in Cannabis-Dependent
Adults", Neuropsychopharmacology.
Provided by The Scripps Research Institute "Scientists
find anticonvulsant drug helps marijuana smokers kick the habit." April
24th,
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