Zindel Leah R, Kranzler Henry R
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Center for Studies of Addiction, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs Suppl. 2014;75(17):79-88. doi: 10.15288/jsads.2014.s17.79.
Modern pharmacotherapy for alcohol dependence has its roots in the failure of National Prohibition in the United States and the rise of the disease model of alcoholism (embodied in Alcoholics Anonymous). In 1948, disulfiram was the first medication approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to treat alcohol dependence, but its efficacy has not been supported by randomized controlled trials. In the 1960s, benzodiazepines replaced older treatments for alcohol withdrawal, but sedative and dependence-producing effects limit their utility in the postwithdrawal period. In the 1980s, the focus shifted to the treatment of co-occurring psychiatric disorders and medications that modify negative mood states, which contribute to relapse to heavy drinking. In the 1990s, developments in neurobiology implicated specific neurotransmitter systems underlying alcohol's effects, culminating in the 1994 approval by the FDA of the opioid antagonist naltrexone to treat alcohol dependence. In 2006, the FDA approved a long-acting formulation of naltrexone. Recently, nalmefene, another opioid receptor antagonist, was approved in Europe for as-needed use to reduce heavy drinking. Acamprosate, an amino acid derivative, first approved in France in 1989, received FDA approval in 2004. However, the beneficial effects of the approved medications are only modestly greater than those of placebo, and their use is limited. Topiramate, currently under investigation for alcohol dependence, has greater efficacy but a variety of adverse effects. In addition to the identification of novel compounds, the future of alcohol dependence pharmacotherapy will depend on developments in pharmacogenetics, in which genetic variation that moderates treatment efficacy and adverse effects is used to personalize treatment.
现代酒精依赖药物治疗起源于美国全国禁酒令的失败以及酒精中毒疾病模型的兴起(体现于戒酒互助会)。1948年,双硫仑成为美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准的首个用于治疗酒精依赖的药物,但其疗效尚未得到随机对照试验的支持。20世纪60年代,苯二氮䓬类药物取代了治疗酒精戒断的旧方法,但镇静和产生依赖性的作用限制了它们在戒断后期的应用。20世纪80年代,重点转向治疗共病的精神障碍以及改善负面情绪状态的药物,这些负面情绪状态会导致复饮。20世纪90年代,神经生物学的发展揭示了酒精作用背后特定的神经递质系统,最终促成FDA在1994年批准阿片类拮抗剂纳曲酮用于治疗酒精依赖。2006年,FDA批准了一种长效纳曲酮制剂。最近,另一种阿片受体拮抗剂纳美芬在欧洲被批准按需使用以减少重度饮酒。阿坎酸,一种氨基酸衍生物,1989年在法国首次获批,2004年获得FDA批准。然而,已批准药物的有益效果仅略优于安慰剂,且其应用有限。目前正在研究用于酒精依赖治疗的托吡酯疗效更佳,但有多种不良反应。除了识别新型化合物外,酒精依赖药物治疗的未来将取决于药物遗传学的发展,其中调节治疗效果和不良反应的基因变异将用于个性化治疗。