Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University Irving Medical Center and the New York State Psychiatric Institute, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Harlem Hospital Center, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2021 Apr 1;221:108554. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2021.108554. Epub 2021 Feb 8.
The absence of an FDA-approved medication for the treatment of cocaine use disorder (CUD) may, in part, reflect the varying conditions present when the decision to use cocaine is made, with one medication unlikely to work under all conditions. The objective of this double-blind, placebo-controlled, human laboratory study was to test the effects of modafinil, a medication with mixed efficacy for the treatment of CUD, using a novel self-administration procedure designed to model distinct clinical scenarios.
During modafinil maintenance (0, 300 mg/day), participants chose to self-administer up to 7 doses of smoked cocaine (25 mg) under 9 conditions: immediately after exposure to: (a) cues associated with cocaine and a non-contingent cocaine administration, i.e. 'prime' (25 mg), (b) only cocaine cues, and (c) neither cues nor cocaine. Each condition was tested when self-administered cocaine cost $5, $10 and $15/dose.
Nontreatment-seeking cocaine smokers (3 F,13 M), spending $388 ± 218/week on cocaine and with no history of alcohol use disorder, completed the study. Relative to placebo, modafinil robustly attenuated self-administration when cocaine was expensive ($10,$15/dose) and when there was no 'prime.' Modafinil had no effect on self-administration when cocaine was inexpensive ($5/dose) or when participants received a 'prime.'
Modafinil's effects on cocaine-taking varied substantially as a function of recent cocaine exposure and cost, which may help explain the mixed clinical findings. Modafinil may be most effective for preventing relapse in abstinent patients, particularly under conditions in which cocaine is costly, rather than initiating abstinence for those continuing to use cocaine.
美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)尚未批准任何药物用于治疗可卡因使用障碍(CUD),部分原因可能是在决定使用可卡因时存在各种不同的情况,一种药物不太可能在所有情况下都有效。本双盲、安慰剂对照、人体实验室研究的目的是测试莫达非尼的疗效,莫达非尼是一种治疗 CUD 的疗效不确定的药物,采用了一种新的自我给药程序,旨在模拟不同的临床情况。
在莫达非尼维持治疗(0、300mg/天)期间,参与者在 9 种条件下选择自行服用最多 7 剂吸食可卡因(25mg):接触:(a)与可卡因相关的线索和非条件可卡因给药后立即给药,即“启动”(25mg);(b)仅可卡因线索;(c)既无线索也无可卡因。每种条件在自行服用可卡因的费用为 5、10 和 15 美元/剂时进行测试。
未接受治疗的可卡因吸烟者(3 名女性,13 名男性),每周在可卡因上的花费为 388 美元±218 美元,且无酒精使用障碍史,完成了该研究。与安慰剂相比,当可卡因昂贵(10、15 美元/剂)且没有“启动”时,莫达非尼可显著减少自我给药。当可卡因价格便宜(5 美元/剂)或参与者接受“启动”时,莫达非尼对自我给药没有影响。
莫达非尼对可卡因的摄取效果因近期可卡因暴露和成本的不同而有很大差异,这可能有助于解释混合的临床发现。对于那些已经戒除可卡因的患者,特别是在可卡因价格昂贵的情况下,莫达非尼可能最有效地预防复发,而对于那些继续使用可卡因的患者,莫达非尼可能不会起始戒断。