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This study will examine whether a new drug called acamprosate can be helpful for alcohol withdrawal, a result of drinking high amounts of alcohol for long periods of time. Alcohol withdrawal can cause various symptoms, including nausea or vomiting, anxiety or depression, tremor, high blood pressure, and others. During withdrawal, brain chemicals called neurotransmitters change, with some rising to abnormally high levels. These changes may contribute to alcohol craving, drinking relapse and impaired mental performance. This study will see if taking acamprosate for 4 weeks can lower the levels of neurotransmitters, such as glutamate, lessen withdrawal symptoms and decrease alcohol craving and brain damage associated with withdrawal.
Healthy normal volunteers and alcohol-dependent patients between 21 and 65 years of age may be eligible for this study.
Participants are admitted to the hospital for 28 days. They receive standard inpatient care for alcohol detoxification, including a medical history and physical examination, neurological evaluation, laboratory tests, nursing, nutrition, discharge planning and referrals for treatment of concomitant conditions, if needed. In addition, they are randomly assigned to take either two acamprosate or two placebo pills three times a day for 28 days and undergo the following tests and procedures:
Full description
Objective: Clinical as well as preclinical studies indicate that the process of developing alcohol dependence recruits a progressively aggravated hyperglutamatergic state, which in turn is a key signal for emotional dysregulations leading to craving and relapse, as well as neurotoxicity leading to cognitive impairment and loss of grey matter in alcoholic patients. Acamprosate has recently been approved for relapse prevention in sober alcoholics, an effect mediated through largely unknown mechanisms. Preclinical data indicate, however, that it might primarily be useful for targeting the hyperglutamatergic state that develops during recurring withdrawal episodes, halting the process described above. If so, acamprosate might be of value as a withdrawal treatment to prevent the progression of alcohol dependence. The aim of the present protocol is to evaluate, in a randomized controlled trial, the effects of acamprosate during withdrawal and the early post-withdrawal phase. The primary outcome variable will be central glutamate/glutamine concentration as determined by MR spectroscopy. A number of exploratory biological and clinical measures will in addition be obtained and used for secondary analyses as specified below.
Study Population: We will study patients age 21 - 65, without gross impairment of judgment or complicated psychiatric or other morbidity, going into withdrawal or with a high probability of doing so, will be admitted as inpatients to the NIAAA CC-unit. A group of healthy volunteers who do not receive study medication will be examined separately in order to confirm that a hyperglutamatergic state is present in the patients during withdrawal.
Design: All patients will receive standard care for alcohol detoxification. In addition, half of them will be randomized in a blinded fashion to oral acamprosate, two 333 mg tablets taken 3 times daily or corresponding placebo. Validated rating scales (CIWA-Ar, CPRS-SA) will be used to assess intensity of withdrawal and psychopathology. If severity of withdrawal exceeds a predefined criterion, standard diazepam treatment will be added to study medication. The accrual target is based on a primary analysis sample of patients who will not require diazepam medication, which is a potential confound. A secondary analysis will be carried out on the complete sample, analyzing the requirement for/amount of diazepam supplement as a secondary outcome variable.
Outcome Measures: A battery of tests will be obtained during the 1st and 3rd week of inpatient treatment. These will include NMR-spectroscopy to quantify central levels of excitatory and inhibitory amino acids (primary outcome variable: GluX concentration); lumbar puncture to obtain CSF for analysis of neurotransmitter/neurohormone metabolites and synaptic proteins. Repeated 4 x daily blood collection for analysis of serum cortisol and ACTH will be obtained to assess spontaneous activity and circadian variation of the HPA-axis, and the combined dexamethasone - CRH test will be carried out to dynamically probe this system, and gauge its sensitivity for feedback inhibition.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA - PATIENTS:
Alcohol dependence according to DSM-IV, based on the alcohol dependence module of the SCID I-interview, and alcohol withdrawal, based on either of:
Clinically manifest significant alcohol withdrawal symptoms, with or without detectable blood alcohol concentrations.
In absence of the above, current intoxication above 0.1 g/dl BAC, self-reported history of continuous alcohol use > 1 month, and self-reported previous episodes of significantly distressful alcohol withdrawal symptoms, whether treated or not.
Age 21 - 65; in younger subjects, maturation processes of the central nervous system are still ongoing; while in older subjects, degenerative changes may confound the measures studied.
Smoking status: this will be noted and evaluated using the Fagerstrom inventory, so that its potential contribution to group differences can be assessed. This variable will not otherwise affect inclusion / exclusion.
INCLUSION CRITERIA - HEALTHY CONTROLS:
Subjects will be eligible for inclusion if they are aged 21-65. They will be as closely as possible matched to the patient population with regard to gender and age.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA - PATIENTS:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA - HEALTHY CONTROLS:
56 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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