Status and phase
Conditions
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About
Background:
People with alcohol use disorder (AUD) have trouble controlling their drinking. Medications can help some people with AUD but are not effective for many others. Researchers want to test new drugs to better treat the disease.
Objective:
To see if the investigational drug GLWL-01 is safe to use in people with alcohol problems. Also, to find out if the drug reduces the urge to drink alcohol.
Eligibility:
People ages 18-70 with Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD)
Design:
Participants will be screened under protocol 06-DA-N415.
Participants will be admitted to the inpatient facility, Clinical Research Unit (CRU) on the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center for up to 21 days. They may leave the CRU on specified days pending approval. All their meals will be provided. They cannot drink alcohol.
Participants will take either the study drug or a placebo by mouth twice daily. They will not know which they are receiving.
Participants will complete many questionnaires.
Participants may have urine tests.
Participants will complete tasks on a computer.
Participants will have blood samples obtained on some study days.
Participants will taste and indicate their preference for sweet liquids.
Participants' blood pressure, pulse, respiratory rate, body temperature and weight, heart rate and rhythm will be measured.
Participants will have breath testing to obtain information about smoking.
Participants will be exposed to alcohol cues, water, and food cues in a bar-like room. Cues are things that might make them feel the urge to eat or drink alcohol.
Participants will take part in a virtual buffet experiment - They will wear a virtual reality headset, walk around a virtual room, and select virtual food and drink.
Full description
Background and Objective: Acyl-ghrelin is a 28-amino acid peptide that stimulates appetite and food intake. It is an endogenous ligand for the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHS-R1a). Preclinical studies suggest that acyl-ghrelin increases alcohol intake and decreases in acyl-ghrelin and GHS-R1a function suppresses alcohol consumption. Furthermore, previous human studies indicate a positive correlation between endogenous ghrelin levels and alcohol craving and drinking. In clinical studies conducted by our group with individuals with AUD, intravenous (IV) acyl-ghrelin administration, versus placebo 1) increased alcohol craving during alcohol cue-exposure and 2) increased IV alcohol self-administration as well as decreased latency to first infusion of alcohol and 3) increased brain activation in the amygdala in anticipation of alcohol reward.
Together, this preclinical and human data suggest that manipulating the ghrelin signal may be a novel and potentially effective pharmacological approach to treat individuals with alcohol use disorder.
After the discoveries of GHS-R1a and acyl-ghrelin, a next step was identifying ghrelin O-acyltransferase (GOAT) the enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of des-acyl-ghrelin (DAG) to acyl-ghrelin via octanoylation. GOAT is thus the master switch for the ghrelin system , as acyl-ghrelin, not DAG, is biologically active at the GHSR-1a. GOAT s structure is highly conserved, is produced by endocrine cells in the stomach and is co-expressed with ghrelin. Therefore, GOAT is a promising target for manipulating the ghrelin system by altering the peripheral acyl-to-total ghrelin ratio (where total ghrelin = acyl-ghrelin + DAG). Recently, the ghrelin system has been investigated as a potential treatment target for AUDs.
As such, an oral bioavailable GOAT inhibitor offers encouraging potential as a treatment for alcohol use disorder. GLWL-01 is an existing GOAT inhibitor for which GLWL Research Inc. has recently and successfully completed a first-in-human safety clinical trial. The goal of this protocol is to conduct a proof-of-concept human laboratory study to assess a potential early signal of efficacy of GLWL-01 in relation to alcohol-related outcomes.
Study population: Males and females (N = 43) with alcohol use disorder.
Study Design: A within-subject, counterbalanced, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Participants will take GLWL-01 450 mg b.i.d. or matched placebo for a minimum of 4 days (Stage I). After a minimum 2 day wash-out window, Stage II will take place during which the counterbalanced study drug will be administered for a minimum of 4 days.
Primary outcome measure: The co-primary aims will be to determine whether: 1) the number of adverse events (AEs) experienced differ in the GLWL-01 condition, compared to placebo; and 2) GLWL-01, compared to placebo, reduces alcohol cue-elicited craving using a validated alcohol cue-reactivity procedure.
Secondary outcome measures: The main secondary aim will be the effects of GLWL-01 on food choices using a virtual buffet experimental procedure. We will also monitor a wide range of behavioral measures including e.g., pain, anxiety, depression, alcohol craving and withdrawal, and smoking.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Males only:
-Males agrees agree to sexual abstinence or to use a reliable method of birth control during the study and three months following the last dose of the study drug. Acceptable methods of birth control may include: 1) condom with spermicide; 2) diaphragm with spermicide; or 3) female condom with spermicide.
Females only:
-Women of child-bearing potential may participate in the study:
if they test negative for pregnancy (based on a urine pregnancy test) prior to initiation of treatment
they must also agree to use either one highly effective method of contraception or a combination of two effective methods of contraception during the study.
Women may choose to use a double-barrier method of contraception. Barrier methods without concomitant use of a spermicide are not reliable or an acceptable method. Thus, each barrier method must include use of a spermicide. It should be noted that the use of male and female condoms as a double-barrier method is not considered acceptable due to the high failure rate when these methods are combined.
OR
-Women not of child-bearing potential may participate in the study and include those who have
Exclusion criteria
NOTE: individuals who have a history of alcohol withdrawal seizures may be in the study as long as they have been abstinent from alcohol for at least 2 weeks prior to consent and during that period of abstinence, there were no seizure episodes (otherwise, participant remains not eligible).
Creatinine greater than or equal to 2 mg/dL, aspartate aminotransferase (AST) or alanine aminotransferase (ALT) > 1.5 times the upper normal limit, hemoglobin <10.5 g/dl
Diagnosis of liver cirrhosis
Clinically significant history or current eating, pituitary or adrenal gland disorders or disorder of gastric motility as judged by a study clinician as determined from medical history and/or current clinical screening information
Current thyroid disorders that are not stable on dose of FDA-approved medications for that disease, as judged by a study clinician as determined from medical history and/or current clinical screening information. A pre-existing stable medical condition is defined as a disease not requiring significant change in therapy or hospitalization for worsening disease during the past 3 months.
Clinically significant abnormal 12-Lead ECG
QTcF > 450 msec for men and > 470 msec for women
Family history of Long QT Syndrome.
Patients on weight loss medications within 30 days of dosing
Patients with a history of bariatric surgery
Diagnosis of diabetes and currently on medication
Unable to refrain from or anticipates the use of:
Currently taking simvastatin >10 mg per day, atorvastatin >20 mg per day, or lovastatin >20 mg per day.
The doses of these statins in combination products should not exceed these defined dose levels.
These criteria are based on the target population for this study. Other criteria are consistent with an ongoing study that GLWL Research Inc. is conducting with GLWL-01 in patients with Prader-Willi Syndrome (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03274856).
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
21 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Lorenzo Leggio, M.D.; NIDA IRP Screening Team
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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