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This is a drug-drug interaction (DDI) study of mirtazapine for methamphetamine (MA) use disorder (MUD) to ensure the safety of this medication in the presence of a relevant dose of MA for people actively-using MA.
Aim 1: To determine if mirtazapine alters the cardiovascular response to IV MA.
Aim 2: To determine if the pharmacokinetics of IV MA are altered by mirtazapine administration.
Aim 3: To evaluate the above aims in the setting of concomitant administration of methadone.
This study involves two simultaneous within-subject drug-drug interaction studies, each comprised of 12 participants. A total of 24 subjects will be enrolled who have methamphetamine use disorder who will be classified into 2 groups: (Group 1: no opioids; Group 2: opioid use disorder on methadone maintenance). Subjects will be randomized to the order of mirtazapine and placebo (i.e. one-half will receive mirtazapine first, then placebo; one-half will receive placebo first, then mirtazapine).
Full description
This is a drug-drug interaction (DDI) study of mirtazapine for methamphetamine (MA) use disorder (MUD) to ensure the safety of this medication in the presence of a relevant dose of MA for people actively-using MA. MA is a widely used psychostimulant associated with substantial morbidity and mortality. MA is more prevalent than many other drugs, including opioids, with 37 million users of MA and amphetamine worldwide and 1.4 million past-year users in the U.S. alone in 2016. The number of MA poisoning deaths has steadily risen in recent years, from >3,700 in 2014 to 10,333 in 2017. Importantly, MA has been recognized as contributing substantially to the U.S. opioid crisis, with about half of MA poisoning deaths also caused by opioids. In the U.S., the annual economic cost of MA use is estimated to be $23.4 billion and use is strongly associated with HIV transmission.
There are no FDA-approved pharmacologic treatments for MUD, a major gap in addiction medicine, especially because behavioral interventions alone have limited efficacy and would likely benefit from adjunctive pharmacologic therapy. Investigators' prior clinical trials included a Phase IIa trial (N=60) and a replication Phase IIb trial (N=120) demonstrating that mirtazapine (an adrenergic, serotoninergic, and dopaminergic generic medication currently approved to treat depression) 30mg orally once daily reduced MA use among MA-dependent men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women. Investigators were directed to conduct a DDI study to ensure the safety of mirtazapine with MA. This research is particularly relevant given the overlap of MA use disorder and opioid use disorder (OUD), which could raise additional safety concerns.
The primary objectives of this study are as follows:
Design This study involves two simultaneous within-subject drug-drug interaction studies, each comprised of 12 participants. A total of 24 subjects will be enrolled who have MA use disorder who will be classified into 2 groups: (Group 1: no opioids; Group 2: opioid use disorder on methadone maintenance). Subjects will be randomized to the order of mirtazapine and placebo (i.e. one-half will receive mirtazapine first, then placebo; one-half will receive placebo first, then mirtazapine).
Procedures Screening assessments will be completed across two-to-four visits over 2 weeks. All screening assessments should be completed within 14 days after labs are drawn.
All subjects will complete the following study visits: screening 1 and 2, enrollment/admission to inpatient stay, 14-day inpatient stay, 14-day post-discharge follow-up visit.
After consent is obtained, eligibility will be determined over the following screening visits, including medical history and physical examination (including weight and height), review of systems, vital signs, concomitant medications, EKG, breathalyzer, labwork, SCID. Additional assessments will include the CDS-12, PSQI, TLFB for substance use, delayed discounting, BIS-11, Stroop Test, CUDIT-r, COWS, ACSA, BDI-II.
On the day of enrollment, study staff will confirm eligibility and transport patient to hospital for admission. Participant will receive a test infusion of MA 30mg IV. If participant tolerates test infusion within defined parameters, participant will be formally enrolled and randomized. First dose of study drug will be administered the evening of admission. On the fifth hospital day, participant will undergo MA challenge (single-blind placebo and 30mg IV for subjective, cardiovascular, and PK assessments). PK draws will continue for 48 hours after infusion.
Participant will begin the opposite condition on day 8 and complete the MA infusion procedures on day 12. After completion of PK studies on day 14, participant will be discharged.
A post-discharge safety check will be completed 10 days after discharge (+/- 7 days).
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15 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
John Walker, MSN; Phillip Coffin, MD, MIA
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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