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Heavy drinking can cause serious health, family, and economic problems. Finding treatments that are effective in decreasing heavy drinking among alcohol-dependent individuals is, therefore, an important scientific and health goal. A novel and important strategy to enhance alcoholism treatment efforts uses a personalized medicine approach to optimize treatment effects by selecting the "right" patient therapeutically and potentially with a minimum of adverse events, for a specific medication.
This study will extend findings from a randomized double-blind clinical trial of ondansetron, in which the medication was found to reduce drinking among individuals with certain genotypes (i.e., forms of DNA, the material that controls the inheritance of characteristics). The proposed study will address a number of limitations in the prior work, including testing the medication in both European-American and African-American samples.
Full description
This study is a 24 week clinical trial. During the 24 weeks participants will receive either ondansetron or placebo. Participants will also receive Brief Behavioral Compliance enhancement Treatment (BBCET) as their psychosocial adjuct weekly in weeks 1 to 12, and then every 2 weeks in weeks 12 to 24. We will enroll two separate population groups (i.e., African-Americans and European-Americans), each with 128 treatment-seeking, alcohol-dependent individuals in a 24-week clinical trial. Subjects in each of these two population groups (N=128/group) will be randomized into 4 cells (N=32/cell) in a 2 (TT vs. TG or GG) × 2 (ondansetron 4 μg/kg twice daily vs. placebo) factorial design. Group assignment will be achieved using a block randomization procedure that balances the treatment groups on PHDD, age, and gender.
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0 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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