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This investigation will be the first study assessing genetic modulation of naltrexone's NTX effects upon the abuse liability of a stimulant drug (methamphetamine). The study team will assess the ability of oral NTX to block the reinforcing and positive subjective effects of intranasal (IN) methamphetamine (30mg/70kg). This investigation could identify an important Gene x Pharmacological interaction, contributing to the personalization of stimulant abuse pharmacotherapy.
Full description
A recent meta-analysis concluded that the OPRM1 A118G SNP (rs1799971) significantly moderates the treatment efficacy of Naltrexone (NTX) in treating alcohol abuse, increasing the treatment efficacy by over 2-fold among G-allele carriers (AG/GG). The proposed application would be the first to investigate the moderating effect of this genotype in the efficacy of NTX to treat stimulant abuse. More specifically, the study team proposes to investigate the interaction between NTX and intranasal (IN) methamphetamine (30mg/70kg). Participants who meet DSM criteria for mild-to-severe stimulant use disorder (N=up to 70) will complete 4 testing sessions where drug effects are tested following pretreatment with NTX (0, 50 mg). Naltrexone pretreatment effects upon the abuse liability of IN methamphetamine will be assessed using self-report measurements of positive subjective effects and drug self-administration. Medication effects on these validated predictors of abuse potential will be compared between A118G A allele homozygotes (AA) and G-allele carriers (AG/GG; an anticipated 25% of the total sample), in order to assess genetic moderation of treatment outcome.
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Exclusion criteria
Currently seeking treatment for a substance use disorder.
DSM-5 criteria for moderate-to-severe substance use disorders (except those involving cocaine, amphetamines and nicotine).
Psychiatric condition that may affect the participants' ability to provide informed consent (e.g., psychotic disorder), or make participation hazardous for the participant or study staff (e.g., severe depression/suicidality, or risk of violence).
Uncontrolled neurological, cardiovascular, and hepatic diseases, active tuberculosis, or any other disorder that might make administration of study medications hazardous.
Gastrointestinal or renal disease that would significantly impair absorption, metabolism or excretion of study drug, or require medication or medical treatment.
Current treatment with a psychotropic medication that in the physician's judgement would interfere with the study endpoints.
History of allergy, adverse reaction, or sensitivity to amphetamines.
Medical conditions that may make study participation hazardous:
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18 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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