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About
Due to Quetiapine's particulars and the promising receptor profile, we want to examine the efficacy concerning relapse prevention of alcoholics suffering from persisting craving and/or affective symptoms (persisting sleep disorder, persisting excitement, persisting depressive symptoms, persisting anxiety symptoms) in comparison to matching placebo in a double-blind pilot study.
We further want to compare the course of the above mentioned craving and affective symptoms under medication with quetiapine / matching placebo.
Full description
Naltrexone and Acamprosate are the best evaluated and established therapy options in relapse prevention of alcoholics at present (Litten et al. 1996, Mann et al. 2004). Studies on cue exposure showed that Naltrexone (Monti et al. 1999) and Haloperidol (Modell et al. 1993) block stimuli triggered craving. In addition, they indicate that both may also stop the craving for further alcohol consumption that is induced by a priming dose of alcohol (Modell et al. 1993). However, the clinical relevance of Haloperidol is rather limited due to the risk of extrapyramidal side effects. New atypical dopamine antagonists are reported to have this profile as well, but without the risk of developing extrapyramidal side effects. In a placebo-controlled clinical trial, the atypical antipsychotic Olanzapine has proved to reduce craving for alcohol both after alcohol exposure and a priming dose of alcohol in non-dependent heavy social drinkers (Hutchison et al. 2001). However, Amisulpride in a dose of 50 mg per day failed to prevent alcohol relapse in a double-blind, placebo-controlled study in 71 patients over 6 months (Marra et al. 2002).
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Inclusion criteria
Only methods with a Pearl-index lower than 1% are regarded as acceptable such as hormonal contraception, surgical sterilization, bilateral ovarectomy, and postmenopause (WHO definition: natural menopause retrospectively for at least one year amenorrhoe) without hormonal replacement therapy within the past 5 months.
Exclusion criteria
unstable DM defined as enrollment glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c)>8.5 %; patients admitted to hospital for treatment of DM or DM related illness in past 12 weeks; patients not under physicians care for DM; physicians responsible for patient´s DM care has not indicated that patient´s DM is controlled; physician responsible for patient´s DM care has not approved patient´s participation in the study; patient has not been on the same dose of oral hypoglycemic drug(s) and/or diet for the 4 weeks prior to randomization. [For thiazolidinediones (glitazones) this period should not be less than 8 weeks]; patients taking insulin whose daily dose on one occasion in the past 4 weeks has been more than 10% above or below their mean dose in the preceding 4 weeks.
Note: If a diabetic patient meets one of these criteria, the patient is to be excluded even if the treating physician believes that the patient is stable and can participate in the study.
Evidence of clinical relevant disease or clinical finding that is unstable or that, in the opinion of the investigator, would be negatively affected by study medication or that would affect study medication.
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40 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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