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Insomnia is an extremely common and poorly treated problem in patients with substance use disorders (SUD)s undergoing rehabilitation treatment in a residential facility. The persistence of insomnia in substance use disorders (SUDs) may be associated with tonic levels of drug craving. Insomnia and craving can predispose to relapse in patients with SUDs. Insomnia and SUDs are independently associated with increased cortisol indicating physiological dysregulation of the stress response system including the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Hence sleep disturbance, craving and increased cortisol leads to relapse in SUD subjects. Suvorexant, an orexin 1 / 2 receptor antagonist, approved by the FDA for the treatment of sleep disturbance in subjects with primary Insomnia. Previous animal studies report Orexin 1 receptor antagonist decreases craving and normal the HPA axis. However, the efficacy of suvorexant on sleep and craving in SUD subjects is not known. The primary aims of this study are-
Full description
Insomnia is an extremely common and poorly treated problem in patients with substance use disorders (SUD)s patients undergoing rehabilitation treatment in residential facility. The persistence of insomnia in substance use disorders (SUDs) may be associated with tonic levels of drug craving. Insomnia and craving can predispose to relapse in patients with SUDs. Insomnia and SUDs are independently associated with increased cortisol indicating physiological dysregulation of the stress response system including the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Hence sleep disturbance, craving and increased cortisol leads to relapse in SUD subjects.
Suvorexant is a novel orexin 1 and 2 receptor antagonist, FDA approved for the treatment of insomnia. Suvorexant may be differentially beneficial in patients with opioid dependence: 1) It is efficacious for treatment of insomnia in the general population, 2) Data from animal models of opioid dependence suggest that orexins may be involved in reward (opioid) seeking behavior and altered stress response while an orexin antagonist appears to decrease reward (opioid) seeking while normalizing HPA axis function. A medication that can improve sleep, decrease craving and normalize the HPA axis may theoretically be helpful in patients with SUDs. At this juncture, the literature supports the case for an open trial of Suvorexant for patients in residential care for SUDs, who complain of sleep disturbance. The patients will be at least 5 days post-withdrawal, in order to minimize the residual sleep complaints associated with that phase of treatment.
In previous, well-designed, placebo-controlled clinical trials in patients with insomnia, suvorexant has been shown to be efficacious compared with placebo. However, substance dependent patients with insomnia were not included in these studies. Although, as a new sleep medication, suvorexant has been placed in Schedule IV by the FDA, the drug has not been studied in the context of its potential abuse liability when administered at bedtime at the therapeutic dose among patients in residential treatment for substance dependence disorders. A modified abuse liability protocol will therefore be incorporated in this pilot study.
The hypothesis for this study are-
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Sex: male or female
Age: 21-64 (inclusive) years old
Caron Foundation residential alcohol or opioid dependent patients that have a history of daily or near daily substance use for the month prior to admittance.
Group 1: at least five days post medically assisted withdrawal for alcohol dependence, and complain of problems falling asleep, remaining asleep after sleep onset, or poor sleep quality on current sleep medication (antidepressant/melatonin).
Group 2: at least five days post medically assisted withdrawal for opioid dependence and complain of problems falling asleep, remaining asleep after sleep onset, or poor sleep quality on current sleep medication (antidepressant/melatonin).
Fluent in written and spoken English.
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28 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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