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About
Background:
Opioids are medicines that control pain. But they are often misused, which can lead to illness and death. Opioids increase dopamine to the brain, which makes people feel good and often causes them to crave drugs, leading to misuse and addiction. An investigational drug ANS-6637 may lower the dopamine surge and stop opioid craving. Midazolam is a drug approved for anxiety. Researchers want to give the two drugs together and see if ANS-6637 affects midazolam levels, to help understand how ANS-6637 is used in the body.
Objective:
To study the safety, tolerability, and effects of ANS-6637 taken with and without midazolam.
Eligibility:
Healthy adults 18 65 years old
Design:
Participants will be screened with a medical history, physical exam, and blood and heart tests. Participants who can get pregnant will have a pregnancy test.
Participants must agree to use 2 types of birth control during the study, if applicable.
Participants will stay at the clinic for 10 days. Meals will be provided. Participants will not be allowed to:
Leave NIH campus
Eat or drink anything with caffeine, alcohol, or certain juices
Use any nicotine or related products (including vaping)
Use any medicines (including herbal)
During the clinic stay, participants will:
Fast overnight several times
Have blood drawn most days. Twice, a small tube will be inserted in an arm vein for frequent blood samples.
Repeat screening tests and answer questions about their mood several times
Get midazolam syrup in water on 1 day
Take 6 ANS-6637 tablets by mouth on 5 days
Take both study drugs on 1 day
A few days later, participants will have a follow-up visit to repeat screening tests and answer questions about their mood.
Full description
Opioid use causes a myriad of effects which contribute to significant morbidity and early mortality, and is associated with risky sexual behavior and injection drug use (IDU), two major forms of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) transmission in urban and suburban United States. Through these high-risk behaviors, persons with opioid use disorder (OUD) develop both direct comorbidities (e.g. blood stream infections and infectious endocarditis), as well as risk-associated illnesses (e.g. sexually transmitted infections, HCV and hepatitis B virus [HBV]) which have considerable downstream health care effects. As such, there is a need for pharmacologic agents in the treatment of OUD that go beyond avoidance of withdrawal and facilitate decreased frequency or complete cessation of opioid use.
The biologic mechanism of OUD, common to all forms of addiction, is a conditioned drug cue-related response in the CNS, causing a dopamine surge. If effective, a central pharmacologic strategy targeting the aberrant reward circuitry seen in OUD could potentially reduce drug craving and result in opioid abstinence.
In the SEARCH Pharmacokinetic (PK) investigation, we aim to understand the pharmacokinetic signal of the novel, oral agent ANS-6637, an aldehyde dehydrogenase 2 (ALDH-2) inhibitor that has the potential to reduce dopamine surge in the CNS and inhibit opioid craving. In preclinical studies, the active metabolite of ANS-6637, GS-548351, showed substrate dependent inhibition of CYP3A in vitro, with little or no inhibitory effect on the activities of other cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes. As such, the current investigation seeks to explore the potential inhibition of CYP3A by ANS-6637 with the FDA-recommended CYP3A probe substrate, midazolam.
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
-INCLUSION CRITERIA:
Must have the ability to understand and must personally sign a written informed consent form, which must be obtained prior to initiation of study procedures.
Must be between 18 and 65 years of age, inclusive.
Must have discontinued use of nicotine and nicotine containing products including vaping or juuling from 90 days prior to study drug dosing and throughout the study duration.
Must be willing to abstain from any food or beverages containing alcohol 72 hours prior to first dose and through follow-up visit.
Must be willing to abstain from cannabis 72 hours prior to first dose and through follow-up visit.
Must be willing to abstain from caffeine (including tea, coffee, chocolate) or grapefruit, Seville orange juice or other methyl xanthine containing foods (e.g. theophylline, theobromine, tea leaves, yerba mate, kola nuts and guarana berries) 72 hours prior to the first dose and through follow- up visit.
Must have a body mass index (BMI) from 19 to 30 kg/m^2 (inclusive) at screening.
Must be human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) antibody negative at screening.
Must be hepatitis B (HBV) surface antigen negative at screening.
Must be hepatitis C (HCV) antibody or RNA negative at screening.
Male subjects must refrain from sperm donation from clinic admission, throughout the study period, and continuing for at least 90 days following the last dose of study drug.
Subjects must refrain from blood donation from clinic admission, throughout the study period, and continuing for at least 30 days following the last dose of study drug.
Must be willing to comply with contraception guidelines below Contraception:
The fetal risks associated with ANS-6637 are not known, but pre- clinical animal data demonstrate some risk. Subjects must agree not to become pregnant or impregnate a female. Females of childbearing potential must have a reproductive risk assessment done to determine the risk of undetectable pregnancy at study start [i.e. sexual and contraceptive history for 30 days preceding screening] pregnancy test at screening and baseline (Day 0). For the duration of the study, subject and their partners must practice two non-hormonal methods of birth control, having begun no less than 30 days, without interruption, prior to screening. They must continue to use both methods until 3 months after stopping the study drug. Two of the three methods of birth control listed below MUST be used, or an alternative combination offering very high efficacy, per the PI, in consultation with the Sponsor Medical Monitor may be considered:
If pregnancy is suspected or should occur, subjects must notify the study staff immediately.
Must, in the opinion of the Investigator, be in good health based upon medical history and physical examination, and screening laboratory evaluations.
Judged to be healthy based on medical history, physical examination, vital signs, and clinical laboratory tests at screening and Day 0: liver function tests (AST, ALT, Tbili) less than or equal to upper limit of normal [ULN], platelets (PLT) >150,000/ microliter, hemoglobin (Hgb) >13 g/dL (males); >12 g/dL (females), CK less than or equal to 2x ULN, Amylase/lipase < ULN, thyroid function tests [TSH and T4] within normal range, fasting total cholesterol <240 mg/dL, or fasting triglycerides <240 mg/dL, per DAIDS AE table and Toxicity Grading Scale for Healthy Adult and Adolescent Volunteers Enrolled in Preventive Vaccine Trials AE table for total bilirubin [Tbili] only.
Must be willing and able to comply with all study requirements.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
26 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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