| Literature DB >> 21191637 |
David Nussbaum1, Kimia Honarmand, Richard Govoni, Martina Kalahani-Bargis, Stephanie Bass, Xinqun Ni, Kaitlyn Laforge, Andrea Burden, Kristoffer Romero, Sonya Basarke, Christine Courbasson, Wade Deamond.
Abstract
Problem Gambling (PG) represents a serious problem for affected individuals, their families and society in general. Previous approaches to understanding PG have been confined to only a subset of the psychobiological factors influencing PG. We present a model that attempts to integrate potential causal factors across levels of organization, providing empirical evidence from the vast literature on PG and complimentary literatures in decision-making and addiction. The model posits that components are arranged systematically to bias decisions in favor of either immediately approaching or avoiding targets affording the opportunity for immediate reward. Dopamine, Testosterone and Endogenous Opioids favor immediate approach, while Serotonin and Cortisol favor inhibition. Glutamate is involved in associative learning between stimuli and promotes the approach response through its link to the DA reward system. GABA functions to monitor performance and curb impulsive decision-making. Finally, while very high levels of Norepinephrine can induce arousal to an extent that is detrimental to sound decision-making, the reactivity of the Norepinephrine system and its effects of Cortisol levels can shift the focus towards long-term consequences, thereby inhibiting impulsive decisions. Empirical evidence is provided showing the effects of each component on PG and decision-making across behavioural, neuropsychological, functional neuroimaging and genetic levels. Last, an effect size analysis of the growing pharmacotherapy literature is presented. It is hoped that this model will stimulate multi-level research to solidify our comprehension of biased decision-making in PG and suggest pharmacological and psychological approaches to treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21191637 PMCID: PMC3215875 DOI: 10.1007/s10899-010-9219-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gambl Stud ISSN: 1050-5350
Fig. 1A central psychobiological model for decision-making in problem gambling
Fig. 2Hypothesized psychological roles for individual decision-model components
Summary of study features of pharmacotherapy for pathological gambling
| Study authors/year global rating | Medication/primary target system | Gambling status criteria/measure | Group assignment | Group equivalency pre-treatment | Total N & | Gambling type (e.g., Slots, etc.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Black et al. ( | Carbamazepine (long acting) 200MG. t.i.d./GABAB Na α-sub-unit channel (Stahl | DSM-IV; NODS & SOGS | None: | N/A |
| Not specified |
| Blanco et al. ( | Fluvoxamine/serotonin transporter | DSM-III Pathological gambling criteria (Diagnostic method unspecified) | RANDOM ASSIGNMENT | Not addressed |
FLUVOX. CONTROL | Not specified |
| Dannon et al. ( | Topirimate vs. Fluvoxamine/Anticonvulsant GABA & Glutamate targets vs. Blocks pre-synaptic 5-HT re-uptake transporter (SSRI) | DSM-IV SOGS | RANDOM ASSIGNMENT | GROUPS DID NOT DIFFER |
Topiramate Fluvoxam. | Not specified |
| Dannon et al. ( | Buproprion vs. Naltrexone/DA Blocker Vs. Opioid Kappa Blocker | DSM-IV; SOGS | RANDOM ASSIGNMENT | Not addressed |
Bupropion = 17 Naltrexone = 19 | Not Specified |
| Grant et al. ( |
| DSM-IV; SCI-PG; PG-YBOCS | PLACEBO RUN IN Phase 1: None PHASE 2: RANDOM ASSIGNMENT | GROUPS DID NOT DIFFER | Phase 1: 27 Phase 2: 13 NAC 6; Placebo 7; | Not Specified |
| Grant et al. ( | Paroxetine/blocks pre-synaptic 5-HT re-uptake transporter (SSRI) | DSM-IV; SOGS | PLACEBO RUN-IN - > RANDOM ASSIGNMENT | GROUPS DID NOT DIFFER | PLACEBO RUN IN 83 Paroxetine 34; Placebo 37; | Not Specified |
| Grant and Potenza ( | Escitalopram/blocks pre-synaptic 5-HT re-uptake transporter (SSRI) | DSM-IV; SCI-PG | PLACEBO RUN-IN -> (Unblinded Open Label Escitalopram ->) RANDOM ASSIGNMENT DISCONTINUE | None reported | 13 6 4 | SLOTS: 10 KENO: 2 SPORTS 1 |
| Hollander et al. ( | Fluvoxamine/Blocks pre-synaptic 5-HT re-uptake transporter (SSRI) | DSM-III-R; SOGS; CGI | SINGLE BLIND PLACEBO RUN-IN SINGLE BLIND FLUVOXAMINE | DSM-IV diagnosis of pathological gambling and a South Oaks Gambling Screen (9) score greater than 5 | Placebo 16; Fluvoxamine 8; | Not Specified |
| Kim and Grant ( | Naltrexone/opioid antagonist (release blocker) | DSM-IV DSM-III-R CGI GSA | None | None Reported |
Female = 10 Male = 7 | Not Specified |
| Kim et al. ( | Paroxetine/blocks pre-synaptic 5-HT re- uptake transporter (SSRI) | DSM-IV CGI GSAS SOGS | RANDOM ASSIGNMENT | None Reported |
Placebo 22; | Not Specified |
| Pallanti et al. ( | Lithium vs. Valproate/increases 5-HT vs. GABA agonist | DSM-IV PG-YBOCS PG-CGI-S | None | None Reported |
Lithium = 23 Valproate = 19 | Not Specified |
| Pallanti et al. ( | Nefazodone/5-HT Reuptake Inhibitor (& NE reuptake inhibitor at high doses) | DSM-IV PG-CGI-S PG-YBOCS | None | None Reported |
Nefazodone 14 | Not Specified |
| Zimmerman et al. ( | Citalopram/5-HT Reuptake Inhibitor (SSRI) | DSM-IV PG-CGI-S SOGS | None | None reported |
| Machine gambling (13/15) 2 Unrated |
Legend: STRONG STUDY FEATURE; Adequate study feature; Weak study feature
Medication: Strong if supported in literature in > 3 controlled studies; Outcome Measure: Gambles/mo. = $’s Gambled/mo., YBOCS, CGI, GSAS; Gambling Status Measure: DSM-IV, SOGS, YBOCS, CGI, GSAS; Treatment Group Assignment: Placebo Run-In, Random > Matched > Wait List > None; Follow-Up (in Months) 25 weeks > 16 Weeks > 8 Weeks > 4 Weeks; Bias/Expectancy: Triple Blind > Double Blind > Single Blind > Open Label; Comparison Group: Alternate Tx. with Control > Placebo > Alternate Tx. > None; Co-Therapy: No Co-Therapy
Effect size (ES) calculations. Columns 1,2 and 3 are reproduced from Table 1 for continuity
| Study | Medication/primary target system | Primary outcome measure(s) | Major result(s) statistic | Effect size magnitude | 95% Confidence interval | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Black et al. ( | Carbamazepine (Long Acting) 200MG. t.i.d./GABAB Na α-Sub-Unit Channel (Stahl | Abstinent @ END | 4/8 | 0 (OR = 1) | ||
| YBOCS-PG | F = 51.2 (df = 1,7) | N/A Only slopes reported for these variables | ||||
| TLFB: LOG $’s/WKLOG Time/WK | F = 9.9 (df = 1,7) F = 6.8 (df = 1, 7) | Hedges g | ||||
| CGI-severity | Means/S.D.s | |||||
| Pre | Post | |||||
| 5.4 | 2.3 | 2.58 | 4.45848 | |||
| 0.7 | 1.3 | 0.70546 | ||||
| Blanco et al. ( | Fluvoxamine/serotonin transporter | Clinical responders | ||||
| 2 Months | TX: 8/11 improved placebo: 8/15 improved | w = 0.196 | N/A | |||
| 6 Months | TX: 3/3 improved placebo: 1/10 improved | w = 0.461 | ||||
| Dannon et al. ( | Topirimate vs. Fluvoxamine/Anticonvulsant GABA & Glutamate targets vs. Blocks pre-synaptic 5-HT re-uptake transporter (SSRI) | Clinical responders | Topiramate: 9/15 | w = 0.100 | N/A | |
| Fluvoxamine: 6/16 | ||||||
| YBOCS-PG | Within and between Tx. effects | Compared two treatments and found both equally effective | ||||
| CGI | ||||||
| Danon et al. ( | Buproprion vs. Naltrexone/DA blocker vs. Opioid Kappa blocker | Clinical responders | Within and between Tx. effects | N/A Compared two treatments and found both equally effective (~75% respond) | N/A | |
| YBOCS-PG | ||||||
| CGI | ||||||
| Grant et al. ( | N-acetyl cysteine (NAC)/increases [Glu] in NAcc; may counter DA | PHASE 2: % Clinical responders | Responders | w = 0.548 | ||
| Tx. | Placebo | |||||
| 83.3% | 28.6% | |||||
| 5/6 | 2/7 | |||||
| YBOCS | Means/S.D.s | |||||
| Pre | Post | Hedges g | ||||
| 20.3 | 11.8 | 1.05 | −0.11057 | |||
| 4.08 | 9.81 | 2.21552 | ||||
| GSAS | 32.3 | 19.3 | 1.16 | −0.01414 | ||
| 5.54 | 13.6 | 2.34332 | ||||
| $ lost/week | 456 | 223 | 0.65 | −0.46978 | ||
| 341 | 327 | 1.76737 | ||||
| Grant et al. ( | Paroxetine/blocks pre-synaptic 5-HT re-uptake transporter (SSRI) | Much improved ON PG-CGI | Paroxetine | w = 0.256 | ||
| 20/34 | Hedges g | |||||
| Placebo | ||||||
| 18/37 | ||||||
| Y-BOCS | Means/S.D.s | |||||
| Paroxetine | ||||||
| Pre | Post | |||||
| 21.7 | 13.9 | 0.267 | −0.20131 | |||
| 5.6 | 9.9 | 0.73407 | ||||
| Placebo | ||||||
| GSAS total | 18.3 | 12.4 | ||||
| 3.8 | 7.6 | |||||
| Paroxetine | ||||||
| 31.3 | 20.2 | 0.505 | 0.03204 | |||
| 10.3 | 12.4 | 0.97801 | ||||
| Placebo | ||||||
| 27.3 | 21.3 | |||||
| 6.8 | 9.9 | |||||
| Grant and Potenza ( | Escitalopram/blocks pre-synaptic 5-HT re-uptake transporter (SSRI) | PRE- 12 week endpoint: | Means/S.D.s | Hedges g | ||
| Pre | Post | |||||
| PG-YBOCS TOT | 22.23 | 11.85 | 0.723 | −1.3 | ||
| 4.51 | 10.69 | 2.74596 | ||||
| GSAS TOT | 25.31 | 17.46 | 0.451 | −1.53403 | ||
| 7.44 | 11.95 | 2.43534 | ||||
| CGI severity | 4.62 | 2.15 | 1.033 | −1.0537 | ||
| 0.65 | 1.82 | 3.11939 | ||||
| Hollander et al. ( | Fluvoxamine/blocks pre-synaptic 5-HT re-uptake transporter (SSRI) | Clinical responders (all abstinent) | 7/10 | N/A | ||
| Means/S.D.s | Hedges g | |||||
| Pre | Post | |||||
| YBOCS-PG urge | 6.9 | 4.8 | 0.407 | 1.80745 | ||
| 3.9 | 5.0 | −0.99294 | ||||
| YBOCS-PG | 13.1 | 14.1 | −0.195 | 1.11944 | ||
| Behavior | 3.1 | 5.5 | −1.58397 | |||
| Kim and Grant ( | Naltrexone/opioid antagonist (release blocker) | Z score: | See Z scores | |||
| GSAS TOT | −2.347 | |||||
| CGI (clinician) | −3.333 | |||||
| CGI (patient) | −4.179 | |||||
| Kim et al. ( | Paroxetine/blocks pre-synaptic 5-HT re- uptake transporter (SSRI) | Means/S.D.s | ||||
| Pre | Post | Cohen’s d (Hedges Adj.) | ||||
| GSAS TOT | Therapist-rated | |||||
| 37.0 | 10.9 | 0.99933 | ||||
| 17.0 | 5.2 | 2.001 | 3.00312 | |||
| Self-report | ||||||
| 38.9 | 13.1 | 1.114 | 0.2351 | |||
| 29.9 | 10.1 | 1.99355 | ||||
| Gambling urge | Therapist | 0.869 | ||||
| GSAS score | 3.8 | 1.0 | 1.570 | 2.270 | ||
| 2.4 | 0.6 | |||||
| Self-report | ||||||
| 3.8 | 1.4 | 1.024 | 0.15384 | |||
| 3.0 | 1.1 | 1.89381 | ||||
| Pallanti et al. ( | Lithium vs. Valproate/increases 5-HT vs. GABA agonist | Clinical responders | Lithium 14/23 | |||
Valproate 13/19 | w = 0.257 | |||||
| Means/S.D.s | Cohen’s d (Hedges Adj.) | |||||
| Pre | Post | |||||
| PG-YBOCS (Lith.) | 22.3 | 15.1 | 1.377 | 0.46709 | ||
| 5.9 | 4.0 | 2.2866 | ||||
| PG-YBOC (Valp.) | 9.7 | 7.3 | 0.696 | −0.6740 | ||
| 3.7 | 2.9 | 1.53838 | ||||
PG-CGI (Lith.) PG-CGI (Valp.) | 4.9 | 2.5 | 2.302 | 1.24736 | ||
| 1.1 | 0.9 | 3.35619 | ||||
| 4.6 | 2.3 | 2.40453 | 1.33114 | |||
| 1.0 | 0.7 | 3.47792 | ||||
| Pallanti et al. ( | Nefazodone/5-HT reuptake inhibitor (& NE reuptake inhibitor at high doses) | Clinical responders | 9/12 | N/A | ||
| Means/S.D.s | Cohen’s d (Hedges Adj.) | |||||
| PG-YBOCS | Pre | Post | ||||
| 22.57 | 16.44 | 0.684 | −0.4803 | |||
| 6.69 | 9.60 | 1.84808 | ||||
| Zimmerman et al. ( | Citalopram/5-HT reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) | Means/S.D.s | Cohen’s d (Hedges Adj.) | |||
| PG-YBOCS | Pre | Post | ||||
| 26.4 | 5.4 | 3.091 | 1.59026 4.59187 | |||
| 7.6 | 4.9 | |||||
| $’s lost in 2 weeks | 1877 | 145 | 0.907 | −0.15772 | ||
| 2520 | 324 | 1.97242 | ||||
| Days gambled in 2 weeks | 8.8 | 1.6 | 1.752 | 0.5593 | ||
| 5.2 | 1.7 | 2.94415 | ||||