| Literature DB >> 25013755 |
Mauro Pettorruso1, Luisa De Risio1, Giovanni Martinotti2, Marco Di Nicola1, Filippo Ruggeri1, Gianluigi Conte1, Massimo Di Giannantonio2, Luigi Janiri1.
Abstract
Pathological gambling or gambling disorder has been defined by the DSM-5 as a behavioral addiction. To date, its pathophysiology is not completely understood and there is no FDA-approved treatment for gambling disorders. Glutamate is the principal excitatory neurotransmitter in the nervous system and it has been recently involved in the pathophysiology of addictive behaviors. In this paper, we review the current literature on a class of drugs that act as modulating glutamate system in PG. A total of 19 studies have been included, according to inclusion and exclusion criteria. Clinical trial and case series using glutamatergic drugs (N-acetylcysteine, memantine, amantadine, topiramate, acamprosate, baclofen, gabapentin, pregabalin, and modafinil) will be presented to elucidate the effectiveness on gambling behaviors and on the related clinical dimensions (craving, withdrawal, and cognitive symptoms) in PG patients. The results have been discussed to gain more insight in the pathophysiology and treatment of PG. In conclusion, manipulation of glutamatergic neurotransmission appears to be promising in developing improved therapeutic agents for the treatment of gambling disorders. Further studies are required. Finally, we propose future directions and challenges in this research area.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25013755 PMCID: PMC4075088 DOI: 10.1155/2014/109786
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Bibliographic process.
Clinical trials and case series using glutamatergic drugs to treat pathological gambling.
| Drug | Dosage | Study design | Duration | Sample size | Methods | Cognitive outcome | Gambling outcome | Comments | References |
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| Acamprosate | 1,998 | Open-label | 8 + 2 weeks | 26 PG pts | PG-YBOCS, G-SAS, CGI, gambling episodes | NA | 77% of participants completed. Improvement on all efficacy scales. 65% were responders. | Improvement in ADHD Checklist scores. | Black et al., 2011 [ |
| 999 | Open-label | 6 months | 8 PG pts | Gambling relapse, VAS | NA | None reached 6-month abstinence. No change in VAS scores to relapse. | Dannon et al., 2011 [ | ||
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| Amantadine | 150 | Clinical case study | 8 weeks | One PG patient | G-SAS, HDRS, YMRS | NA | Reduction of 43–64% in gambling symptoms severity (G-SAS). | Pettorruso et al., 2012 [ | |
| 200 | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 17 weeks | 17 PG pts with Parkinson's disease | G-SAS, PG-YBOCS, SOGS | NA | Abolished daily PG in 7 pts. 5 pts reduced daily expenditures and time spent gambling. | Valuable option in Parkinson's disease gambling behaviors | Thomas et al., 2010 [ | |
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| Baclofen | 30–50 | Open-label | 6 months | 9 PG pts | Gambling relapse, VAS | NA | One patient reached 4-month abstinence. None reached 6-month abstinence. No change in VAS scores to relapse. | Dannon et al., 2011 [ | |
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| Gabapentin, pregabalin | 300–600 | Case series | 6 months | GB: 4 PG pts | G-SAS, VAS | NA | Reduction of gambling craving and withdrawal | Pettorruso et al., 2013 [ | |
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| Memantine | 10–30 | Open-label | 10 weeks | 29 PG pts | PG-YBOCS, stop-signal task, IDED task | Reduced cognitive inflexibility | PG-YBOCS score and hours spent gambling decreased. | Target both gambling and cognitive deficits in PG | Grant et al., 2010 [ |
| 20 | Case report | 8 weeks | One OCD, BD, PG pt | G-SAS | Reduction of more than 50% in GSAS scores. | Pavlovic, 2011 [ | |||
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| Modafinil | 200 | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | Single session | 20 nontreatment-seeking PG pts | EIQ, IGT, cognitive tasks | In H-I pts reduced disinhibition and risky decision-making | In H-I pts decreased desire to gamble, salience, disinhibition, and risky decision-making. In L-I pts increased scores. | Impulsivity could moderate medication response in PG |
Zack and Poulos, 2009 [ |
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| NAC | 1,200–1,800 | Open-label, double-blind discontinuation phase | 8 + 6 weeks | 27 PG pts | PG-YBOCS, G-SAS, CGI | NA | 59.3% were respondents. Difference with placebo in discontinuation phase. | NAC targets craving in PG-addictive subtype | Grant et al., 2007 [ |
| 1,200–3,000 | RCT | 12 weeks | 28 PG, nicotine dependent, pts | SCI-PG, PG-YBOCS | NA | During the 3-month followup, NAC was superior to placebo on PG severity. | NAC facilitates long-term behavioral therapy | Grant et al., 2014 [ | |
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| Topiramate | 200 | Randomized, blind-rater vs fluvoxamine | 12 weeks | 15 PG pts (topiramate), 16 PG pts (fluvoxamine) | SOGS, PG-YBOCS, CGI | NA | 9/12 pts reported full remission and 3/12 partial remission. Significant CGI improvement. | Dannon et al., 2005 [ | |
| 300 | RCT | 14 weeks | 20 PG pts | PG-YBOCS, G-SAS, CGI-I, BIS-11 | Reduced impulsivity traits | No significant effect on the primary measures. | Small sample size. Study probably | Berlin et al., 2013 [ | |
| 200 | Clinical case study (add-on to lithium) | 2 months | One pt with BD and PG comorbidities | None | NA | Gambling behavior abated after 2 months of combined treatment. On long-term followup the patient remained asymptomatic. | Valuable add-on treatment in BD-PG comorbidity | Nicolato et al., 2007 [ | |
RCT: randomized-controlled trial; PG: pathological gambling; G-SAS: Gambling-Symptom Assessment Scale; PG-YBOCS: Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale modified for pathological gambling; HDRS: Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; YMRS: Young Mania Rating Scale; NA: not available; IDED task: intradimensional/extradimensional set shift task; SOSG: South Oaks Gambling Screen; EIQ: Eysenck Impulsiveness Questionnaire; IGT: Iowa gambling task; OCD: obsessive compulsive disorder; BD: bipolar disorder; H-I: high impulsivity; L-I: low impulsivity.
Figure 2Clinical domains and comorbidity issues in the selection of glutamatergic treatment strategies to treat pathological gambling.