| Literature DB >> 27217809 |
Jan Copeland1, Izabella Pokorski1.
Abstract
Cannabis is the most widely used and variably regulated drug in the world, with increasing trends of use being reported in the US, Australia, Asia, and Africa. Evidence has shown a decrease in the age of commencement of cannabis use in some developed countries and a prolongation of risk of initiation to cannabis use beyond adolescence among more recent users. Cannabis use is associated with numerous health risks and long-term morbidity, as well as risk of developing cannabis-use disorders. Cannabis users infrequently seek professional treatment, and normally do so after a decade of use. Cannabis-use disorders are currently treated using a selection of psychosocial interventions. Severity of withdrawal is a factor that increases the risk of relapse, and is the target of pharmacotherapy studies. Currently, there is no approved pharmacotherapy for cannabis-use disorders. A number of approaches have been examined, and trials are continuing to find a safe and effective medication with little abuse liability.Entities:
Keywords: cannabinoid; intervention; marijuana; treatment; withdrawal
Year: 2016 PMID: 27217809 PMCID: PMC4862355 DOI: 10.2147/SAR.S89857
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Subst Abuse Rehabil ISSN: 1179-8467
Pharmacological trials for cannabis-use disorder
| Drug | Sample size (n) | Dose | Design | Results | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral THC | 11 | 10 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Reduced withdrawal | Haney et al |
| Oral THC | 8 | 30, 90 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Reduced withdrawal | Budney et al |
| Nabilone | 11 | 6, 8 mg | Nonclinical, experimental laboratory | Reduced withdrawal and use | Haney et al |
| Dronabinol | 2 | 10–50 mg | Case studies | Mixed results | Levin and Kleber |
| Cannabidiol | 1 | 300–600 mg | Case study | Reduced withdrawal and use | Crippa et al |
| Nabiximols | 51 | 166.4 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Reduced withdrawal | Allsop et al |
| Rimonabant | 63 | 1, 3, 10, 30, 90 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Attenuated effects of cannabis, potentially serious side effects | Huestis et al |
| Rimonabant | 42 | 40 mg | Double-blind parallel-group | Attenuated cardiovascular effects of cannabis, removed from the market | Huestis et al |
| Naltrexone | 14 | 50 mg | Double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Failed to attenuate dronabinol | Wachtel and de Wit |
| Naltrexone | 9, 23 | 50 mg | Double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Enhanced subjective effects of THC | Haney et al |
| Naltrexone | 21 | 12 mg | Double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Mixed results | Haney et al |
| Naltrexone | 29 | 12, 25, 50, 100 mg | Double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Enhanced subjective effects of cannabis | Cooper and Haney |
| Naltrexone | 5 | 50, 200 mg | Double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | No effect | Greenwald and Stitzer |
| Bupropion | 10 | 300 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Worsened withdrawal | Haney et al |
| Nefazodone | 7 | 450 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Improved anxiety | Haney et al |
| Fluoxetine | 22 | 20–40 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Reduced cannabis use | Cornelius et al |
| Lofexidine + THC | 8 | 2.4, 60 mg | Placebo-controlled | Reduced withdrawal | Haney et al |
| Nefazodone | 106 | 300 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | No effect | Carpenter et al |
| Entacapone | 36 | 200 mg | Open-label | Reduced craving | Shafa and Abdolmaleky112 |
| Baclofen | 11 | 30, 60, 90 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | No effect | Haney et al |
| Fluoxetine | 70 | 20 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | No effect | Cornelius et al |
| 24 | 1,200 mg | Open-label | Reduced self-reported use, but not urine cannabinoid levels | Gray et al | |
| 116 | 1,200 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled | Increased negative urine cannabinoid tests during treatment | Gray et al | |
| Buspirone | 10 | Up to 60 mg | Open-label | Reduced craving and irritability | McRae et al |
| Buspirone | 50 | Up to 60 mg | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | Reduced cannabis use | McRae et al |
| Lithium | 9 | 600–900 mg | Open-label | Reduced withdrawal | Bowen et al |
| Lithium | 12 | 500 mg | Open-label | Tolerated, reduction in cannabis use | Winstock et al |
| Lithium | 38 | 500 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | No effect | Johnston et al |
| Divalproex | 7 | 1,500 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Worsened withdrawal | Haney et al |
| Divalproex | 25 | 1,500–2,000 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | No effect | Levin et al |
| Gabapentin | 50 | 1,200 mg | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Decreased withdrawal, high dropout rate | Mason et al |
| Oxytocin | 16 | 40 IU | Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossover | Decreased craving and anxiety | McRae-Clark et al |
| Quetiapine | 14 | 200 mg | Within-subject double-blind placebo-controlled | Decreased withdrawal, increased cannabis use | Cooper et al |
| Varenicline | 5 | 0.5–1 mg | Case series | Reduced use, zero completion of study due to side effects | Newcombe et al |
Notes:
Nefazodone dosage 300 mg; buproprion dosage 150 mg.
Sample size data not available for each individual drug.
Baclofen dosage 30, 60, 90 mg; mirtazapine dosage 30 mg.
This study had two separate sample sizes.
Abbreviation: THC, tetrahydrocannabinol.