Literature DB >> 27217809

Progress toward pharmacotherapies for cannabis-use disorder: an evidence-based review.

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


Introduction

In the US, 23 states now have medical cannabis laws, with four of those states legalizing cannabis for recreational use.1 As debate continues about the medicinal benefits of cannabis and the potential harms of recreational use, a subset of the approximate 5% of the world’s population who regularly use cannabis will develop a cannabis-use disorder, characterized by tolerance, craving, and a withdrawal syndrome.2 The 2012–2013 National Survey on Drug Use and Health reported cannabis as the most commonly used illicit drug in 2013, with 19.8 million past-month users and 8.1 million daily or almost-daily users in people over 12 years old, a dramatic increase from the 5.1 million reported in the 2005–2007 survey.3 The prevalence of cannabis-use disorders has also increased significantly, by approximately 20%,1 with 4.2 million people reporting past-year dependence or abuse in 2013, the largest number for illicit drugs.3 This increase is speculatively explained by the increased potency of cannabis through altered tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) levels and the wider availability of cannabis.1,4,5 As the prevalence of cannabis-use disorder increases, so does demand for treatment.1 To date, psychosocial treatment remains the primary approach utilized, despite high nonresponse and relapse rates (70%).6 There is a clear need to improve current treatment options, and medications may be a useful adjunct to aid in successful treatment outcomes; however, there are currently no approved medications for the treatment of cannabis-use disorder.2,6 This review aims to present information on the pharmacotherapies that have been trialed as a treatment for cannabis-use disorder. The strategies that have been explored include agonist substitution, antagonists, or modulators of noncannabinoid neurotransmitter systems assessing the effects on different aspects of cannabis use (eg, intoxication, withdrawal, self-administration).2 Research to date has been limited to human laboratory studies and small open-label or placebo-controlled clinical trials. All the studies conducted have provided useful information regarding safety and tolerability of medications combined with cannabis, as well as provided clinically relevant outcomes to guide the selection of medications to test in expensive and time-consuming clinical trials.2

Materials and methods

This study is a review of the literature on pharmacotherapies for cannabis-use disorder. The search for articles was performed on the PubMed, Medline, and Google Scholar online databases, using the search terms “cannabis use disorder”, “pharmacotherapies”, “withdrawal”, “intoxication”, and “dependence”. Additionally, an active search was conducted for related articles in the reference lists of selected publications, which included case reports, human laboratory studies, open-label studies and randomized controlled trials. An inclusion criterion was articles published in English up to January 2016. Only those studies involving human samples were included. Altogether, 56 articles were considered relevant to this review, and the results were subdivided according to their pharmacological mechanism of action.

Epidemiology of cannabis use

Global annual prevalence of cannabis use is estimated to be between 2.8% and 4.5%.7 As 23 states in the US have legalized medicinal cannabis, four of these states have also legalized recreational cannabis.1 In the US, lifetime prevalence of cannabis use has been reported to be between 21% and 43% and 12-month prevalence between 4% and 10% in different large-scale epidemiological studies from 2013.3,7,8 Cannabis use is typically more common among males, though sex differences appear to be diminishing.8,9 Outside the US, patterns of consumption are unevenly distributed, with the highest prevalence rates in parts of Africa, Oceania (New Zealand, Pacific Islands, and Australia), and Europe. Use appeared to stabilize or decline in Canada9 and much of Europe and New Zealand after observed peaks in the late 1990s. More recently, trends toward increased use are being reported in Asia, Africa, and Australia, and more significantly in the US.9,11–13 Cannabis use is most common among young adults, with recent US data citing 19% past-month use in North Americans aged 18–25 years.3 In Australians aged 18–29 years, 21% reported past-year use,11 and in 15- to 34-year-olds in the European Union, an average of 12% reported past-year use.12 Several age-related trends have recently become apparent, which include a decrease in the age of commencement of cannabis use among younger age-groups in some developed countries and a prolongation of the risk of initiation to cannabis use beyond adolescence in more recent cohorts of users.13–15 The US has reported a notable increase in adolescent cannabis use, with approximately 25% of eighth grade students and nearly 40% of high school seniors reporting use.16 This increase has been linked to a decline in perceived risk of cannabis, which may be due to the legalization of cannabis in the US and its promotion as a medicine.1,9 National data from North America and Australia also indicate increases in recent cannabis use among 50- to 59-year-olds, possibly in part reflecting an aging cohort of adolescent cannabis users from the 1970s, when cannabis use first became popular, and the promotion of medicinal cannabis.11,13 A limited number of studies examining the use patterns of indigenous communities in the US and Australia have reported significantly higher levels of cannabis use, particularly daily use, when compared to nonindigenous populations. This is an especially prominent issue among indigenous adolescents.17,18

Cannabis harms

Cannabis has very low acute toxicity, and is thus only a minor contributor to drug-related mortality; it is, however, a major public health burden in terms of morbidity.19,20 Over the decades, cannabis plants have undergone selective breeding to intensify the potency of the “high” gained from smoking, as well as to intensify the psychotropic effects experienced.1,4,5 The full extent of the consequences of high-THC cannabis strains are not yet known; however, it can be speculated that this increase is related to an increase in cannabis-use disorder and treatment sought. There is a growing body of evidence on the accumulated risks associated with regular, long-term use, with cannabis-use disorder being the most obvious. A recent body of literature indicated that chronic cannabis use may be associated with changes in brain morphology,21 and animal studies have demonstrated that adolescent cannabis use can affect the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, which are involved in attention, executive function, and memory, and may permanently impair adolescent neurocognitive functions.15 Although reports of neurocognitive deficits among those with cannabis-use disorder have been inconsistent, studies have demonstrated deficits in verbal fluency, working memory, attention regulation, visuospatial abilities, immediate and delayed memory functions, and executive functions.15 Some studies have also shown that subtle cognitive impairment affecting attention, memory, and the organization and integration of complex information, as well as loss of overall intelligence, have been found to persist even when cannabis is no longer used.22,23 Cannabis use has frequently been linked to the development of mental illness, and while cross-sectional data frequently shows an association with anxiety and depression,24–26 longitudinal studies have produced mixed evidence between the role of cannabis-related causality in the development of these disorders versus the underlying causes and comorbidity. Frequent cannabis use or use disorder has been associated with a modest risk of developing a depressive disorder,22 as found in a recent integrative analysis of four major Australasian cohorts27 and a meta-analysis of the literature.28 Populations at greater risk of developing the adverse acute and chronic effects of cannabis use include adolescents, pregnant women, those with respiratory or cardiovascular vulnerability, and those with comorbid disorders.29 Smoking while pregnant increases the risk of delivering a child with lower birth weight.30–32 Individuals with cardiovascular disease risk exacerbating their conditions, and this risk also applies to those with respiratory disease, with such side effects as chronic cough, sputum production, wheezing, and bronchitis.33 There is also growing evidence that some of the negative respiratory effects of cannabis and tobacco may be additive.34 Onset of cannabis use during early adolescence may be a particular marker for increased risk of cannabis-use disorder, adverse physical health, compromised social development, and academic achievement.35,36 Comorbidity with other substance-use disorders and other mental health disorders is a clinical concern and is relatively common, despite ongoing debates about causality.37,38 For those vulnerable to psychotic disorders, evidence has shown that cannabis use can precipitate the disorder on average 3 years earlier, as well as increasing rates of noncompliance with medication and hospitalizations.39

Cannabis-use disorder

Although the majority of cannabis users do not report dependence, 10%–30% of those who ever use cannabis will go on to develop a cannabis-use disorder.2,40–42 Cannabis-use disorder is an emerging area of research, with age of onset most commonly occurring during adolescence or young adulthood, within 10 years of initiation of smoking.41,42 Rates of cannabis abuse and dependence are greater among males.8 Cannabis-use disorder has been found to commence with loss of control and continued use despite harm, with withdrawal experienced at a later age.43 There is some evidence that as prevalence of cannabis use increases, so does the incidence of cannabis-use disorder. Recent US data reports that since 2006, there has been a significant overall increase in cannabis use, with 8.1 million people aged 12 years or older using cannabis daily or almost daily in the past 12 months.3 Lifetime prevalence rates of cannabis dependence also dramatically increased to 8.3% in 2013, a stark contrast to the 2.5% reported in 2006.8 This is indicative of the likely growing demand for the number of treatment episodes and the need for improved pharmacological and psychosocial interventions for this population. The diagnostic criteria for cannabis-use disorders can be found in two major classification systems: the International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10 and the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). The most recent DSM (DSM-5) now includes a disorder specific to cannabis use, combining abuse and dependence, whereas the ICD-10 contains only a general diagnosis. The DSM-5 requires at least two criteria of tolerance, withdrawal, increasing amounts of use over time, inability to control consumption, craving, and recurrent use causing negative impacts on social, professional, and educational life, to be met within the previous 12 months.40 These signify a problematic pattern of use, leading to clinically significant impairment or distress for the user.44 Among the general adolescent population (aged 13–19 years) frequency rather than duration of use may be a better predictor of meeting criteria for cannabis-use disorder.45 Changes to the DSM diagnostic criteria include removal of the legal criterion for abuse and addition of a craving criterion, and the removal of the abuse/dependence distinction.40 Originally, cannabis withdrawal was not included in the DSM-IV as a discrete disorder as the evidence evolved. Preclinical, clinical, and epidemiological studies over the last decade have produced irrefutable evidence of a cannabis-withdrawal syndrome.46,47 The symptoms include nightmares and strange dreams, trouble sleeping, anxiety, irritability, physical tension, low mood and depression, and reduced appetite.48 Symptoms normally occur between days 1 and 3 of abstinence and peak between days 2 and 6, and typically last 4–14 days.49 Sleep difficulties may last for some weeks as slow-wave sleep returns to normal. Cannabis withdrawal causes functional impairment dependent on symptom severity48,49 that is predictive of relapse to cannabis use and greater levels of cannabis use following a quit attempt.50,51 Cannabis withdrawal may be a significant barrier in achieving abstinence, and is an important aspect in treatment planning.

Cannabis treatment

Trends in increased potency of cannabis have created an increase in use, as well as a global increase in the demand for treatment of cannabis-use disorder.1,3,12 In general, cannabis users rarely present for specialist addiction treatment.14 Adults that do present for treatment of cannabis dependence have typically used cannabis for 10 years or more and have had multiple failed quit attempts. When they do seek professional help, they not only do so due to disorder criteria, such as dependence or withdrawal symptoms, but also in response to other issues related to their cannabis use, such as relationship and family difficulties, financial problems, health concerns, and poor life satisfaction.14,52 Adolescent cannabis users presenting for treatment are less likely to believe they have a problem, and typically do so due to coercion or from family members seeking treatment for them.14

Pharmacotherapies

Cannabinoid medications

As research into cannabis increases, so does knowledge surrounding the complex endocannabinoid system. The endocannabinoid system modulates neurotransmission at inhibitory and excitatory synapses in brain regions relevant to the regulation of pain, emotion, motivation, and cognition.52 This signaling system is engaged by the active component of cannabis, Δ9-THC, which exerts its pharmacological effects by activation of the two known cannabinoid receptors, CB1 and CB2, although there is increasing research suggesting that additional cannabinoid receptors exist.16,52 High concentrations of CB1 receptors are found in the hippocampus, neocortex, basal ganglia, and cerebellum.52 CB2 receptors are found primarily in the peripheral tissues, and are thought to modulate immune and inflammatory responses.53,54 During chronic cannabis use, a series of neuroplastic changes occur, which continue to be poorly understood. These changes, however, are thought to lead to the development of dependence. Downregulation and desensitization of the CB1 receptors is also thought to occur, suggesting that withdrawal is driven by compensatory downregulation of the endocannabinoid system.54,55 These withdrawal symptoms promote relapse into drug use, suggesting that pharmacological strategies aimed at alleviating cannabis withdrawal might prevent relapse and reduce dependence. Cannabinoid-replacement therapy and CB1-receptor antagonism are two potential treatments for cannabis dependence that are currently under investigation.52,55

Cannabinoid antagonists

Rimonabant is a CB1-selective cannabinoid-receptor antagonist that has been found to block the effects of THC in animals. This strategy targets the addiction to the cannabis by blocking the positive subjective and reinforcing effects of the drug.2 In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study by Huestis at al, rimonabant was tested in 63 patients with a history of cannabis use. All participants were given a cannabis cigarette 2 hours after taking the medication. The medication was found to decrease feelings of intoxication and decrease heart rate.56 This study was among the first to show the utility of cannabis-receptor blocking in decreasing subjective cannabis effects.57 However, rimonabant was withdrawn from the market in 2009, due to potentially serious side effects, such as severe depression and suicidal thoughts.58,59 Novel cannabinoid-receptor antagonists are believed to be in development.

Cannabinoid agonists

Agonist substitution involves replacing the problem drug with the same or similar drug in a safer form and route of administration. It is hypothesized that CB1-receptor agonists should reduce cannabis use by activating the same key binding sites as cannabis, reducing withdrawal and cravings.59 Agonist therapy is also thought to attenuate the acute effects of cannabis through competition at the receptor sites, facilitating abstinence. The agonist is then generally tapered off once acute withdrawal symptoms have passed.59 The cannabis-agonist therapies have shown greatest promise in recent trials. Due to the experimental nature of the following studies, there are no known standard dosages testing not only drug efficacy but also balanced dosing for benefits versus side effects.60 Dronabinol is an orally bioavailable synthetic form of THC that acts as a cannabinoid-receptor agonist at the CB1 receptor. It is approved for use in the US for AIDS-related anorexia and nausea as a result of chemotherapy.61 It has shown some benefit in doses of 10–50 mg in reducing cannabis-withdrawal symptoms, with minimal side effects in several laboratory and open-label studies.62,63 Early studies testing dronabinol on cannabis withdrawal found significant reductions in craving, anxiety, chills, depression, trouble sleeping, and decreased appetite (10 mg, five times/day for 6 days).61,64,65 This study was successfully replicated, and found no evidence of abuse potential.2,62 A follow-up trial was conducted at 20 mg three times a day for 8 days, which decreased symptoms of withdrawal but produced mild intoxication and did not decrease relapse to cannabis.64,65 There have been two case reports testing dronabinol in combination with other medications. One patient was medicated for 6 months with dronabinol (40 mg/day) and divalproex (250 mg/day), a mood stabilizer that reduces irritability and mood swings in bipolar disorder and during alcohol withdrawal. A second patient was maintained on dronabinol (10–15 mg/day) while also receiving venlafaxine (25 mg/day) for depression and modafinil (100 mg as needed) to counter the energy decreases experienced with dronabinol. In both cases, patients achieved and maintained abstinence.64 In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study by Levin et al, dronabinol was provided twice daily at 40 mg doses in a 12-week trial in 156 cannabis-dependent adults. Both groups received weekly motivational enhancement therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy. Dronabinol appeared to lower withdrawal symptoms and promote treatment retention (77% versus 61%, respectively), but did not affect abstinence at weeks 7 and 8 (17.7% and 15.6% for dronabinol and placebo, respectively). Four serious adverse events were reported, but none were deemed to be study-related.65 Although there is evidence that dronabinol decreases withdrawal, it does not appear to alter levels of cannabis use significantly. Nabilone is another cannabinoid agonist with superior bioavailability to dronabinol, with a more predictable dose–response relationship and less individual variability in drug response.66 Promisingly, nabilone has been found to improve both cannabis-withdrawal symptoms and prevent relapse in a nonclinical, experimental laboratory-based study.66 Nabilone was tested in three 8-day inpatient phases, assessing different nabilone doses (0, 6, and 8 mg/day). Both doses were shown to reverse withdrawal-induced irritability, sleep disturbance, and appetite reduction.67 Both nabilone doses decreased laboratory measures of cannabis relapse, and patients chose to smoke fewer doses of cannabis while on nabilone compared to placebo. These positive results support further testing of nabilone in clinical populations. The most innovative and promising pharmacotherapy currently being explored is nabiximols (Sativex), which has a 1:1 ratio of Δ9-THC to cannabidiol (CBD) in an oromucosal, botanically derived, cannabinoid-based spray. Nabiximols is available in 15 countries for symptomatic relief of spasticity in multiple sclerosis, and is being assessed for cancer-related pain. This drug has recently been trialed in Australia for the treatment of withdrawal symptoms. This relatively small (n=51) inpatient randomized controlled trial found that nabiximols were efficacious in the reduction of both the severity and time course of cannabis withdrawal, and in retaining participants in withdrawal treatment.57 The THC component of nabiximols provides the agonist substitution, and the CBD content of nabiximols is potentially a major innovation over other CB1-receptor agonists, such as dronabinol and nabilone. CBD has psychoactive but not intoxicating effects.68 There is speculation about its method of action. CBD affects numerous other drug targets, including transient receptor-potential family channels, 5-HT1A, and PPARγ receptors.69 CBD is present in varying degrees across different cannabis strains, although it appears largely bred out of modern illicit strains. CBD has notable anxiolytic, antidepressant, and antipsychotic properties, and can attenuate paranoia and other adverse psychological effects of THC in humans.68–74 CBD appears to operate at both CB1 and CB2 receptors, indirectly stimulating endogenous cannabinoid signaling by suppressing fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH), the enzyme that breaks down anandamide.69 Anandamide is the endogenous cannabinoid produced by the human body. This enables more anandamide to remain at the receptors, reducing the sudden withdrawal produced by abrupt cessation of cannabis use. It has also been shown to be an inverse agonist of CB2 receptors.70,71 It has been tested extensively on animals and humans, and is just entering the clinical trial phase for cannabis use. It has shown some promise in a single case study, where it was effective in reducing withdrawal symptoms and sustaining the withdrawal attempt of a cannabis-dependent patient with multiple failed quit attempts. Following maintenance on CBD (300–600 mg/day) for 11 days, the patient demonstrated no self-reported abstinence symptoms.73 It has also shown some promise as a treatment for cannabis dependence, due to its potential impact on the salience of drug cues.74 All these potential treatments need and are undergoing much further testing and replication, in order to enter the first line of treatment recommendations.

Other medications

There have been various noncannabinoid medications already used to treat other substance-use disorders, which have been evaluated in controlled inpatient studies for the treatment of cannabis withdrawal, largely with negative results.

Opioid agonists and antagonists

Clonidine, an adrenergic receptor agonist, reduced cannabis-withdrawal symptoms in rodents, presumably by reversing enhanced noradrenergic signaling during withdrawal. This led to testing lofexidine, an α2-adrenergic receptor agonist that is currently used to treat opioid withdrawal, in clinical studies, which was found not to diminish mood symptoms associated with withdrawal significantly, but did improve sleep and decrease cannabis relapse. Combining lofexidine and dronabinol produced the most significant improvements in sleep, withdrawal, craving, and relapse compared to placebo.75–77 Naltrexone is an opioid µ-antagonist approved for treatment of alcohol and opioid dependence. In a study examining the interaction of naltrexone with smoked cannabis (0 or 3.27% THC) in a randomized, double-blind trial, it was found that naltrexone alone with no THC increased ratings of “liking”, “take again”, and “stimulated”. Conversely, the naltrexone with 3.27% THC increased ratings of “liking”, “take again”, “stimulated”, “high”, “good”, and “strength”. It was concluded that naltrexone may increase the abuse liability of cannabinoids.78

Antidepressants

Nefazodone and mirtazapine are both antidepressants with sedative properties that enhance noradrenergic and serotonergic activity.79,80 Nefazodone is a serotonin- and norepinephrine-reuptake inhibitor and a 5-HT2A-receptor antagonist approved for the treatment of depression.57,78 During cannabis withdrawal, nefazodone at 450 mg/day for 26 days decreased such symptoms as anxiety and muscle pain, but did not alleviate irritability, misery, or troubled sleep.78,79 Conversely, mirtazapine (30 mg/day for 14 days) reversed sleep disruption and appetite loss during cannabis withdrawal, but did not improve participants’ mood or decrease relapse.79 Consistent with the laboratory data, clinical trials with bupropion and nefazodone were also negative. Bupropion is an indirect noradrenergic and dopaminergic agent used for tobacco cessation and treatment of depression, which was given at 150–300 mg/day for 28 days against placebo, and was found to worsen irritability, restlessness, depression, and troubled sleep during cannabis withdrawal.57,80 It is hypothesized that the stimulant properties of bupropion may have exacerbated abstinence-associated agitation and insomnia. In a randomized study by Carpenter et al of cannabis-dependent participants, bupropion (300 mg/day divided into two oral doses) and nefazodone (600 mg/day divided into two oral doses) were compared to placebo in a 13-week trial. The study included a 1 week placebo lead-in and 2-week placebo washout period. All patients were given weekly sessions with a psychosocial intervention. There was no difference in cannabis use or withdrawal symptoms among those receiving bupropion, nefazodone, or placebo, and only half the patients completed the 10-week medication phase.81 Mood disorders, especially depression, are a common comorbidity associated with cannabis use. The use of antidepressant medication in this population was explored to promote abstinence.82 Venlafaxine and fluoxetine were tested in a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial with depressed cannabis-dependent adolescents.83 Venlafaxine is a serotonin- and norepinephrine-reuptake inhibitor approved for the treatment of major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder, and panic disorder. In the 12-week study, no advantage was discovered for fluoxetine (10–20 mg/day for 12 weeks) over placebo on either depression or cannabis-use outcomes. A subsequent trial in 103 adult patients found that extended-release venlafaxine (375 mg/day for 12 weeks) was not effective relative to placebo in reducing depression, and found less abstinence in the treatment group (11.8% and 36.5%, respectively).83 Overall, neither laboratory nor clinical studies have provided compelling evidence for the utility of antidepressants to treat cannabis-use disorders.

Anxiolytics and mood stabilizers

Given that anxiety can be a symptom of cannabis withdrawal, it was hypothesized that anxiety symptoms may be a useful treatment target. Exploratory analyses suggested that decreased anxiety predicted cannabis abstinence. The nonbenzodiazepine anxiolytic buspirone was tested in a randomized, controlled clinical trial for cannabis-use disorders.84 Cannabis-dependent patients were randomized to buspirone (60 mg/day) or placebo for 12 weeks in conjunction with a psychological intervention (two or three sessions of motivational interviewing during the first 4 weeks). The study reported a high dropout rate (50%) and no direct effect of buspirone on self-reported anxiety, withdrawal symptoms, or craving. However, exploratory analyses suggested that decreased anxiety over the study predicted cannabis abstinence.84 Divalproex has been investigated for its mood-stabilizing properties with effects upon γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) transmission. Divalproex is an anticonvulsant approved for the treatment of seizures and bipolar disorder, as well as migraine prophylaxis. Administered at 1,500 mg/day for 29 days, the medication was found to decrease cannabis cravings, but increased anxiety, irritability, and fatigue and decreased cognitive performance compared to placebo.85 In an additional randomized, placebo-controlled pilot study in 25 cannabis-dependent adults, divalproex was adjusted to individual patient response (ranging from 250 to 2,000 mg/day) in conjunction with cognitive behavioral therapy for a period of 8 weeks. Patients who completed the 8 weeks reported decreased irritability, cannabis craving, and cannabis use. However, there was an increased incidence of adverse reactions related to the medication, such as fatigue, headaches, drowsiness, and nausea. The adverse events related to the medication, as well as poor patient compliance, do not support the clinical utility of divalproex.86 Another mood stabilizer tested for the treatment of cannabis withdrawal is lithium carbonate. Two small preliminary open-label, inpatient laboratory studies (600–900 mg/day for 6 days and 1,000 mg/day for 7 days) reported moderate reductions in withdrawal symptoms,87,88 but a recent randomized control study of lithium carbonate found a reduction in some specific withdrawal symptoms, such as stomachaches and nightmares, but no significant difference in overall Cannabis Withdrawal Scale scores or levels of cannabis use compared to placebo.89 There are also potential concerns regarding the safety of outpatient administration of lithium, due to its toxicity at high doses.88,89

Other medications

The hormone oxytocin has been tested in several preclinical studies, and has been shown to reduce drug reinforcement and anxiety-like behavior. A recent trial examining the effects of intranasal oxytocin found that acute administration alleviated craving and anxiety in eight cannabis users.90 These data are supported by findings that oxytocin mediates lithium’s effects on cannabis withdrawal, and warrant further investigation into the utility of oxytocin for cannabis-use disorder. Quetiapine, an atypical antipsychotic, which is a 5-HT2A and D2 antagonist, a partial agonist at the 5-HT1A receptor, inhibits the norepinephrine transporter. Quetiapine was given to cannabis users with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, and was reported to reduce cannabis use over the course of treatment.91 An inpatient laboratory study comparing quetiapine at 200 mg/day for 15 days to placebo found improved sleep quality and decreased anorexia during cannabis withdrawal. There was, however, increased craving for cannabis, and self-administration of cannabis, indicating that this drug is not an appropriate potential treatment for cannabis-use disorders.92 A small open-label study investigated the clinical utility of atomoxetine, a norepinephrine-reuptake inhibitor used for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD; 20–80 mg daily for 11 weeks). A reduction in cannabis use was demonstrated in cannabis-dependent individuals; however, the medication produced a number of adverse effects in the majority of patients (nausea, vomiting, dyspepsia, diarrhea).93 A follow up placebo-controlled study evaluated the effects of atomoxetine on symptoms of ADHD and cannabis use in cannabis-dependent adults in conjunction with motivational enhancement therapy.94 Participants randomized to atomoxetine showed greater improvements in clinically assessed ADHD symptoms, but no significant effects on self-reported ADHD symptoms or cannabis use. Entacapone, an inhibitor of catecholaminergic catabolism approved for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, was tested in a small open-label pilot study over 12 weeks on patients meeting criteria for cannabis-use disorder. As an acute maintenance treatment, entacapone at 2,000 mg/day significantly decreased craving for cannabis in over half the patients. The drug was well tolerated, and there were no reported serious adverse events, which warrants further studies to confirm these findings.95,96 Alternative pharmacotherapy approaches continue to be explored as understanding of the neuropharmacology of cannabis-use disorders improves.82 These alternative medications have been found to treat other drugs of dependence or target similar pathways to cannabis. Animal studies showed that N-acetylcysteine (NAC), an antioxidant, reversed alterations to the glutamine system associated with repeated self-administration of a range of addictive drugs. In an open-label study, adolescents received 2,400 mg of NAC daily over a 4-week period with no other intervention. The medication decreased self-reported cannabis use, as well as cannabis craving. It was generally well tolerated, but did produce some mild-to-moderate side effects.97 A follow-up 8-week double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial with 116 treatment-seeking cannabis-dependent adolescents (ages 15–21 years) received NAC (1,200 mg) or placebo twice daily as well as contingency management and brief cessation counseling weekly.98 Participants receiving NAC were twice as likely to produce a negative urine-toxicology test at the end of the study compared with those receiving placebo. This difference, however, was not significant at 1-month follow-up. In a case series assessing the effects of baclofen, a GABA-receptor agonist and antispasmodic medication, 40 mg/day in six patients with cannabis and nicotine dependence, common side effects included sedation and lethargy.99 Despite this, the medication was well tolerated, and it was reported that withdrawal symptoms decreased in patients who maintained abstinence for between 1 and 13 months.99 In a laboratory study, baclofen did not reduce cannabis relapse, had negative effects on mood and behavior, and reduced cognitive performance across conditions.79 These results fail to support the use of baclofen for cannabis withdrawal. Gabapentin is an alkylated analog of GABA approved in the US for the treatment of seizures and postherpetic neuralgia. It is believed to modulate GABAergic mechanisms by blocking the α2δ subunit of the voltage-gated calcium channel. In a 12-week, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in 50 adults with cannabis dependence, 1,200 mg of gabapentin was divided into three daily doses. Although there was a high dropout rate, the authors found statistically significant reduction in grams used and days of use, along with reductions in cannabis-withdrawal symptoms, marijuana cravings, sleep problems, and depression scores. Improvements in measures of executive functioning were also seen, and there were no serious adverse events.100,101 The fixed dose of 1,200 mg/day was found to be safe and well tolerated,100 with no safety or dependence risks obtained in earlier human laboratory studies;102 however, there have been reports regarding the misuse potential of gabapentin, which may be an important consideration in future studies.103–105 Nevertheless, these promising findings prompted a clinical trial that is under way at Scripps Research Institute (NCT00974376). Varenicline is a tobacco-cessation aid with demonstrated efficacy. It is a partial agonist at the α4β2 subtype of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) and a full agonist at the α7nAChR, which has also been shown to bind with THC. In light of this binding similarity and the common concurrent use of cannabis with tobacco, varenicline was tested on five cannabis and tobacco users in a small case series. Four of the participants reported a reduction in the enjoyment obtained from cannabis and the amount they used. Nevertheless, all patients failed to complete the 12-week course of medication, due to a variety of reported side effects, such as headache, vomiting, and anger. Additionally, varenicline has been implicated in anger toward others. A larger study would be required to assess the utility of varenicline in the treatment of cannabis dependence, as well as close monitoring of adverse events.106 The most recent drug to be tested, vilazodone, a selective serotonin-receptor inhibitor and partial 5-HT1A agonist, was tested against placebo on a randomized group of 76 cannabis-dependent adults. Participants received 40 mg of vilazodone a day for 8 weeks, including brief motivational enhancement-therapy intervention and contingency management to encourage study retention. Vilazodone was found to provide no advantage over placebo in reducing cannabis use.110

Conclusion

Increasing cannabis prevalence results in an increase in harms associated with cannabis use, including cannabis-use disorder. With a growing number of users seeking treatment for cannabis-use disorders, there is a demand for targeted treatments and a wider range of evidence-based options. Comorbid substance-use disorders and mental health conditions are common, and should be assessed and treated concurrently. Although there is currently no evidence-based pharmacotherapy for the treatment of cannabis-use disorder, Table 1 provides a summation of the trials that have been conducted, and highlights the therapies that were least successful, such as the antagonist rimonabant. The most promising are the newer agonist therapies, such as nabiximols and nabilone, which have been found to reduce measures of withdrawal and relapse, warranting further exploration in the management of aspects of cannabis-use disorder.
Table 1

Pharmacological trials for cannabis-use disorder

DrugSample size (n)DoseDesignResultsAuthors
Cannabinoid agonists
Oral THC1110 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverReduced withdrawalHaney et al61
Oral THC830, 90 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverReduced withdrawalBudney et al63
Nabilone116, 8 mgNonclinical, experimental laboratoryReduced withdrawal and useHaney et al66
Dronabinol210–50 mgCase studiesMixed resultsLevin and Kleber60
Cannabidiol1300–600 mgCase studyReduced withdrawal and useCrippa et al72
Nabiximols51166.4 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverReduced withdrawalAllsop et al57
Cannabinoid antagonists
Rimonabant631, 3, 10, 30, 90 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverAttenuated effects of cannabis, potentially serious side effectsHuestis et al56
Rimonabant4240 mgDouble-blind parallel-groupAttenuated cardiovascular effects of cannabis, removed from the marketHuestis et al58
Other agents
Opioid antagonists
Naltrexone1450 mgDouble-blind placebo-controlled crossoverFailed to attenuate dronabinolWachtel and de Wit78
Naltrexone9, 23d50 mgDouble-blind placebo-controlled crossoverEnhanced subjective effects of THCHaney et al76
Naltrexone2112 mgDouble-blind placebo-controlled crossoverMixed resultsHaney et al79
Naltrexone2912, 25, 50, 100 mgDouble-blind placebo-controlled crossoverEnhanced subjective effects of cannabisCooper and Haney80
Naltrexone550, 200 mgDouble-blind placebo-controlled crossoverNo effectGreenwald and Stitzer81
Antidepressants
Bupropion10300 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverWorsened withdrawalHaney et al83
Nefazodone7450 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverImproved anxietyHaney et al77
Fluoxetine2220–40 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverReduced cannabis useCornelius et al87
Lofexidine + THC82.4, 60 mgPlacebo-controlledReduced withdrawalHaney et al75
Nefazodonea,bBupropiona,b106300 mg150 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverNo effectCarpenter et al84
Entacapone36200 mgOpen-labelReduced cravingShafa and Abdolmaleky112
Baclofenb,c or mirtazapineb,c1130, 60, 90 mg30 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverNo effectHaney et al82
Fluoxetine7020 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverNo effectCornelius et al88
Glutamates
N-acetylcysteine241,200 mgOpen-labelReduced self-reported use, but not urine cannabinoid levelsGray et al101
N-acetylcysteine1161,200 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlledIncreased negative urine cannabinoid tests during treatmentGray et al102
Anxiolytics
Buspirone10Up to 60 mgOpen-labelReduced craving and irritabilityMcRae et al90
Buspirone50Up to 60 mgDouble-blind, placebo-controlledReduced cannabis useMcRae et al89
Mood stabilizers
Lithium9600–900 mgOpen-labelReduced withdrawalBowen et al92
DrugnDoseDesignResultsStudy
Lithium12500 mgOpen-labelTolerated, reduction in cannabis useWinstock et al93
Lithium38500 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverNo effectJohnston et al94
Divalproex71,500 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverWorsened withdrawalHaney et al61
Divalproex251,500–2,000 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverNo effectLevin et al91
Other
Gabapentin501,200 mgRandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverDecreased withdrawal, high dropout rateMason et al103
Oxytocin1640 IURandomized double-blind placebo-controlled crossoverDecreased craving and anxietyMcRae-Clark et al95
Quetiapine14200 mgWithin-subject double-blind placebo-controlledDecreased withdrawal, increased cannabis useCooper et al97
Varenicline50.5–1 mgCase seriesReduced use, zero completion of study due to side effectsNewcombe et al109

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.

It is anticipated that as the evidence base for full and partial CB1-receptor agonists is developed, these medications will become cost-effective and accessible. Pilot data and theoretical support for CBD make it an important cannabinoid to evaluate for the treatment of cannabis-use disorders with comorbid psychoactive and anxiety disorders. Different approaches yet to be explored include the inhibition of endocannabinoid catabolic enzymes, FAAH, and monoacylglycerol lipase, which reduces cannabinoid withdrawal in animal models with cannabinoid dependence. FAAH inhibitors appear to lack the abuse liability associated with cannabinoid agonists.10 A study examining the efficacy of FAAH inhibitors in reducing cannabis withdrawal in cannabis-dependent participants is under way at Yale University. The recent catastrophic preclinical trial of the FAAH inhibitor BIA 10-2474, however, sounds a new note of caution for future studies of compounds impacting the endogenous cannabinoid-receptor system for a range of indications.
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Authors:  D Robin Taylor; David M Fergusson; Barry J Milne; L John Horwood; Terrie E Moffitt; Malcolm R Sears; Richie Poulton
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2002-08       Impact factor: 6.526

Review 2.  The association between regular cannabis exposure and alterations of human brain morphology: an updated review of the literature.

Authors:  Valentina Lorenzetti; Nadia Solowij; Alex Fornito; Dan Ian Lubman; Murat Yucel
Journal:  Curr Pharm Des       Date:  2014       Impact factor: 3.116

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Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2012-02-29       Impact factor: 7.853

4.  A randomized double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of venlafaxine-extended release for co-occurring cannabis dependence and depressive disorders.

Authors:  Frances R Levin; John Mariani; Daniel J Brooks; Martina Pavlicova; Edward V Nunes; Vito Agosti; Adam Bisaga; Maria A Sullivan; Kenneth M Carpenter
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2013-03-21       Impact factor: 6.526

Review 5.  Cannabis use and earlier onset of psychosis: a systematic meta-analysis.

Authors:  Matthew Large; Swapnil Sharma; Michael T Compton; Tim Slade; Olav Nielssen
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  2011-02-07

Review 6.  Acute phase and five-year follow-up study of fluoxetine in adolescents with major depression and a comorbid substance use disorder: a review.

Authors:  Jack R Cornelius; Duncan B Clark; Oscar G Bukstein; Boris Birmaher; Ihsan M Salloum; Sandra A Brown
Journal:  Addict Behav       Date:  2005-08-15       Impact factor: 3.913

7.  Marijuana use and the risk of Major Depressive Episode. Epidemiological evidence from the United States National Comorbidity Survey.

Authors:  Chuan-Yu Chen; Fernando A Wagner; James C Anthony
Journal:  Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol       Date:  2002-05       Impact factor: 4.328

8.  Effects of maternal drinking and marijuana use on fetal growth and development.

Authors:  R Hingson; J J Alpert; N Day; E Dooling; H Kayne; S Morelock; E Oppenheimer; B Zuckerman
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  1982-10       Impact factor: 7.124

9.  The time course and significance of cannabis withdrawal.

Authors:  Alan J Budney; Brent A Moore; Ryan G Vandrey; John R Hughes
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  2003-08

10.  Pharmacological treatment of cannabis dependence.

Authors:  A M Weinstein; David A Gorelick
Journal:  Curr Pharm Des       Date:  2011       Impact factor: 3.116

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Authors:  Brooke J Arterberry; Hayley Treloar Padovano; Katherine T Foster; Robert A Zucker; Brian M Hicks
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Authors:  Kevin M Gray; Susan C Sonne; Erin A McClure; Udi E Ghitza; Abigail G Matthews; Aimee L McRae-Clark; Kathleen M Carroll; Jennifer S Potter; Katharina Wiest; Larissa J Mooney; Albert Hasson; Sharon L Walsh; Michelle R Lofwall; Shanna Babalonis; Robert W Lindblad; Steven Sparenborg; Aimee Wahle; Jacqueline S King; Nathaniel L Baker; Rachel L Tomko; Louise F Haynes; Ryan G Vandrey; Frances R Levin
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend       Date:  2017-06-10       Impact factor: 4.492

Review 6.  Reciprocal Influences of HIV and Cannabinoids on the Brain and Cognitive Function.

Authors:  Sheri L Towe; Christina S Meade; Christine C Cloak; Ryan P Bell; Julian Baptiste; Linda Chang
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7.  Prevalence and correlates of treatment utilization among adults with cannabis use disorder in the United States.

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Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend       Date:  2017-05-29       Impact factor: 4.492

8.  Emergency Department Burden of Nausea and Vomiting Associated With Cannabis Use Disorder: US Trends From 2006 to 2013.

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9.  Cannabis Withdrawal: A Review of Neurobiological Mechanisms and Sex Differences.

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10.  Predictors of Topiramate Tolerability in Heavy Cannabis-Using Adolescents and Young Adults: A Secondary Analysis of a Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial.

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