| Literature DB >> 27842569 |
Meha Bhatt1, Laura Zielinski2, Lola Baker-Beal3, Neera Bhatnagar4, Natalia Mouravska5, Phillip Laplante6, Andrew Worster7, Lehana Thabane8,9, Zainab Samaan10,11,12,13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Amphetamine and methamphetamine use disorders are associated with severe health and social consequences. No pharmacological therapy has been approved for the treatment of these disorders. Psychostimulants can act as maintenance-like therapies for managing substance use among these patients. The aim of this study is to evaluate the literature examining the efficacy and safety of psychostimulant agents for increasing abstinence and treatment retention among patients with amphetamine and methamphetamine use disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Amphetamine; Central nervous system stimulants; Methamphetamine; Psychostimulants; Substance use disorder
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27842569 PMCID: PMC5109734 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-016-0370-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram for the study selection process
Individual study characteristics (17 included studies)
| Author, year and country | Diagnosis/sample details | Study length | Intervention/dose | Number of participants (% male) | Mean age by treatment group (years), SD | Summary of substance use outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anderson, A 2012 | MA dependence/adults with any frequency of use | 16 weeks | Modafinil/200 or 400 mg once daily on awakening | 210 (59.1% male) | Modafinil 200 mg 37.6 (8.9) | No significant difference in MA non-use weeks ( |
| Anderson, A 2015 | MA dependence/low frequency users (≤29 of past 30 days) | 12 weeks | Bupropion/150 mg twice daily | 204 (65% male) | Total sample 39.3 (NR) | Treatment success, defined as ≥2 negative urines in weeks 11 and 12, was achieved by 14% (14/100) of the bupropion group and 19% (20/104) of the placebo group (chi-square, |
| Das, M 2010 | MA dependence/among men having sex with men | 12 weeks | Bupropion/150 mg 1 pill every morning for 1 week, then 2 150 mg pills every morning thereafter | 30 (100% male) | Bupropion 38.1 (2) | Reductions in meth-metabolite-positive urines were similar in the bupropion and placebo groups (normal-logistic model, |
| Elkashef, A 2008 | MA dependence/adults with any frequency of use | 18 weeks | Bupropion/150 mg once daily for 3 days, then increased to 300 mg daily (1 tablet twice a day) for 11 weeks | 151 (67% male) | Bupropion 36.2 (9.2) | No significant improvement for percentage of participants with MA-free study weeks in the bupropion group (week 1 = 25%; week 12 = 54%) compared to placebo (week 1 = 29%; week 12 = 44%) |
| Galloway, G 2011 | MA dependence/adults with any frequency of use | 8 weeks | Dextroamphetamine/60 mg daily—single dose on the first day and as 2 equally divided doses on subsequent days | 60 (56.7% male) | Dextroamphetamine 37 (7.2) | Out of 16 urine tests over the 8-week trial period, the dextroamphetamine group had 2.9 ± 4.3 MA-negative results and the placebo group had 3.2 ± 5.0 MA-negative results (Mann–Whitney |
| Heinzerling, K 2010 | MA dependence/adults with any frequency of use | 14 weeks | Modafinil/200 mg per day (taken in the morning) for the first 3 days of the study, followed by an increase to 400 mg per day (in the morning) | 71 (70.4% male) | Modafinil 39.1 (11.1) | No significant association between treatment group assignment and the probability of providing MA-free urine drug screens across the treatment period (OR = 0.78, 95% CI 0.39–1.56, |
| Heinzerling, K 2013 | MA abuse or dependence/adolescent low frequency users (≤18 of past 30 days) | 8 weeks | Bupropion/150 mg twice daily | 19 (47.4% male) | Bupropion 17.5 (1.6) | Mean number of twice weekly MA-negative urine screens in bupropion group = 5.0 and placebo group = 8.9 ( |
| Heinzerling, K 2014 | MA dependence/low frequency users (≤29 of past 30 days) | 16 weeks | Bupropion/150 mg once daily for 3 days, then 150 mg twice daily | 84 (80.9% male) | Bupropion 38.6 (10.1) | No significant difference in the proportion of participants with MA abstinence during weeks 11 and 12, for bupropion = 12/41 and placebo = 6/43 ( |
| Konstenius, M | Amphetamine dependence/among individuals with ADHD | 13 weeks | Methylphenidate/18 mg starting dose titrated over period of 10 days to the maximum dose of 72 mg | 24 (75% male) | Methylphenidate 34.6 (10.1) | No significant difference in proportion of positive urine screens during the study between methylphenidate (mean = 10.6, SD = 8.8) and placebo groups (mean = 8.6, SD = 7.8) ( |
| Konstenius, M 2014 | Amphetamine dependence/among incarcerated individuals with ADHD | 24 weeks | Methylphenidate/18 mg starting dose titrated over a period of 19 days (with 36 mg increments every 3 days), to a maximum dose of 180 mg/day | 54 (100% male) | Methylphenidate 41 (7.5) | Significant difference in proportion of drug-negative urines in methylphenidate group (MD = 23%, |
| Ling, W 2014 | MA dependence/adults with any frequency of use | 14 weeks | Methylphenidate/18 mg daily for week 1, 36 mg for week 2 and 54 mg for weeks 3–10 | 110 (81.8% male) | Methylphenidate 38.7 (9.8) | Methylphenidate group was less likely to be MA positive compared to placebo group at week 14 (OR = 0.18, |
| Longo, M 2009 | MA dependence/adults with any frequency of use | 12 weeks | Dexamphetamine/20 mg/day starting dose increased by 10 mg daily as required until stabilized or to a maximum of 110 mg/day (stabilized over 14 days) | 49 (61.2% male) | Dexamphetamine 31.9 (4.5) | Significant decrease of MA concentration in hair for both groups ( |
| Miles, SW | Amphetamine or MA dependence/adults with any frequency of use | 22 weeks | Methylphenidate/18 mg/day for the first week, 36 mg daily for the second week and 54 mg daily thereafter until the end of week 22 | 78 (62.8% male) | Methylphenidate 38.9 (9.2) | No significant difference in mean percentage of positive urine tests over the course of the study between methylphenidate (mean = 89%, SD = 19) and placebo (mean = 90%, SD = 14) groups ( |
| Rezaei, F 2015 | MA dependence/adults with any frequency of use | 10 weeks | Methylphenidate/18 mg/day during the first week and 36 mg/day during the second week and then received 54 mg/day for the remaining 8 weeks | 56 (73.2% male) | Methylphenidate 35.6 (6.9) | Methylphenidate group had significantly less MA-positive urine tests compared to placebo at week 10 ( |
| Shearer, J 2009 | MA dependence/regular users (2–3 days of use per week or more) | 22 weeks | Modafinil/200 mg/day | 80 (62.5% male) | Modafinil 35.8 (6.9) | No significant difference in proportion of stimulant-positive weekly urine drug screens between groups (chi-square = 17.10, |
| Shoptaw, S | MA dependence/adults with any frequency of use | 12 weeks | Bupropion/150 mg per day for days 1–3, followed by an increase to 300 mg per day (one 150 mg capsule taken twice daily) until week 12 | 73 (64.4% male) | Bupropion 34.6 (10.6) | No significant difference between treatment groups in the mean MA-free urine screens or the probability of achieving a MA-free week in a GEE model (chi-square = 0.004, degrees of freedom = 71, |
| Tiihonen, J | Amphetamine or MA dependence/among intravenous users | 20 weeks | Methylphenidate/18 mg/day for the first week, 36 mg/day for the second week, and 54 mg/day thereafter | 34 (70.6% male) | Methylphenidate 35.1 (7.9) | Significantly fewer positive urine samples in methylphenidate group compared to placebo group (OR = 0.42, 95% CI = 0.24–0.72; |
All studies used an inactive placebo pill of the same dosage as the intervention for the control group. The substance use outcomes are summarized as they are reported in the individual studies
MA methamphetamine, SD standard deviation, NR not reported, GEE generalized estimating equations, OR odds ratio, CI confidence interval, MD mean difference
Fig. 2Summary graph of author judgments for each risk of bias criteria
Fig. 3Risk of bias assessment based on author judgment for individual studies
Fig. 4a Forest plot for efficacy of psychostimulants on abstinence from illicit amphetamines or methamphetamines (measured by urinalysis). b Subgroup analysis by psychostimulant medication on abstinence from illicit amphetamines or methamphetamines. c Subgroup analysis by frequency of substance use on abstinence from illicit amphetamines or methamphetamines
Fig. 5a Forest plot for efficacy of psychostimulants on retention in treatment. b Subgroup analysis by substance use disorder on retention in treatment. c Subgroup analysis by psychostimulant medication on retention in treatment. d Subgroup analysis by frequency of substance use on retention in treatment. e Subgroup analysis by treatment duration on retention in treatment
Fig. 6a Funnel plot for abstinence from illicit substances. b Funnel plot for retention in treatment
GRADE evidence profile
| Quality assessment | No. of patients | Effect | Quality | Importance | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # of studies | Study design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other | Psychostimulants | Placebo | Relative (95% CI) | Absolute (95% CI) | ||
| Abstinence from illicit amphetamines and methamphetamines (final 2 weeks of treatment) (assessed with: urinalysis) | ||||||||||||
| 5 | RCTs | Very seriousa,b | Seriousc | Seriousd | Very seriouse | None | 70/353 (19.8%) | 62/289 (21.5%) | OR 0.97 | 5 fewer per 1000 | ⨁◯◯◯ | Critical |
| Retention in treatment (end of trial) (follow-up: range 8 to 24 weeks) | ||||||||||||
| 14 | RCTs | Seriousb | Serious c | Very seriousd,f | Seriouse | None | 332/626 (53.0%) | 268/558 (48.0%) | OR 1.20 | 46 more per 1000 | ⨁◯◯◯ | Critical |
CI confidence interval, OR odds ratio
aThe majority of studies had high attrition bias (>50% dropout rate) and small sample sizes
b80% of studies did not mention allocation concealment, which may be a source of bias
cHeterogeneity was not explained by subgroup analyses, as indicated by non-significant tests for subgroup differences
dStudies investigating the efficacy of different psychostimulant drugs at varying doses were pooled
e95% confidence intervals are wide and there is a varying range of effect, with little overlap of confidence intervals from some studies
fPopulations varied across studies with certain studies including injection drug users, incarcerated individuals, or participants with ADHD
Summary of findings table
| Outcomes | No. of participants | Quality of the evidence | Relative effect | Anticipated absolute effects | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk with placebo | Risk difference with psychostimulants | ||||
| Abstinence from illicit amphetamines and methamphetamines (final 2 weeks of treatment) | 642 | ⨁◯◯◯ | OR 0.97 | 215 per 1000 | 5 fewer per 1000 |
| Retention in treatment (end of trial) | 1184 | ⨁◯◯◯ | OR 1.20 | 480 per 1000 | 46 more per 1000 |
GRADE working group grades of evidence
High quality: We are very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect
Moderate quality: We are moderately confident in the effect estimate: The true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different
Low quality: Our confidence in the effect estimate is limited: The true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect
Very low quality: We have very little confidence in the effect estimate: The true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect
The risk in the intervention group (and its 95% confidence interval) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95% CI)
CI Confidence interval, OR Odds ratio
aThe majority of studies had high attrition bias (>50% dropout rate) and small sample sizes
b80% of studies did not mention allocation concealment, which may be a source of bias
cHeterogeneity was not explained by subgroup analyses, as indicated by non-significant tests for subgroup differences
dStudies investigating the efficacy of different psychostimulant drugs at varying doses were pooled
e95% confidence intervals are wide and there is a varying range of effect, with little overlap of confidence intervals from some studies
fPopulations varied across studies with certain studies including injection drug users, incarcerated individuals or participants with ADHD