| Literature DB >> 35133639 |
Elizabeth M Burnette1,2, Steven J Nieto1, Erica N Grodin1, Lindsay R Meredith1, Brian Hurley3, Karen Miotto4, Artha J Gillis4, Lara A Ray5,6.
Abstract
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a highly prevalent but severely under-treated disorder, with only three widely-approved pharmacotherapies. Given that AUD is a very heterogeneous disorder, it is unlikely that one single medication will be effective for all individuals with an AUD. As such, there is a need to develop new, more effective, and diverse pharmacological treatment options for AUD with the hopes of increasing utilization and improving care. In this qualitative literature review, we discuss the efficacy, mechanism of action, and tolerability of approved, repurposed, and novel pharmacotherapies for the treatment of AUD with a clinical perspective. Pharmacotherapies discussed include: disulfiram, acamprosate, naltrexone, nalmefene, topiramate, gabapentin, varenicline, baclofen, sodium oxybate, aripiprazole, ondansetron, mifepristone, ibudilast, suvorexant, prazosin, doxazosin, N-acetylcysteine, GET73, ASP8062, ABT-436, PF-5190457, and cannabidiol. Overall, many repurposed and novel agents discussed in this review demonstrate clinical effectiveness and promise for the future of AUD treatment. Importantly, these medications also offer potential improvements towards the advancement of precision medicine and personalized treatment for the heterogeneous AUD population. However, there remains a great need to improve access to treatment, increase the menu of approved pharmacological treatments, and de-stigmatize and increase treatment-seeking for AUD.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35133639 PMCID: PMC8888464 DOI: 10.1007/s40265-021-01670-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs ISSN: 0012-6667 Impact factor: 9.546
Pharmacotherapies approved and under development for the treatment of AUD
| Agent | Mechanism of action | Approval status | Preclinical results | Clinical results | Target outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Disulfiram | Aldehyde dehydrogenase inhibitor; dopamine beta-hydroxylase inhibitor | FDA- and EMA-approved for AUD | Mixed results: prevents heavy but not moderate drinking [ | Mixed results; drinking outcomes improved with supervised administration [ | Achieve and maintain abstinence |
| Acamprosate | Modulates glutamatergic activity | FDA- and EMA-approved for AUD | Reduced ethanol intake, withdrawal symptoms, place preference [ | Mixed results; Reduced risk of relapse, increased cumulative abstinence duration [ | Achieve and maintain abstinence |
| Naltrexone | Opioid receptor antagonist | FDA- and EMA-approved for AUD | Reduced binge drinking, ethanol preference, motor impairment and sedation [ | Reduced risk of relapse, binge drinking, and craving [ | Achieve and maintain abstinence and reduce drinking |
| Nalmefene | Opioid receptor antagonist and partial agonist | EMA-approved for AUD; FDA-approved for opioid overdose | Reduced alcohol seeking, relapse and binge-like drinking, neuroinflammation [ | Reduced binge drinking and total alcohol consumption [ | Reduce drinking |
| Baclofen | GABAB agonist | Approved for AUD in France | Reduced ethanol self-administration and motivational properties [ | Mixed results; increased rates of abstinence, time to first relapse, possibly reduced heavy-drinking days [ | Achieve and maintain abstinence |
| Sodium oxybate | Modulates GABA activity | Approved for AUD in Italy and Austria | Reduced ethanol self-administration, withdrawal symptoms, and relapse-like drinking [ | Effective treatment of alcohol withdrawal syndrome, increased abstinence [ | Reduce withdrawal symptoms and achieve abstinence |
| Topiramate | Inhibits glutamatergic activity and increases GABA activity | Repurposed | Reduced ethanol intake in rodent models [ | Reduced drinks per day and percent heavy-drinking days and increased percent days abstinent [ | Achieve abstinence and reduce drinking |
| Gabapentin | Modulates GABA activity | Repurposed | Mixed results: reduced or increased ethanol intake [ | Reduced percent heavy-drinking days, alcohol consumption, and abstinence rates and increased time to relapse, with outcomes improved among those with alcohol withdrawal symptoms [ | Achieve abstinence and reduce drinking |
| Varenicline | Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor agonist | Repurposed | Reduced ethanol seeking, intake, and binge-like consumption [ | Reduced percent heavy-drinking days and drinks per day with outcomes improved for those who smoke cigarettes [ | Reduce drinking |
| Aripiprazole | Dopamine receptor partial agonist and 5-HT2A receptor antagonist | Repurposed | Reduce ethanol-induced place preference and ethanol consumption [ | Mixed results with outcomes improved for more impulsive individuals; reduced heavy-drinking days and increased days abstinent at rates comparable to naltrexone [ | Reduce drinking |
| Ondansetron | 5-HT3 receptor antagonist | Repurposed | Blocked sensitization to locomotor stimulant effects, reduced voluntary ethanol intake [ | Reduced drinks per day and increased days abstinent in patients with early-onset AUD [ | Achieve abstinence and reduce drinking |
| Mifepristone | Glucocorticoid receptor antagonist | Repurposed | Reduced ethanol-seeking in rodents [ Mixed results in primates; reduced chronic voluntary alcohol use but did not prevent relapse [ | Reduced alcohol craving and consumption [ | Reduce drinking |
| Ibudilast | Selective PDE inhibitor and MIF inhibitor | Repurposed | Reduced ethanol intake [ | Reduced craving, odds of heavy drinking, and neural cue-reactivity [ | Reduce drinking |
| Prazosin and Doxazosin | Adrenergic alpha-1 antagonists | Repurposed | Reduced relapse, ethanol intake, and stress-induced ethanol seeking [ | Mixed results; reduced craving and alcohol consumption. Outcomes improved among those with alcohol withdrawal symptoms [ | Reduce drinking |
| N-Acetylcysteine | Modulates synaptic glutamatergic activity | Repurposed | Reduced ethanol intake and relapse [ | Increased abstinence rates and reduced drinks per week among those with cannabis use disorder [ | Reduce drinking |
| Suvorexant | Dual orexin antagonist | Repurposed | Reduced ethanol consumption and relapse [ | – | Unknown |
| ABT-436 | Highly selective vasopressin type 1B receptor antagonist | Novel agent | Attenuated ethanol reinstatement and reduced ethanol intake [ | Increased days abstinent but did not reduce heavy drinking or craving [ | Achieve and maintain abstinence |
| GET73 | Gamma-hydroxy-butyrate analogue; negative allosteric modulator at mGluR5 | Novel agent | Reduced ethanol intake and suppressed relapse [ | – | Unknown |
| ASP8062 | Positive allosteric modulator of GABAB receptor | Novel agent | Reduced ethanol self-administration [ | – | Unknown |
| PF-5190457 | Ghrelin receptor inverse agonist | Novel agent | Reduced ethanol intake and preference [ | Reduced alcohol craving and cue-reactivity [ | Unknown |
| Cannabidiol | Diverse pharmacological effects | Novel agent | Reduced ethanol administration and relapse-like behavior [ | – | Unknown |
5-HT3 serotonin receptor 3, 5-HT2A serotonin receptor 2A, AUD alcohol use disorder, EMA European Medicines Agency, FDA United States Food and Drug Administration, GABA gamma-aminobutyric acid, mGluR5 metabotropic glutamate receptor 5, MIF macrophage migration inhibitory factor, PDE phosphodiesterase
| Alcohol use disorder is severely under-treated, and the development of new and more effective pharmacotherapies is necessary. |
| The repurposed and novel agents discussed in this qualitative literature review offer promise for the future of AUD treatment, including advancements toward precision medicine for the heterogeneous AUD population. |