1. A pilot trial of injectable, extended-release naltrexone for the treatment of co-occurring cocaine and alcohol dependence.
- Author
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Pettinati HM, Kampman KM, Lynch KG, Dundon WD, Mahoney EM, Wierzbicki MR, and O'Brien CP
- Subjects
- Adult, Alcoholism complications, Cocaine-Related Disorders complications, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Combined Modality Therapy, Delayed-Action Preparations, Double-Blind Method, Female, Humans, Injections, Male, Medication Adherence, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Treatment Outcome, Alcoholism rehabilitation, Cocaine-Related Disorders rehabilitation, Naltrexone therapeutic use, Narcotic Antagonists therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: There is a high co-occurrence of cocaine and alcohol use disorders, and patients with both of these problems are difficult to treat. There is a reasonable rationale and some empirical data to justify a pilot trial of an injectable, extended-release formulation of naltrexone for treating co-occurring cocaine and alcohol addiction., Methods: Eighty cocaine (n = 80) and alcohol dependent, treatment-seeking subjects were randomly assigned to receive either two monthly extended-release injections of naltrexone or two matching placebo injections in an 8-week clinical trial, with weekly medical management plus cognitive behavioral therapy visits., Results: No differences in reduction in cocaine or alcohol use were observed between the injectable naltrexone and placebo groups during the 8-week trial., Conclusions: Injectable extended-release naltrexone, while an ideal method for ensuring medication adherence in these traditionally hard-to-treat patients, did not result in any measurable reduction in cocaine or alcohol use over the course of 8 weeks of treatment., (© American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry.)
- Published
- 2014
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