Alcoholism
Conditions
Keywords
Alcohol, Abuse, Use, Disorder, Dependence, Symptoms, Alcoholic, Alcoholism, Prazosin, Drug, Medicine, Medication, Treatment, Study, Placebo, Medical, Management, Craving, Consumption, Binge, Drinking, Drink, Heavy
Brief summary
The purpose of this study is to determine whether the drug prazosin is effective for the treatment of alcohol dependency.
Detailed description
Alcohol dependence (AD) afflicts nearly 10% of the US population and causes marked medical morbidity and mortality, marked psychiatric morbidity, increased health care costs, and lost work hours (Saxon, Malte, Sloan, et al., 2006; McFall, Saxon, Thaneemit-Chen, et al., 2007). Alcohol dependence is a biologically, genetically based disease, yet the majority of clinically accepted treatments are behaviorally or psychosocially based (Anton, O'Malley, Ciraulo, et al., 2006; Todd, Armeli, Tennen, et al., 2005). Despite the initial success of these treatments, 40-70% of patients relapse within the first 12 months after treatment (McGinnis & Foege, 1993). Research is needed to develop more effective biological treatments. Currently, only three pharmacological treatments are FDA approved for the treatment of alcohol dependence and all are sub-optimal. None of these medications directly target noradrenergic brain systems. Recent advances in understanding the neurobiology of substance dependence and relapse support the notion that adrenergic systems play a critical role in these processes. In a 6-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot study, we randomized 24 participants without PTSD entering treatment for AD to prazosin or identical appearing placebo (Simpson et al., 2009). The prazosin group reported no more adverse events than the placebo group, and controlling for drinks per week at baseline and week number, the prazosin group reported fewer drinks per week in the final 3 weeks of the study. These findings led us to conduct a larger trial to further evaluate prazosin for AD. The current study is a 16-week, randomized, two group parallel-design, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of prazosin for decreasing alcohol use and the subjective experience of alcohol craving in individuals without PTSD who are seeking treatment for AD. Following randomization, a 2-week titration period will be followed by 10 weeks of stable dosing of prazosin or placebo. Study participants will attend study visits at least weekly for 12 weeks and will complete a final follow-up one month after discontinuation of the medication phase of the study at 16 weeks post-randomization. All study participants will also participate in Medical Management (MM) treatment, a behavioral intervention that has demonstrated efficacy as a behavioral platform for treatment of AD (Anton, O'Malley, Ciraulo, et al., 2006). Study participants will not be involved in other professional counseling or substance abuse treatment during their study involvement, though 12-step meeting attendance is encouraged during MM. Daily monitoring of alcohol craving, alcohol use, other substance craving and substance use, medication compliance, and key psychiatric symptoms via toll-free telephone calls to an Interactive Voice Response (IVR) system will continue throughout the 16-week study. Outcome measures will address alcohol use and craving and include IVR reports of craving and use, the TLFB for alcohol use, Penn Alcohol Craving Scale (PACS), Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (depression), urine toxicology analysis (UDA), and Breathalyzer readings.
Interventions
Form: Prazosin will be taken orally, in the form of pills. Dosing: 9 AM, 3 PM, 9 PM Days 1-2: 0 mg, 0 mg, 1 mg Days 3-4: 1 mg, 1 mg, 1 mg Days 5-7: 2 mg, 2 mg, 2 mg Day 8-10: 2 mg, 2 mg, 6 mg Day 11-14: 4 mg, 4 mg, 6 mg Day 15-84: 4 mg, 4 mg, 8 mg
Form: Placebo will be taken orally, in the form of pills. Dosing: 9 AM, 3 PM, 9 PM Days 1-2: 0 mg, 0 mg, 1 mg Days 3-4: 1 mg, 1 mg, 1 mg Days 5-7: 2 mg, 2 mg, 2 mg Day 8-10: 2 mg, 2 mg, 6 mg Day 11-14: 4 mg, 4 mg, 6 mg Day 15-84: 4 mg, 4 mg, 8 mg
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* Current primary DSM-IV diagnosis of alcohol dependence(AD) * Heavy drinking in the last 30 days * At least 18 years of age * Good general medical health (see
Exclusion criteria
below) * Capacity to provide informed consent * English fluency and literacy
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Alcohol Consumption | 12 weeks | At the baseline and final medication visits, the Form 90 (19) was used to assess alcohol and drug use for the preceding 90-day period |
Countries
United States
Participant flow
Recruitment details
Recruitment began in January 2008 and ended June 2014. Six hundred and one people responding to flyers and newspaper advertisements and contacted the study, 151 provided informed consent, and 19 women and 73 men (N = 92) were randomized. Both civilian and veteran participants were seen in an outpatient VA clinic.
Pre-assignment details
Of the 151 consented into the study, 59 did not go onto be randomized because of the following: Declined after screen (N=11) (includes missing baseline/first medication appointment) Ineligible at screen (N=48) * PTSD (N=11) * Acute illness (N=7) * Drug dependence (N=4) * Drinking inclusion not met (N=20) * Other (N=6)
Participants by arm
| Arm | Count |
|---|---|
| Prazosin Prazosin medication
Prazosin medication: Form: Prazosin will be taken orally, in the form of pills.
Dosing: 9 AM, 3 PM, 9 PM
Days 1-2: 0 mg, 0 mg, 1 mg
Days 3-4: 1 mg, 1 mg, 1 mg
Days 5-7: 2 mg, 2 mg, 2 mg
Day 8-10: 2 mg, 2 mg, 6 mg
Day 11-14: 4 mg, 4 mg, 6 mg
Day 15-84: 4 mg, 4 mg, 8 mg | 48 |
| Placebo Placebo medication
Placebo medication: Form: Placebo will be taken orally, in the form of pills.
Dosing: 9 AM, 3 PM, 9 PM
Days 1-2: 0 mg, 0 mg, 1 mg
Days 3-4: 1 mg, 1 mg, 1 mg
Days 5-7: 2 mg, 2 mg, 2 mg
Day 8-10: 2 mg, 2 mg, 6 mg
Day 11-14: 4 mg, 4 mg, 6 mg
Day 15-84: 4 mg, 4 mg, 8 mg | 44 |
| Total | 92 |
Baseline characteristics
| Characteristic | Placebo | Prazosin | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, Categorical <=18 years | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 0 Participants |
| Age, Categorical >=65 years | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 0 Participants |
| Age, Categorical Between 18 and 65 years | 44 Participants | 48 Participants | 92 Participants |
| Age, Continuous | 49.1 years STANDARD_DEVIATION 9.5 | 47.3 years STANDARD_DEVIATION 9.8 | 48.1 years STANDARD_DEVIATION 9.7 |
| Region of Enrollment United States | 44 Participants | 48 Participants | 92 Participants |
| Sex: Female, Male Female | 8 Participants | 11 Participants | 19 Participants |
| Sex: Female, Male Male | 36 Participants | 37 Participants | 73 Participants |
Adverse events
| Event type | EG000 affected / at risk | EG001 affected / at risk |
|---|---|---|
| deaths Total, all-cause mortality | 0 / 48 | 1 / 44 |
| other Total, other adverse events | 28 / 48 | 15 / 44 |
| serious Total, serious adverse events | 3 / 48 | 2 / 44 |
Outcome results
Alcohol Consumption
At the baseline and final medication visits, the Form 90 (19) was used to assess alcohol and drug use for the preceding 90-day period
Time frame: 12 weeks
Population: Providing baseline and last week of medication information for all participants that completed the titration period (40 in each group).
| Arm | Measure | Group | Value (MEAN) | Dispersion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prazosin | Alcohol Consumption | Final medication week % Days Heavy Drinking | 11.4 percentage of days heavy drinking | Standard Deviation 22.8 |
| Prazosin | Alcohol Consumption | Baseline % Days Heavy Drinking | 71.8 percentage of days heavy drinking | Standard Deviation 29.1 |
| Placebo | Alcohol Consumption | Baseline % Days Heavy Drinking | 66.5 percentage of days heavy drinking | Standard Deviation 26 |
| Placebo | Alcohol Consumption | Final medication week % Days Heavy Drinking | 22.6 percentage of days heavy drinking | Standard Deviation 34.1 |