Commentary

GLP-1 RA Therapy for Alcohol Use Disorder?


 

FROM ADA 2024

More important, we educate our patients when they go through the consent process. We tell them that this medication per se does not give hypoglycemia. In fact, we’re including people with diabetes, so for people on other medications like metformin, we explain to them that technically such a risk should not exist, but because you’re drinking alcohol in excessive amounts, you do have a potential higher risk. We just don’t know how significant that risk could be.

We do a large amount of education at baseline when they enroll in our study. We also educate our patients on how to recognize early on the potential risk for hypoglycemia, exactly for the reasons you said. We explain to them the unknown potential that the GLP-1 RAs and alcohol together may synergize and give hypoglycemia.

Dr. Jain: I don’t know if you got this feeling at the ADA conference, but I felt, when attending all these sessions, that it seems like GLP-1 RA is the gift that keeps giving. We see the effect on diabetes, obesity, metabolic-associated steatotic liver disease, possibly with Alzheimer’s, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and so many things.

Now, of course, there’s potential use in alcohol use disorder. Do you think that using GLP-1 RA therapy is ready for prime time? Do you think we are now ready to prescribe this in people with alcohol use disorder?

Dr. Leggio: I would say we’re not there yet. As I mentioned at the beginning, the evidence keeps on growing. It’s getting stronger and stronger because the positive data keep on coming up. We have data from animal models, including the different species, ranging from rodents to nonhuman primates. We have anecdotal evidence and machine-learning approaches using, for example, big data and social media data. Now we have pharmacoepidemiology data and some small, initial, but still good randomized clinical trials.

What we are missing is the final step of having a substantial number of prospective, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials to really prove or disprove whether these medications work, and to also better understand which patients may respond to these medications.

The good news is that there are many ongoing clinical trials. We are conducting a clinical trial in Maryland at the NIH. Dr. Simmons is doing a clinical trial at Oklahoma State University. Dr. Christian Hendershot at UNC is conducting a study at Chapel Hill. Dr. Josh Gowin is doing a study in Colorado. Dr. Anders Fink-Jensen is doing a study in Denmark. The momentum is very high.

I’m only mentioning those people who are doing alcohol-semaglutide clinical trials. There are also people doing clinical trials on smoking, stimulants, and opioids. There are actually some very fresh, still unpublished data from Penn State that were presented publicly at conferences, showing how these drugs may reduce opioid craving, which is, of course, critically important, given that we’re in the middle of a fentanyl pandemic that is killing one person every 7 minutes, for example, in Baltimore. It’s very alarming and we need more treatments.

The bottom line is that it’s very promising, but we need to wait for these clinical trials to have a definitive answer. I would say that if you have a patient with diabetes, obesity, and also alcohol addiction, and they are on semaglutide or any other GLP-1 RA, and in addition to using the medication for diabetes and obesity, they also have a beneficial effect on their alcohol drinking, then that’s fantastic. At the end of the day, that’s the mission we all share: helping people.

If it’s someone without obesity and diabetes, personally, at this stage, I will go with other medications that either have FDA approval or at least very solid evidence of efficacy from RCTs rather than going with the GLP-1 RA, at least until I see more definitive data from randomized clinical trials.

There is a large amount of hope. We are hoping that these clinical trials will be positive. We are very enthusiastic and we’re also very thrilled to see that Novo Nordisk recently launched a gigantic multisite clinical trial with — I forgot how many sites, but it’s very large across Europe, America, and maybe other continents as well.

Their primary outcome is improvement in alcohol-related liver disease, but they’re also looking at alcohol drinking as a secondary outcome. That’s very important because, unlike in the diabetes field, in the addiction field, we do struggle to build partnership with the private sector because sometimes the addiction field is not seen as an appetitive field from pharma.

We all know that the best success in any medication development story is when you put academia, the government, and pharma together. Think about the COVID-19 vaccine development. That’s unfortunately the exception rather than rule in the addiction field.

With the company doing a large clinical trial in the alcohol field, although they focus more on the liver but they also looked at drinking, I really hope we’ll see more and more companies in the private sector take more and more interest in addiction. Also, I hope to see more and more partnership between the private sector, the government, and academia.

Dr. Jain: Such exciting times, indeed. We can’t wait enough for the results of these and many other trials to come out. Dr. Leggio, it was an absolute delight chatting with you today. Thank you so much for joining us from ADA 2024.

Akshay B. Jain, MD, Clinical Instructor, Department of Endocrinology, University of British Columbia; Endocrinologist, TLC Diabetes and Endocrinology, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Serve(d) as a speaker or a member of a speakers bureau for: Abbott; Acerus; AstraZeneca; Amgen; Bausch Healthcare; Bayer; Boehringer Ingelheim; Care to Know; CCRN; Connected in Motion; CPD Network; Dexcom; Diabetes Canada; Eli Lilly; GSK; HLS Therapeutics; Janssen; Master Clinician Alliance; MDBriefcase; Merck; Medtronic; Moderna; Novartis; Novo Nordisk; Partners in Progressive Medical Education; Pfizer; Sanofi Aventis; Timed Right; WebMD. Received research grants/research support from: Abbott; Amgen; Novo Nordisk. Received consulting fees from: Abbott; Acerus; AstraZeneca; Amgen; Bausch Healthcare; Bayer; Boehringer Ingelheim; Dexcom; Eli Lilly; Gilead Sciences; GSK; HLS Therapeutics; Insulet; Janssen; Medtronic; Novo Nordisk; Partners in Progressive Medical Education; PocketPills; Roche; Sanofi Aventis; Takeda. Lorenzo Leggio, MD, PhD, Clinical Director, Deputy Scientific Director, National Institute on Drug Abuse Intramural Research Program, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, Maryland, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Serve(d) as a US federal employee for: National Institutes of Health. He had received income in an amount equal to or greater than $250 from: UK Medical Council on Alcohol for his service as editor-in-chief for Alcohol and Alcoholism and received royalties from Rutledge as an editor for a textbook.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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