From the Journals

Intranasal oxytocin shows early promise for cocaine dependence


 

FROM DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE REPORTS

Intranasal oxytocin (INOT) is showing early promise as a treatment for cocaine dependence, new research suggests.

Results of a small 6-week randomized, placebo-controlled trial in patients with cocaine use disorder showed a high level of abstinence in those who received INOT beginning 2 weeks after treatment initiation.

“In this population of cocaine-dependent individuals in a community clinic setting, we found the use of intranasal oxytocin to be safe and feasible, with no adverse events, and a high level of abstinence after 6 weeks, compared to placebo,” lead author Wilfrid Noel Raby, PhD, MD, a Teaneck, N.J.–based psychiatrist, said in an interview.

On the other hand, “the findings were paradoxical because there was a greater dropout rate in the intranasal oxytocin group after week 1, suggesting that oxytocin might have a biphasic effect, which should be addressed in future studies,” added Dr. Raby, who was an adjunct clinical professor of psychiatry, division on substance abuse, Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, when the trial was conducted.

The study was published in the March issue of Drug and Alcohol Dependence Reports.

‘Crying need’

“Focus on stress reactivity in addiction and on the loss of social norms among drug users has generated interest in oxytocin, due to its purported role in these traits and regulation of stress,” the authors wrote.

Oxytocin is a neuropeptide that regulates autonomic functions. Previous research in cannabis users suggests it may have a role in treating addiction by reportedly reducing cravings. In addition, earlier research also suggests it cuts stress reactivity and state anger in cocaine users.

A previous trial of INOT showed it decreased cocaine craving, and additional research has revealed recurrent cocaine use results in lower endogenous oxytocin levels and depleted oxytocin in the hypothalamus and amygdala.

“The bias of my work is to look for simple, nonaddictive medicinal approaches that can be used in the community settings, because that’s where the greatest crying need lies and where most problems from drug addiction occur,” said Dr. Raby.

“There has been long-standing interest in how the brain adaptive systems, or so-called ‘stress systems,’ adjust in the face of drug dependence in general, and the main focus of the study has been to understand this response and use the insight from these adaptations to develop medicinal treatments for drug abuse, particularly cocaine dependence,” he added.

To investigate the potential for INOT to promote abstinence from cocaine, the researchers randomized 26 patients with cocaine use disorder (73% male, mean [SD] age, 50.2 [5.4] years). Most participants had been using cocaine on a regular basis for about 25 years, and baseline average days of cocaine use was 11.1 (5.7) during the 30 days prior to study entry.

At a baseline, the researchers collected participants’ medical history and conducted a physical examination, urine toxicology, electrocardiogram, comprehensive metabolic panel, and complete blood count. They used the MINI International Neuropsychiatric Interview to confirm the diagnosis of cocaine dependence.

The study began with a 7-day inpatient abstinence induction stage, after which participants were randomized to receive either INOT 24 IU or intranasal placebo (n = 15 and n = 11, respectively).

Patients attended the clinic three times per week. At each visit, they completed the cocaine craving scale, the Perceived Stress Scale, and the Clinician Global Inventory (all self-reports), as well as the Time Line Follow Back (TLFB) to document cocaine use.

Participants were trained to self-administer an intranasal solution at home, with compliance monitored in two ways – staff observed self-administration of the randomized medication at the time of clinic visits and weighed the “at home bottle.”

Cocaine use was determined via urine toxicology and TLFB self-report.

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