Evidence-Based Reviews

N-acetylcysteine: A potential treatment for substance use disorders

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Appropriate populations. Evidence is stronger for use of NAC among adolescents (age 15 to 21) than for individuals older than age 21.25,27 Further research is needed to explore potential reasons for age-specific effects.

Safety and dosing. A safe and potentially efficacious dosage for the treatment of cannabis use disorder is 2,400 mg/d (1,200 mg twice daily).24,25,27

Clinical implications. Combined with contingency management, NAC might be efficacious for adolescents with cannabis use disorder, with treatment gains evident by the fourth week of treatment.24,25 To date, no clinical trials have examined the efficacy of NAC for treating cannabis use disorder without adjunctive contingency management, and research is needed to isolate the clinical effect of NAC among adolescents.

Tobacco use disorder

Cigarette smoking remains a leading cause of preventable death in the United States,28 and nearly 70% of people who start using tobacco become dependent.20 Existing FDA-approved treatments include nicotine replacement products, varenicline, and bupropion. Even though efficacious treatments exist, successful and sustained quit attempts are infrequent.29 NAC may exert a complementary effect to existing tobacco cessation interventions, such as varenicline.30 While these medications promote abstinence, NAC may be particularly beneficial in preventing relapse after abstinence has been achieved (Table 430-36).

NAC for the treatment of tobacco use disorder image

Continue to: Cessation and relapse prevention

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