Gabapentin Treatment of Benzodiazepine Abuse in Methadone Maintenance Patients
NCT ID: NCT00420771
Last Updated: 2019-04-24
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE2
19 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2007-01-31
2011-01-31
Brief Summary
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The investigators hypothesize that individuals receiving methadone maintenance treatment who are abusing (nonprescribed use) benzodiazepines have difficulty in reducing or discontinuing benzodiazepine use because of the significant anxiety, mood, and sleep disturbance symptoms that accompany reduction in use. Gabapentin, an anticonvulsant which has anxiolytic and sedating properties, may alleviate the symptoms associated with a reduction in benzodiazepine abuse and make the achievement of abstinence more likely when administered in the setting of an active psychotherapy condition.
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Detailed Description
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The investigators plan to enroll 86 participants into the study. Both males and females will be recruited. The distribution of benzodiazepine abuse in methadone maintenance populations with regard to race and gender is not well studied.The investigators expect the gender and racial distribution of subjects to reflect the demographic nature of the Bridge Plaza Treatment and Rehabilitation Clinic; which is approximately 33% Caucasian, 33% African-American, and 33% Hispanic; and 40% female. The investigators will make every effort to recruit minority patients in order to ensure the ability to generalize our findings to the overall treatment population.
All patients will begin medication at the start of the study. Subjects will take medication twice each day, once in the morning and once in the evening. All tablets (placebo and study medication) will be over-capsulated with riboflavin to measure compliance. The placebo group will have a dosing schedule that is identical to the gabapentin group (i.e., they will take the same number of pills each day). Medication will be dispensed weekly in individual vials identified by patient, with dosing instructions written on the outside of the vials. Patients in the placebo group will not receive gabapentin at any time during the study. Gabapentin will be administered in 400 mg tablets; placebo tablets will appear identical to the gabapentin tablets. Gradual increases in medication doses are used in order to minimize side effects and enhance compliance. At the start of week 1, the group receiving gabapentin will be administered at 400 mg three-times a day. This dose will be increased to 800 mg three-times a day at week 2 and increased to 1200 mg three-times a day at the start of week 3. The dose will continue at 1200 mg three-times a day for weeks 3 through 8. Dose reductions for tolerability will be made by the research psychiatrist in coordination with the research pharmacy. All patients must take a minimum of gabapentin/placebo 400 mg BID to remain in the study.
Both the active and placebo medication capsules will contain riboflavin, which will allow the clinic to verify that the study medication is being taken correctly and absorbed by the body. Urine samples obtained weekly will be examined under a UV lamp in order to observe any fluorescence signifying the consumption of the study capsules. The patient will consume approximately 100 mg of riboflavin daily.
The goal of compliance enhancement therapy is to achieve high quality supportive treatment as well as consistency between treatment groups. Treatment will be delivered in 9 individual sessions over 9 weeks. Sessions will last approximately 30 minutes and will be structured, focused on setting abstinence from benzodiazepine use as a goal, patient compliance, and current functioning. The therapist will promote a positive supportive therapeutic relationship with the treatment goal of encouraging abstinence from benzodiazepines and adherence to study visits and medication.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
QUADRUPLE
Study Groups
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Gabapentin
gabapentin treatment 1200 mg three times daily
Gabapentin
For the first week, one 400 mg Gabapentin capsule taken 3 times per day. For the second week, two 400 mg Gabapentin capsules taken 3 times per day. For the third week through the eighth week, three 400 mg Gabapentin capsules taken 3 times per day. For the ninth and last week, two 400 mg Gabapentin capsules taken 3 times per day for 3 days, then one 400 mg Gabapentin capsule taken 3 times per day for 4 days. Placebo study medication appears identical to active medication and is prescribed with an identical dosing schedule.
Placebo
Placebo condition received pills identical in appearance to experimental arm.
Placebo
placebo comparator appears identical to active medication and is prescribed with an identical dosing schedule with a maximum dose of 400mg taken three times per day
Interventions
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Gabapentin
For the first week, one 400 mg Gabapentin capsule taken 3 times per day. For the second week, two 400 mg Gabapentin capsules taken 3 times per day. For the third week through the eighth week, three 400 mg Gabapentin capsules taken 3 times per day. For the ninth and last week, two 400 mg Gabapentin capsules taken 3 times per day for 3 days, then one 400 mg Gabapentin capsule taken 3 times per day for 4 days. Placebo study medication appears identical to active medication and is prescribed with an identical dosing schedule.
Placebo
placebo comparator appears identical to active medication and is prescribed with an identical dosing schedule with a maximum dose of 400mg taken three times per day
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Individuals seeking treatment for benzodiazepine abuse or dependence.
* Individuals capable of giving informed consent and capable of complying with study procedures.
* Individuals must have current benzodiazepine use.
* Individuals must report using, benzodiazepines an average \> 4 days per week over the past 28 days. The average amount of benzodiazepine used per using day must be \> lorazepam 4 mg/day or its equivalent
(1 mg lorazepam = 0.25 mg clonazepam = 0.5 mg alprazolam = 5 mg diazepam = 10 mg chlordiazepoxide)
* Women of child-bearing age will be included provided that they are not pregnant, based on the results of a blood pregnancy test done at the time of screening and agree to use a method of contraception with proven efficacy and not to become pregnant during the study.
Exclusion Criteria
* Individuals with evidence of acute physiological benzodiazepine withdrawal.
* Individuals with a history of seizures during alcohol or sedative-hypnotic withdrawal.
* Individuals with a history of requiring pharmacologic detoxification from alcohol or sedative-hypnotic agents in the past year.
* Individuals meeting DSM IV criteria for current cocaine dependence as their primary substance use disorder diagnosis.
* Unstable physical disorders that might make participation hazardous such as uncontrolled hypertension and tachycardia (SBP \> 150 mm Hg, DBP \> 90 mm Hg, or a sitting quietly HR \> 100 bpm), acute hepatitis (patients with chronic mildly elevated transaminase levels \[2-3 x upper limit of normal\] are acceptable) or poorly controlled diabetes. Kidney disease or impaired kidney function that would interfere with the excretion of gabapentin is exclusionary.
* Patients currently taking prescribed psychotropic medications, other than methadone or medications prescribed for pain syndromes, that would be disrupted by study medication or by an effort to discontinue benzodiazepines. Anticonvulsants prescribed for pain syndromes are exclusionary.
* Patients with a known sensitivity to gabapentin.
* Individuals who have exhibited suicidal or homicidal behavior within the past two years or have current active suicidal ideation.
* Women who are pregnant or nursing.
* Individuals physiologically dependent on any other drugs (excluding nicotine, caffeine, methadone).
* Individuals currently prescribed gabapentin.
18 Years
65 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
NIH
New York State Psychiatric Institute
OTHER
Responsible Party
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John Mariani MD
research psychiatrist
Principal Investigators
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John J Mariani, M.D
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Columbia University/New York State Psychiatric Institute
Locations
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Bridge Plaza Treatment and Rehabilitation Clinic
Long Island City, New York, United States
Countries
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References
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Mariani JJ, Malcolm RJ, Mamczur AK, Choi JC, Brady R, Nunes E, Levin FR. Pilot trial of gabapentin for the treatment of benzodiazepine abuse or dependence in methadone maintenance patients. Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse. 2016 May;42(3):333-40. doi: 10.3109/00952990.2015.1125493. Epub 2016 Mar 10.
Other Identifiers
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4906/#5998R
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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