MEDICATIONS: PARTICULAR TREATMENTS
EFFECTIVE FOR ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE
May 4, 2006 — Medical management combined with the drug naltrexone or with a
specialized behavioral therapy can be effective treatments for alcohol
dependence, according to a study in the May 3 issue of the Journal of the
American Medical Association.
About eight million individuals in the U.S. currently meet diagnostic
criteria for alcohol dependence (also called alcoholism), a leading preventable
cause of illness and death and a major contributor to health care costs,
according to background information in the article. In primary care settings,
the prevalence of alcohol use disorders ranges from 20 percent to 36 percent;
most of those patients are never treated and, if they are, do not receive
specialty care. Several behavioral treatments and at least two medications
approved by the U.S. FDA, naltrexone and acamprosate, have shown efficacy in the
treatment of alcohol dependence. However, no large-scale randomized controlled
study has evaluated whether combined drug treatment with or without behavioral
therapy could improve outcome.
Raymond F. Anton, M.D., of the Medical University of South Carolina,
Charleston, and colleagues evaluated the effectiveness in treating alcohol
dependence with medical management and naltrexone, acamprosate, or both, with or
without combined behavioral intervention (CBI) provided by behavioral health
specialists. The trial (the COMBINE Study), conducted from January 2001 through
January 2004, included 1,383 recently alcohol-abstinent volunteers with a
diagnosis of primary alcohol dependence. The participants were divided into nine
groups. Eight groups of patients received medical management with 16 weeks of
naltrexone or acamprosate, both, and/or both placebos, with or without CBI.
Medical management included sessions with a medical professional focused on
enhancing medication adherence and alcohol abstinence. A ninth group received
CBI only (no pills). Patients were evaluated for up to one year after treatment.
The researchers found that all groups showed substantial reduction in
drinking. During treatment, patients receiving naltrexone plus medical
management, CBI plus medical management and placebos, or both naltrexone and CBI
plus medical management had higher percentages of days abstinent (80.6, 79.2,
and 77.1, respectively) than the 75.1 in those receiving placebos and medical
management only. Naltrexone also reduced the risk of a heavy drinking day over
time, most evident in those receiving medical management but not CBI.
Acamprosate showed no significant effect on drinking compared with placebo,
either by itself or with any combination of naltrexone, CBI, or both. During the
16 weeks of treatment, there was an overall difference in percent days abstinent
between those receiving placebo pills and medical management alone (73.8),
placebo pills and medical management plus CBI (79.8), and CBI alone (no pills or
medical management) (66.6). One year after treatment, these between-group
effects were similar but no longer significant.
"In conclusion, within the context of medical management, naltrexone yielded
outcomes similar to those obtained from specialist behavioral treatment (i.e.,
CBI). We found no evidence of efficacy for acamprosate and also no evidence of
incremental efficacy for combinations of naltrexone, acamprosate, and CBI.
Somewhat unexpectedly, we observed a positive effect of receiving placebo
medication and medical management over and above that seen with
specialist-delivered behavioral therapy alone. Medical management of alcohol
dependence with naltrexone appears to be feasible and, if implemented in
primary, and other, health care settings, could greatly extend patient access to
effective treatment. Future studies that evaluate the usefulness of continued or
intermittent care of alcohol-dependent individuals over the longer term should
be considered," the authors write.
Editorial: Evidence—Based Treatments for Alcohol Dependence — New Results and
New Questions
In an accompanying editorial, Henry R. Kranzler, M.D., of the University of
Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, comments on the findings of the
COMBINE Study.
"While this important study provides evidence of the efficacy of some
treatments for alcohol dependence, it also raises a number of questions. In view
of studies from Europe providing consistent evidence that acamprosate helps to
maintain abstinence, the lack of efficacy of this medication in the COMBINE
Study is perplexing. Although population differences must be considered,
differences in study design may have contributed to the lack of replication of
the European acamprosate studies. The modest effects of the specific treatments
and a lack of additive or synergistic benefits of combining treatments suggest
that other compounds and therapeutic approaches should be explored to yield
further improvements in the treatment of alcohol dependence."
"The findings from the COMBINE Study should be of great interest to primary
care physicians treating patients with alcohol dependence. Patients who decline
an offer of pharmacological treatment to reduce their drinking can be referred
for intensive behavioral treatment. Notably, however, the beneficial effects of
naltrexone were seen in the context of medical management similar to what is
routinely available in primary care practice. This offers the prospect that an
efficacious treatment for alcohol dependence can be made as widely available as
are current treatments for smoking cessation and major depression," Dr. Kranzler
writes.
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