Longer-lasting options to treat drug addiction

October 18, 2010 By LAURAN NEERGAARD , AP Medical Writer

(AP) -- New treatments for addiction to heroin or narcotic painkillers promise longer-lasting relief that may remove some day-to-day uncertainty of care: A once-a-month shot is now approved and a six-month implant is in the final testing phase.

The main treatment options have long been once-a-day medications - controversial methadone or a tablet named - that act as substitutes for the original drug, to suppress withdrawal and craving without the high.

Skipping a dose risks a relapse, but summoning the daily willpower to stick with treatment is "a formidable task," says National Institute on Drug Abuse director Dr. Nora Volkow.

Last week, the approved the monthly shot Vivitrol for long-term treatment of opioid - to heroin or such painkillers as , and Vicodin.

Vivitrol works differently than methadone or buprenorphine: It blocks the high if a recovering addict slips up, and it's not addictive.

Scientists had tried a daily version of Vivitrol's ingredient, naltrextone, years ago, but too many patients skipped pills. So Alkermes Inc. created the longer-lasting version first for alcoholism in 2006, and now opioid addiction. In a study of 250 opioid addicts in Russia, more than half of Vivitrol recipients stuck with therapy for the six-month trial. Better, 36 percent stayed completely drug-free, compared with 23 percent who received dummy shots.

Next in the pipeline: A matchstick-size implant that for six months at a time slowly oozes a low dose of buprenorphine into the , to keep cravings tamped down. A large study published last week deemed the implant, called Probuphine, promising - just over a third of those patients, too, tested drug-free. Ongoing research partly funded by the government should show next spring if it's ready for FDA evaluation.

Which approach will work best for which patient? Scientists don't know yet; there are pros and cons to daily and long-lasting versions. Early next year, NIDA will directly compare once-a-month Vivitrol to once-a-day buprenorphine and behavioral therapy alone to help tell.

But longer-lasting options promise to help keep patients on track longer.

"Opioid addicts are notoriously bad at complying with their medication. They like to take drug holidays. They like to party on the weekend," says Dr. Katherine Beebe of Titan Pharmaceuticals, which is developing the Probuphine implant.

And long-acting options also may help make substance abuse treatment more a part of mainstream medicine.

"To have these medications work effectively, you need to stay on them for long periods of time," says Dr. Patrick O'Connor of Yale University School of Medicine.

"We are really struggling to get the public and physicians to think of this more like a standard chronic disease - like diabetes, like cancer, like chronic lung disease - and not apply a special stigma to it."

About 800,000 people in the U.S. are addicted to heroin, and another 1.8 million either abuse or are dependent on opioid painkillers, Volkow says.

After initial detox, how to choose among long-term treatments?

Methadone is the cheapest but requires daily visits to a public clinic, many of which have waiting lists. Still, methadone may be the most potent choice for people who have abused heroin for many years, the hardest-to-treat patients, Volkow says.

Daily buprenorphine has increased access to care in recent years, because certain specially certified physicians can prescribe a month's supply of the pills at a time, for several hundred dollars.

Both and buprenorphine require monitoring because they, too, can be abused, and some treatment programs won't use them because "their perception is you're changing one drug for another," says Volkow.

Only about 45,000 people have used Vivitrol since its approval for alcoholism in 2006; the new approval paves the way for insurance coverage of the $1,100 shot for opioid addiction, too. It occasionally causes serious side effects such as liver damage or injection-site reactions. Also, Volkow says it won't work for people who need addiction care and pain relief at the same time - they'll still need buprenorphine.

But Volkow expects Vivitrol will attract painkiller addicts who'd never consider other options, plus people struggling with daily therapy.

T.J. Voller of Westborough, Mass., became addicted to Oxycontin after an injury at 23 and moved on to . Two tries of buprenorphine worked only briefly.

"If I didn't want to take it and wanted to get high, there was nothing to stop me," explains Voller, 29. He's been on Vivitrol for nearly a year and is back in college. "I get an injection once a month and I don't have to worry. I'm not saying I don't have my bad days, but they're much more manageable."

©2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Rank not rated yet
Relevant PhysicsForums posts
  • A question about drug tolerance
    createdMay 23, 2012
  • Poor nutrition leading to overeating?
    createdMay 23, 2012
  • Math and dyslexia?
    createdMay 21, 2012
  • portable metabolism meter?
    createdMay 21, 2012
  • Rare medical conditions on 20/20 tonight
    createdMay 18, 2012
  • "Good" Cholesterol in Doubt
    createdMay 17, 2012
  • More from Physics Forums - Medical Sciences

More news stories

Gene discovery points towards non-hormonal male contraceptive

A new type of male contraceptive could be created thanks to the discovery of a key gene essential for sperm development.

Medicine & Health / Genetics

created 4 hours ago | popularity 5 / 5 (3) | comments 0 | with audio podcast

Thioridazine kills cancer stem cells in human while avoiding toxic side-effects of conventional cancer treatments

A team of scientists at McMaster University has discovered a drug, thioridazine, successfully kills cancer stem cells in the human while avoiding the toxic side-effects of conventional cancer treatments.

Medicine & Health / Cancer

created 9 hours ago | popularity 4.6 / 5 (21) | comments 1 | with audio podcast

Amino acid consumption associated with how fast cancer cells divide

For almost a century, researchers have known that cancer cells have peculiar appetites, devouring glucose in ways that normal cells do not. But glucose uptake may tell only part of cancer's metabolic story. Researchers from ...

Medicine & Health / Cancer

created 6 hours ago | popularity 5 / 5 (1) | comments 1 | with audio podcast

Brentuximab vedotin effective in large-cell lymphoma

(HealthDay) -- More than half of patients with relapsed or refractory systemic anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (ALCL) treated with the CD30-directed antibody-drug conjugate brentuximab vedotin achieve a complete ...

Medicine & Health / Cancer

created 3 hours ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0

'Personality genes' may help account for longevity

"It's in their genes" is a common refrain from scientists when asked about factors that allow centenarians to reach age 100 and beyond. Up until now, research has focused on genetic variations that offer a physiological advantage ...

Medicine & Health / Genetics

created 3 hours ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0 | with audio podcast


HyperSolar shows dirty water no barrier to power world

(Phys.org) -- The Santa Barbara, California, company, HyperSolar, is set to transparently share the ups and downs of its research experiences toward the company’s ultimate vision, successfully producing ...

Is a classical electrodynamics law incompatible with special relativity?

(Phys.org) -- The laws of classical electromagnetism that were developed in the 19th century are the same laws that scientists use today. They include Maxwell’s four equations along with the Lorentz la ...

Asteroid nudged by sunlight: Most precise measurement of Yarkovsky effect

Scientists on NASA's asteroid sample return mission, Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security, Regolith Explorer (OSIRIS-REx), have measured the orbit of their destination asteroid, ...

Organic carbon from Mars, but not biological

Molecules containing large chains of carbon and hydrogen--the building blocks of all life on Earth--have been the targets of missions to Mars from Viking to the present day. While these molecules have previously ...

In nanorod crystal growth, nanoparticles seen as artificial atoms

In the growth of crystals, do nanoparticles act as "artificial atoms" forming molecular-type building blocks that can assemble into complex structures? This is the contention of a major but controversial theory ...

New mapping of Mars shows western Medusae Fossae formation older than once thought

(Phys.org) -- Recent geologic mapping of the Medusae Fossae Formation on Mars—an intensely eroded deposit near the northern edge of the cratered highlands—has revealed a wider distribution of its ...