The purpose of this study is to determine whether aripiprazole (marketed dopamine stabilizer) is effective in reducing of alcohol craving compared to placebo.
Non-treatment seeking individuals meeting criteria for alcohol dependence (N=30) will be recruited through advertisement and paid for their participation. Alcoholics, after baseline evaluation, will be assigned through urn randomization to one of two experimental groups in which they will receive either aripiprazole (up to 15 mg/day) or an identical placebo. Subjects will take the study drug or placebo for 8 days (day 1-6 being the natural observation period). After a minimum of 24 hours of abstinence from alcohol (day 7-8) they will undergo an alcohol administration (priming dose) and motivated free choice drinking procedure (on day 8). Alcoholic subjects will receive a brief counseling session at the end of the study to enhance their awareness of problem drinking and to motivate them to seek treatment. Referral for treatment will be offered. Each subject will undergo a functional MRI brain scan with cue stimulation on day 7, on the evening before the alcohol administration paradigm. fMRI brain imaging technology will be used to determine if alcoholics treated with aripiprazole differ in alcohol cue-induced activity in the nucleus accumbens. It is hypothesized that aripiprazole will reduce nucleus accumbens activation to alcohol cues compared to placebo.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
30
Center for Drug and Alcohol Programs, Medical University of South Carolina
Charleston, South Carolina, United States
For the Efficacy Hypotheses, the primary dependent variables are
(First) "Natural" alcohol consumption period -- total number of drinks consumed during the 5-day observation period
(Second) Limited access alcohol consumption paradigm -- Total number of drinks consumed
(Third) Activation of nucleus accumbens after cue stimulation
For the Safety and Tolerability Hypotheses, the primary dependent variables are
(First) Number of drop-outs due to adverse events
(Second) Number of side effects on symptom checklist
(Third) Change in liver function as indicated by ALT, AST
Blood alcohol levels after priming drink
Average BAES stimulation score
SHAS score after alcohol priming drink
Change in POMS sub-scale scores
Change in Epworth Sleepiness Scale
Differential effects on the Quality of Sleep Scale
Craving (OCDS) change between day 1 and 6
Craving after alcohol priming
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