In 2004, acamprosate was approved in the U.S. for abstinence maintenance, by decreasing craving, in alcoholic patients who have undergone detoxification. while a new anti-craving drug was encouraging, only 36.1% of the subjects treated with acamprosate remained abstinent for 6 months. Having the ability to identify treatment responsive individuals would have a major impact on the use of acamprosate.
The primary objective of this pharmacogenomic probe study of acamprosate is to identify genetic variations that predict response. Our hypothesis is that effective acamprosate response in alcohol dependent subjects may be influenced by genetically controlled variation in the functionality of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDA) and/or the type 5 metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR5). Hypothesis confirmation could lead to development of effective individualized treatment recommendations for alcohol dependent patients based on pharmacogenomically relevant genetic variations. The general goal is to identify genetic polymorphic variants that differentiate subjects continuously abstinent for six months while taking acamprosate from relapsed subjects. The initial analysis will determine whether any of ten polymorphisms in four target genes (GRIN1, GRIN2A and GRIN2B that code for the NMDA receptor and GRM5 that codes for the type mGluR5 receptor) are associated with successful abstinence. Subsequent analyses will examine whether variation in a comprehensive set of 383 linkage disequilibrium haplotype tagged single nucleotide polymorphisms of these four genes predicts successfully abstinent subjects.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
485
acamprosate 333mg tabs, 2tabs 3times per day = 1998mg/day
Mayo Clinic
Rochester, Minnesota, United States
Aim 1: To determine the relationship between genetically determined variation in the NMDA receptor and treatment response to acamprosate.
Time frame: 6 months
Aim 2: To determine the relationship between genetically determined variation in the mGluR5 receptor and treatment response to acamprosate.
Time frame: 6months
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