The purpose of this study is to determine whether gabapentin enacarbil is effective in the treatment of problems with alcohol.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
346
Horizant Extended Release Tablets, 600 mg, white to off-white, oval shaped tablets, taken 2 times per day
Placebo tablet, white to off-white, oval shaped tablets, taken 2 times per day
University of California Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California, United States
Friends Research Institute
San Francisco, California, United States
University of Miami, Miller School of Medicine
Miami, Florida, United States
Percentage of Subjects With no Heavy Drinking Days (PSNHDD)
The primary objective of the study is to compare the efficacy of HORIZANT (gabapentin enacarbil) Extended-Release Tablets 600 mg twice daily (BID) with matched placebo on the primary alcohol consumption outcome endpoint, percentage of subjects with no heavy drinking days (PSNHDD) during the last 4 weeks of treatment, among patients with Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD).
Time frame: Weeks 22-25
Percentage of Subjects Abstinent From Alcohol (Key Secondary Endpoint)
Timeline Follow-back drinking data is used to calculate the % of subjects that report not drinking alcohol during weeks 22-25
Time frame: Weeks 22-25
Percentage of Subjects With a World Health Organization (WHO) Drinking Risk Category Decrease of at Least 1-level
Timeline Follow Back data is used to calculate the % of participants that decrease at least 1-level WHO drinking risk category. The WHO has developed a drinking risk categorical scale that can be used in a responder analysis approach to assess clinically relevant decreases in alcohol consumption (Aubin et al-2015). The WHO 1- and 2-level decrease endpoints are the percentage of subjects experiencing at least 1- and 2-level decrease in WHO levels of alcohol consumption, respectively, from the level at baseline (the period including the 28 days before screening) to the level during the last 4 weeks of the maintenance phase (Study Weeks 22-25). The WHO levels are as follows: Males Females Low Risk 1 to 40g 1 to 20g Medium Risk 41 to 60g 21 to 40g High Risk 61 to 100g 41 to 60g Very High Risk 101+g 61+g
Time frame: Weeks 22-25
Percentage of Subjects With a World Health Organization (WHO) Drinking Risk Category Decrease of at Least 2-levels
Timeline Follow Back data is used to calculate the % of participants that decrease at least 1-level WHO drinking risk category. The WHO has developed a drinking risk categorical scale that can be used in a responder analysis approach to assess clinically relevant decreases in alcohol consumption (Aubin et al-2015). The WHO 1- and 2-level decrease endpoints are the percentage of subjects experiencing at least 1- and 2-level decrease in WHO levels of alcohol consumption, respectively, from the level at baseline (the period including the 28 days before screening) to the level during the last 4 weeks of the maintenance phase (Study Weeks 22-25). The WHO levels are as follows: Males Females Low Risk 1 to 40g 1 to 20g Medium Risk 41 to 60g 21 to 40g High Risk 61 to 100g 41 to 60g Very High Risk 101+g 61+g
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Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Boston University Medical Center
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
Lebanon, New Hampshire, United States
Mount Sinai St. Luke's Hospital
New York, New York, United States
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Dallas, Texas, United States
University of Virginia
Charlottesville, Virginia, United States
Time frame: Weeks 22-25
Percentage of Days Abstinent Per Week
Timeline Follow Back daily drinking data used to calculate the % of days abstinent per week.
Time frame: Weeks 22-25
Percentage of Heavy Drinking Days Per Week
Timeline Follow Back data used to calculate the % of heavy drinking days per week. Heavy drinking is 4+ drinks per day for females and 5+ drinks per day for males
Time frame: Weeks 22-25
Weekly Mean Number of Drinks Per Week
Timeline Follow Back data used to calculate the weekly mean number of drinks per week
Time frame: Weeks 22-25
Weekly Mean Drinks Per Drinking Day
Timeline Follow Back daily drinking data used to calculate the weekly mean drinks per drinking day
Time frame: Weeks 22-25
Cigarettes Per Week Among Smokers
A quantity frequency interview of three questions to assess cigarette smoking behavior and other tobacco/nicotine containing products use during the study: 1) "Over the past week, on how many days did you smoke cigarettes?", 2) "On the days you smoked during the past week, how many cigarettes did you smoke on average?", and 3) "Have you used any other tobacco or nicotine containing products besides cigarettes in the past week (e.g., cigars, cigarellos, pipes, bidis, or smokeless tobacco such as pan, chewing tobacco, or snuff, or nicotine replacement therapies such as patch or gum)?".
Time frame: Weeks 22-25
Alcohol Craving Score [Alcohol Craving Scale - Short Form (ACQ-SR-R)]
The ACQ-SR-R contains 12-items adapted from the 47-item ACQ-NOW developed by Singleton et al (1994) to assess craving for alcohol among alcohol users in the current context (right now). Each item has a 1 to 7 raw score (from strongly disagree to strongly agree). Items 3, 8, and 11 are reverse keyed. A general craving index is derived by summing all items and dividing by 12. Minimum score is 1 and maximum score is 7. Higher scores are indicative of higher craving. Mixed effects models as stated in Section 9.4.3 of the SAP will be generated for the total score and for the 4 subscales. Covariates for these models will be identified
Time frame: Weeks 24 and 26
Alcohol Related Consequences (ImBIBe) Score
ImBIBe is a 15-item questionnaire in which the subject responds on a 5-point scale (0-4) responses to questions on the consequences of alcohol use. This scale was adapted from the Drinker Inventory of Consequences questionnaire based on FDA recommendations on patient reported outcomes (Miller \& Tonigen-1995). The potential range is 0-60. A higher score indicates a worse outcome. The questions are added together. A question that is missing is imputed with the average value of all other questions in the questionnaire.The total score is the sum of the individual item scores. Mixed effects models as stated in Section 9.4.3 will be generated for the total score. Covariates for these models will be identified
Time frame: Weeks 24 and 26
Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) Score
The PSQI is a 19-item questionnaire assessing the subject's overall sleep experience in the past 30 days (Buysse et al-1989). The lower the overall score, the better the person sleeps. The tool has an adequate internal reliability, validity and consistency for clinical and community samples of the various populations. Range is (0-21); \>6 indicative of "poor" sleep quality.
Time frame: Week 26
Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) Score
The BAI consists of 21 questions about how the subject has been feeling in the last week, expressed as common symptoms of anxiety (such as numbness and tingling, sweating not due to heat, and fear of the worst happening). This inventory was designed to minimize the overlap with depression scales (Beck et al-1988).The BAI has a maximum score of 63. The standardized cutoffs for anxiety severity are: 0-7: minimal level of anxiety 8-15: mild anxiety 16-25: moderate anxiety 26-63: severe anxiety
Time frame: Week 26
Beck Depression Inventory - II
The BDI-II is a 21-item multiple choice questionnaire that is used for measuring the severity of depression (Beck et al-1966). Each item is scored on a scale value of 0 to 3. The standardized cutoffs for depression severity are: 0-13: minimal depression 14-19: mild depression 20-28: moderate depression 29-63: severe depression
Time frame: Week 26