Within-subject, double-blind, placebo-controlled examination of opioid abuse potential in healthy individuals as a function of A118G SNP on the OPRM1 gene.
Participants completed a 5-day, within-subject, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized, human laboratory abuse potential trial. Healthy individuals were admitted to a residential research unit for 5 consecutive days. Blood samples were drawn for genome wide analyses using the Global Screening Array on day 1. Participants were administered an oral dose of the opioid hydromorphone (4mg) on day 2 of the study. Persons who did not evidence strong agonist effects then proceeded into the randomized period wherein they received 0mg, 2mg, and 8mg of oral hydromorphone on the remaining three study days. The order of dosing was randomized, with only 1 dose administered per day and all participants receiving 1 exposure to each dose. Outcomes were standard human abuse potential metrics, including self-reported drug effects and feeling high. Data were analyzed as a function of the A118SNP on the OPRM1 gene that codes for the mu opioid receptor. The overall aim was to determine whether signal for abuse potential among persons with no history of opioid misuse was associated with genotype.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
100
Within-subject double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, residential human abuse potential study. All participants received 4mg oral hydromorphone on study day 2 and a subset continued into the randomized portion for study days 3-5 wherein they received placebo, 2mg hydromorphone, and 8mg hydromorphone in randomized order. Only one dose was administered per day and following randomized all participants received each dose in random order. Outcomes were collected during 8-hour residential-based sessions and included metrics of FDA human abuse potential testing as well as secondary outcomes of laboratory pain testing, subjective reports of drug effects, and cognitive performance, evaluated as a function of study medication condition. Participants were genotyped for rs-1799971 status and results were analyzed as between-group comparisons based upon genotype.
Johns Hopkins University Bayview Medical Campus
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Self-report Visual Analog Ratings of HIGH
Peak visual analog rating scale values of HIGH (rated on 0-100 scale with higher scores indicating higher feeling of being HIGH) collected at 30 minute intervals post-drug administration for 6 hours.
Time frame: 30 minutes after study drug administration
Self-report Visual Analog Ratings of DRUG EFFECT
Peak visual analog rating scale values of DRUG EFFECT (rated on 0-100 scale with higher scores indicating higher drug effect) collected at 30 minute intervals post-drug administration for 6 hours.
Time frame: 30 minutes after study drug administration
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