This study combines functional MRI with medication treatment in order to understand the neural mechanisms by which disulfiram, a currently approved medication for alcohol use disorder, changes behavior. Disulfiram is a medication that prevents drinking by causing a highly unpleasant physical reaction when alcohol is consumed while it is being taken. Thus, it provides a means for studying the general neural mechanisms by which awareness of risks impacts behavior change in alcohol use disorder.
The overall goal of this project is to combine functional brain imaging and clinical methods in order to examine how treatment with disulfiram (DIS) alters neural activity related to alcohol-seeking motivation in patients with alcohol use disorder (AUD). DIS is an established, effective, FDA-approved medication for AUD that causes a highly aversive physical reaction if alcohol is consumed while it is being taken. The mere awareness of the risk or threat the DIS-alcohol reaction deters alcohol use, i.e. it is not necessary to drink alcohol while taking DIS to change behavior. By uncovering the neural mechanisms underlying this risk/threat-based psychological effect, it will be possible to integrate DIS with biologically based treatments targeted at these neural mechanisms, with the goal of improving the efficacy of DIS. Furthermore, the results will shed light on the general neural mechanisms by which awareness of risks of substance use impacts addictive motivation. This is a core process in a number of behavioral treatments for substance use disorders, such as Motivational Interviewing and Contingency Management, as well as in behavior change in non-treatment settings.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
7
Patients will be hospitalized on an inpatient psychiatric unit for 1-7 days to initiate abstinence. An fMRI scan will be performed to examine neural mechanisms of alcohol motivation. Prior to discharge, patients will receive the first dose of disulfiram 500 mg. They will then attend an outpatient clinic every other day for 14 days. At each clinic visit, they will receive 500 mg of disulfiram under supervision. Another fMRI scan examining alcohol motivation will be performed. Following this, all patients will attend the clinic weekly, and will be prescribed disulfiram 250 mg daily to take at home. This will be followed followed by an optional extension of weekly visits taking disulfiram 250 mg daily for another 28 days, for a total of 70 days of disulfiram treatment.
NYPInstitute
New York, New York, United States
Alcohol Use
Number of drinking days
Time frame: 42 days
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