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View Full Version : Commonly Available Drug Found To Treat Opioid Addi


duke_nemmerle
02-19-2009, 12:19 AM
Just thought I'd share this with you folks. I haven't been here in a long time; I'm hoping everyone is well.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/02/090217212255.htm

Scientists at Stanford University School of Medicine have discovered that a commonly available non-addictive drug can prevent symptoms of withdrawal from opioids with little likelihood of serious side effects. The drug, ondansetron, which is already approved to treat nausea and vomiting, appears to avoid some of the problems that accompany existing treatments for addiction to these powerful painkillers, the scientists said.

Opioids encompass a diverse array of prescription and illegal drugs, including codeine, morphine and heroin. In 2007, about 12.5 million Americans aged 12 and older used prescription pain medications for non-medical purposes, according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, administered by the federal government's Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
"Opioid abuse is rising at a faster rate than any other type of illicit drug use, yet only about a quarter of those dependent on opioids seek treatment," said Larry F. Chu, MD, assistant professor of anesthesia at the School of Medicine and lead author of the study that will be published online Feb. 17 in the Journal of Pharmacogenetics and Genomics. "One barrier to treatment is that when you abruptly stop taking the drugs, there is a constellation of symptoms associated with withdrawal." Chu described opioid withdrawal as a "bad flu," characterized by agitation, insomnia, diarrhea, nausea and vomiting.
Current methods of treatment are not completely effective, according to Chu. One drug used for withdrawal, clonidine, requires close medical supervision as it can cause severe side effects, while two others, methadone and buprenorphine, don't provide a satisfactory solution because they act through the same mechanism as the abused drugs. "It's like replacing one drug with another," said co-investigator Gary Peltz, MD, PhD, professor of anesthesia.
"What we need is a magic bullet," said Chu. "Something that treats the symptoms of withdrawal, does not lead to addiction and can be taken at home."
The researchers' investigation led them to the drug ondansetron, after they determined that it would block certain receptors involved in withdrawal symptoms.
The scientists were able to make this connection thanks to their having a good animal model for opioid dependence. Mice given morphine for several days develop the mouse equivalent of addiction. Researchers then stop providing morphine to trigger withdrawal symptoms. Strikingly, these mice, when placed into a plastic cylinder, will start to jump into the air. One can measure how dependent these mice are by counting how many times they jump. Like humans, dependent mice also become very sensitive to pain when they stop receiving morphine.
But the responses vary among the laboratory animals. There are "different flavors of mice," explained Peltz. "Some strains of mice are more likely to become dependent on opioids." By comparing the withdrawal symptoms and genomes of these different strains, it's possible to figure out which genes play a major role in addiction.
To accomplish this feat, Peltz and his colleagues used a powerful computational "haplotype-based" genetic mapping method that he had recently developed, which can sample a large portion of the genome within just a few hours. This method pinpoints genes responsible for the variation in withdrawal symptoms across these strains of mice.
The analysis revealed an unambiguous result: One particular gene determined the severity of withdrawal. That gene codes for the 5-HT3 receptor, a protein that responds to the brain-signaling chemical serotonin.
To confirm these results, the researchers injected the dependent mice with ondansetron, a drug that specifically blocks 5-HT3 receptors. The drug significantly reduced the jumping behavior of mice as well as pain sensitivity — two signs of addiction.
The scientists were able to jump from "from mouse to man" by sheer luck: It turns out that ondansetron is already on the market for the treatment of pain and nausea. As a result, they were able to immediately use this drug, approved by the Food and Drug Administration, in eight healthy, non-opioid-dependent humans. In one session, they received only a single large dose of morphine, and in another session that was separated by at least week, they took ondansetron in combination with morphine. They were then given questionnaires to assess their withdrawal symptoms.
Similar to mice, humans treated with ondansetron before or while receiving morphine showed a significant reduction in withdrawal signs compared with when they received morphine but not ondansetron. "A major accomplishment of this study was to take lab findings and translate them to humans," said principal investigator J. David Clark, MD, PhD, professor of anesthesia at Stanford University School of Medicine and the Palo Alto Veterans Affairs Health Care System.
Chu plans on conducting a clinical study to confirm the effectiveness of another ondansetron-like drug in treating opioid withdrawal symptoms in a larger group of healthy humans. And the research team will continue to test the effectiveness of ondansetron in treating opioid addiction.
The scientists warned that ondansetron will not by itself resolve the problems that arise with continued use of these painkillers. Addiction is a long-term, complex process, involving both physical and psychological factors that lead to compulsive drug use. "This is not a cure for addiction," said Clark. "It's naïve to think that any one receptor is a panacea for treatment. Treating the withdrawal component is only one way of alleviating the suffering. With luck and determination, we can identify additional targets and put together a comprehensive treatment program."
Collaborators on this study included De-Yong Liang, PhD, the study's co-lead author, previously a research associate in the Department of Anesthesia and currently a research associate at the Palo Alto Institute for Research and Education; Xiangqi Li, MD, a life science research assistant in the department; Nicole D'Arcy, a medical student: Peyman Sahbaie, MD, a research associate at the institute; and Guochun Liao, PhD, of the pharmaceutical company Hoffman-La Roche. This work was supported by grants to Clark from the National Institutes of Health and the National Institute on Drug Abuse, and grants to Chu from the NIH and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.
The researchers are working with the Stanford University Office of Technology Licensing to seek a patent for the use of ondansetron and related medicines in the treatment of drug addiction.

Raz
02-19-2009, 12:36 AM
^^^^And we chalk up another peice a good info stored in ze phile database.....Good info bro...

Opiyum
02-19-2009, 12:42 AM
^^^YAR MATEY....
I dont know why but I always have thought of you as a pirate Raz. Maybe it's the avatar or maybe it's you way with words. Either way you are one kick ass pirate.

Seedy
02-19-2009, 01:00 AM
Good find i'll be looking into this!

Narkotikon
02-19-2009, 01:08 AM
Am I missing something? The researchers gave the eight or so test subject one large shot of morphine, then a week later the new drug, and determined that it eased w/d? No one is going to get w/d from one shot of morphine, and from what little symptoms they may get, a week's time would be enough to make them "normal" again. Or, am I missing something?

If this is true, I think it's great. But I have a hard time believing there is any magic cure for w/d. I still think the most compassionate way to deal with it is through a slow / moderately slow detox with another opiate, and not just methadone or bupe. I think any opiate should be able to be used, depending on what works best for that particular patient.

I tend to be skeptical of these "magic bullet" cures. A lot of doctors I've dealt with seem to think that Clonidine is a "magic" cure for w/d, and personally, the only thing I think it does for me is lower my heart-rate and drain what little energy I already have in w/d. It just makes me feel exhausted, like I'm going to faint.

I hope one day they can make a pill to make w/d go away, but I highly doubt this is it, or that will happen for a very long time, if at all.

Good information, though. Thanks for posting it.

Mayo
02-19-2009, 03:45 AM
When I was kicking hard last june or july, I had severe nausea and took some zofran (ondansetron).
I posted about it in the H horror story forum. It really helped alot.
I wasn't expecting it to do anything other than settle my stomach, but it did much more.
I just didn't realize it was entirely due to the zofran at the time.

OxiContinKing
02-19-2009, 12:16 PM
How would one go about getting a prescription for this

Hoss
02-19-2009, 12:42 PM
^^^YAR MATEY....
I dont know why but I always have thought of you as a pirate Raz. Maybe it's the avatar or maybe it's you way with words. Either way you are one kick ass pirate.

^ I second that "YAR" Opi; I too have always envisioned Raz as being a pirate too - I think it's like you said, a combo of the avatar and his dialect, however whatever it is, it's awesome.

Here here to our resident pirate, Raz http://tbn3.google.com/images?q=tbn:Jt9zuuMbOYyO8M:http://www.piratesonlineforums.com/forums/images/smilies/pirates/pirate.smiley.captain.wink.gif

Also, to the OP - good information; I had not even heard of this drug before, and as I understand it, it goes under the name of 'Zofran' here in the United States. I agree with Nark in regards to confusion based upon the information given about the morphine administered to the test subject before the administration of said WD cure, however even if it helps in any regard with WD that is at least good information. Thank you for posting.

blaze1
02-19-2009, 12:45 PM
and how much do you need to take?

red26
02-19-2009, 12:58 PM
How would one go about getting a prescription for this Tell yer doctor that you've been vomiting and in the past you've been given zofran and it was helpful. Phenegran is a good nervous systen down-regulator too. When my nerve pain gets really bad and the nurontin(?) is'nt helpin as much as it should I pop 50mgs. of it and things start to calm down.