Efficacy and safety of sodium oxybate in alcohol-dependent patients with a very high drinking risk level

Archive ouverte

van den Brink, Wim | Addolorato, Giovanni | Aubin, Henri-Jean | Benyamina, Amine | Caputo, Fabio | Dematteis, Maurice | Gual, Antoni | Lesch, Otto-Michael | Mann, Karl | Maremmani, Icro | Nutt, David | Paille, François | Perney, Pascal | Rehm, Jurgen | Reynaud, Michel | Simon, Nicolas | Söderpalm, Bo | Mann, Wolfgang | Walter, Henriette | Mann, Rainer

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

International audience. Medication development for alcohol relapse prevention or reduction of consumption is highly challenging due to meth-odological issues of pharmacotherapy trials. Existing approved medications are only modestly effective with many patients failing to benefit from these therapies. Therefore, there is a pressing need for other effective treatments with a different mechanism of action, especially for patients with very high (VH) drinking risk levels (DRL) because this is the most severely affected population of alcohol use disorder patients. Life expectancy of alcohol-dependent patients with a VH DRL is reduced by 22 years compared with the general population and approximately 90 000 alcohol-dependent subjects with a VH DRL die prematurely each year in the EU (Rehm et al. 2018). A promising new medication for this population is sodium oxybate, a compound that acts on GABA B receptors and extrasynaptic GABA A receptors resulting in alcohol-mimetic effects. In this article, a European expert group of alcohol researchers and clini-cians summarizes data (a) from published trials, (b) from two new-as yet unpublished-large clinical trials (GATE 2 (n = 314) and SMO032 (n = 496), (c) from post hoc subgroup analyses of patients with different WHO-defined DRLs and (d) from multiple meta-analyses. These data provide convergent evidence that sodium oxybate is effective especially in a subgroup of alcohol-dependent patients with VH DRLs. Depending on the study, abstinence rates are increased up to 34 percent compared with placebo with risk ratios up to 6.8 in favor of sodium oxybate treatment. These convergent data are supported by the clinical use of sodium oxybate in Austria and Italy for more than 25 years. Sodium oxybate is the sodium salt of γ-hydroxybutyric acid that is also used as a recreational (street) drug suggestive of abuse potential. However, a pharmacovigilance database of more than 260 000 alcohol-dependent patients treated with sodium oxybate reported very few adverse side effects and only few cases of abuse. We therefore conclude that sodium oxybate is an effective, well-tolerated and safe treatment for withdrawal and relapse prevention treatment, especially in alcohol-dependent patients with VH DRL.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Editorial: Dual disorders (addictive and concomitant psychiatric disorders): Mechanisms and treatment

Archive ouverte | Vorspan, Florence | CCSD

International audience

Baseline severity and the prediction of placebo response in clinical trials for alcohol dependence: A meta‐regression analysis to develop an enrichment strategy

Archive ouverte | Scherrer, Bruno | CCSD

International audience. Background: There is considerable unexplained variability in alcohol abstinence rates (AR) in the placebo groups of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) for alcohol dependence (AD). This is of...

Sodium oxybate for the maintenance of abstinence in alcohol-dependent patients: An international, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Archive ouverte | Guiraud, Julien | CCSD

International audience. Background: Sodium oxybate (SMO) has been shown to be effective in the maintenance of abstinence (MoA) in alcohol-dependent patients in a series of small randomized controlled trials (RCTs). ...

Chargement des enrichissements...