• N. Engl. J. Med. · Jan 2021

    Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study

    Bupropion and Naltrexone in Methamphetamine Use Disorder.

    • Madhukar H Trivedi, Robrina Walker, Walter Ling, Adriane Dela Cruz, Gaurav Sharma, Thomas Carmody, Udi E Ghitza, Aimee Wahle, Mora Kim, Kathy Shores-Wilson, Steven Sparenborg, Phillip Coffin, Joy Schmitz, Katharina Wiest, Gavin Bart, Susan C Sonne, Sidarth Wakhlu, A John Rush, Edward V Nunes, and Steven Shoptaw.
    • From the Peter O'Donnell Jr. Brain Institute at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (M.H.T.) and the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (R.W., A.C., T.C., M.K., K.S.-W., S.W.), Dallas, the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston (J.S.), and Texas Tech University, Permian Basin, Odessa (A.J.R.); the University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles (W.L., S. Shoptaw); the Emmes Company, Rockville (G.S., A.W.), and the National Institute on Drug Abuse Center for the Clinical Trials Network (U.E.G., S. Sparenborg [retired]), Rockville - both in Maryland; the San Francisco Department of Public Health and the University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco (P.C.); CODA, Portland, OR (K.W.); Hennepin Healthcare, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis (G.B.); Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston (S.C.S.); Duke-National University of Singapore, Singapore (A.J.R.); Duke Medical School, Durham, NC (A.J.R.); and Columbia University, New York (E.V.N.).
    • N. Engl. J. Med. 2021 Jan 14; 384 (2): 140153140-153.

    BackgroundThe use of naltrexone plus bupropion to treat methamphetamine use disorder has not been well studied.MethodsWe conducted this multisite, double-blind, two-stage, placebo-controlled trial with the use of a sequential parallel comparison design to evaluate the efficacy and safety of extended-release injectable naltrexone (380 mg every 3 weeks) plus oral extended-release bupropion (450 mg per day) in adults with moderate or severe methamphetamine use disorder. In the first stage of the trial, participants were randomly assigned in a 0.26:0.74 ratio to receive naltrexone-bupropion or matching injectable and oral placebo for 6 weeks. Those in the placebo group who did not have a response in stage 1 underwent rerandomization in stage 2 and were assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive naltrexone-bupropion or placebo for an additional 6 weeks. Urine samples were obtained from participants twice weekly. The primary outcome was a response, defined as at least three methamphetamine-negative urine samples out of four samples obtained at the end of stage 1 or stage 2, and the weighted average of the responses in the two stages is reported. The treatment effect was defined as the between-group difference in the overall weighted responses.ResultsA total of 403 participants were enrolled in stage 1, and 225 in stage 2. In the first stage, 18 of 109 participants (16.5%) in the naltrexone-bupropion group and 10 of 294 (3.4%) in the placebo group had a response. In the second stage, 13 of 114 (11.4%) in the naltrexone-bupropion group and 2 of 111 (1.8%) in the placebo group had a response. The weighted average response across the two stages was 13.6% with naltrexone-bupropion and 2.5% with placebo, for an overall treatment effect of 11.1 percentage points (Wald z-test statistic, 4.53; P<0.001). Adverse events with naltrexone-bupropion included gastrointestinal disorders, tremor, malaise, hyperhidrosis, and anorexia. Serious adverse events occurred in 8 of 223 participants (3.6%) who received naltrexone-bupropion during the trial.ConclusionsAmong adults with methamphetamine use disorder, the response over a period of 12 weeks among participants who received extended-release injectable naltrexone plus oral extended-release bupropion was low but was higher than that among participants who received placebo. (Funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse and others; ADAPT-2 ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03078075.).Copyright © 2021 Massachusetts Medical Society.

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