• J Stud Alcohol Drugs · May 2011

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Problem drinking and low-dose naltrexone-assisted opioid detoxification.

    • Paolo Mannelli, Kathleen Peindl, Ashwin A Patkar, Li-Tzy Wu, Haresh M Tharwani, and David A Gorelick.
    • Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, 2218 Elder Street, Suite 123, Durham, North Carolina 27705, USA. paolo.mannelli@duke.edu
    • J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2011 May 1; 72 (3): 507-13.

    ObjectiveThe influence of alcohol use on opioid dependence is a major problem that warrants a search for more effective treatment strategies. The addition of very-low-dose naltrexone (VLNTX) to methadone taper was recently associated with reduced withdrawal intensity during detoxification. In a secondary analysis of these data, we sought to determine whether problem drinking affects detoxification outcomes and whether symptoms are influenced by VLNTX use.MethodOpioid-dependent patients (N = 174) received naltrexone (0.125 or 0.250 mg/day) or placebo in a double-blind, randomized design during methadone-based, 6-day inpatient detoxification. Alcohol consumption was assessed at admission using the Addiction Severity Index and selfreport. Outcome measures were opioid withdrawal intensity, craving, and retention in treatment.ResultsProblem drinking-opioid dependent patients (n = 79) showed episodic heavy alcohol use and reported increased subjective opioid withdrawal intensity (p = .001), craving (p = .001), and significantly lower rate of retention in treatment (p = .02). Individuals with problem drinking and opioid dependence who were treated with VLNTX (n = 55) showed reduced withdrawal (p = .05) and a lower rate of treatment discontinuation (p = .03), resuming alcohol intake in smaller numbers the day following discharge (p = .03). Treatment effects were more pronounced on anxiety, perspiration, shakiness, nausea, stomach cramps, and craving. There were no group differences in use of adjuvant medications and no treatment-related adverse events.ConclusionsHeavy drinking is associated with worse opioid detoxification outcomes. The addition of VLNTX is safe and is associated with reduced withdrawal symptoms and better completion rate in these patients. Further studies should explore the use of VLNTX in detoxification and long-term treatment of combined alcohol-opioid dependence and alcohol dependence alone.

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