Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to obtain a preliminary indication of the safety and effectiveness of oral memantine (40 mg/day) in alcohol dependent patients. This study is a 16-week study comparison of memantine and placebo in patients with alcohol dependence.


Clinical Trial Description

This study is a 16-week study, double-blind, parallel groups, two arm comparison of memantine and placebo in patients with alcohol dependence.

Procedures. This outpatient clinical trial comprises a 2-week placebo lead-in phase followed by a 12-week treatment phase and a 2-week lead-out phase. Patients will be seen 2x/week. There will also be a 3-month follow-up visit to reassess the status of abstinence or relapse to drinking. The design of the study is as follows:

Single-blind Placebo Lead-in Phase (Week -2 and Week -1). Patients who give informed consent and provisionally meet the inclusion-exclusion criteria will enter a 2-week Single-blind Placebo Lead-in Phase. After this placebo lead-in phase, patients will be randomized to receive memantine or placebo and they will be stratified by sex, age, race and level of alcohol dependence.

12 Week Treatment Phase (Weeks 1-12). At these visits, medication will be provided, standardized assessment instruments will be completed, and biochemical measures will be taken to monitor alcohol consumption as well as compliance with study medication. In one of these two weekly visits patients will receive individual, manual-guided relapse prevention therapy with a clinician and meet with a study psychiatrist. Patients wishing to take naltrexone (ReVia), disulfiram (Antabuse), or participate in more intensive inpatient treatment during the trial will be discontinued from the study.

Single-blind Lead-out Phase (Weeks 13-14). During this 2-week lead-out phase, patients on active medication will be tapered off the medication to placebo, but all other measures and assessments (including weekly psychotherapy sessions) will remain the same. All patients, regardless of whether they complete the study or are administratively removed, will be followed up and rated at Week 14. There will also be a 3-month follow-up visit to reassess the status of abstinence or relapse to drinking.

Clinic Visits. During these visits, the research nurse and a research assistant measure breath alcohol content (BAC), urine and blood samples as scheduled for monitoring alcohol, illicit drug use, and medication compliance. Medication compliance will initially be assessed by measuring riboflavin fluorescence in urine samples. The staff will supervise the completion of self-report questionnaires. The nurse will check vital signs at each visit, weight once per week and will question patients about compliance, any missed doses, and possible side effect or other adverse events, and will complete the compliance and adverse events forms. Medication compliance will be monitored via riboflavin (Del Boca et al 1996), self-report data, collateral informant data, and medication blood levels. Likewise, drinking behavior will be monitored with BAC, self-report and collateral informant data. This data will be available to the treatment team and will be used to reinforce importance of compliance. The patient will meet weekly with the psychiatrist who will assess current alcohol use and mood status, evaluate side effects and adjust dosage as needed (using the prearranged blinded dose adjustment schedule), review events occurring since the last study visit relating to the patient's functioning, and perform the CGI-Observer rating. During one of the two weekly visits, the patient will also meet with the therapist for individual relapse prevention therapy. At any point during the trial, if the treating psychiatrist determines that the primary alcohol dependence, secondary dependence on other drugs of abuse, or new drug dependence has escalated such that a more intensive intervention is required, he/she will make decisions about removal from the trial and referral to other forms of treatment.

Medication will be given on a fixed-flexible schedule, titrated to the maximum recommended dose to minimize side effects. Patients will receive enough medication to last until the next visit. For patients assigned to memantine, they will be gradually titrated from 10 mg/day to the maximal dose of 20 mg b.i.d. (40 mg/day) over the first two weeks of the treatment phase. All patients will receive matching pills in the same quantity each day. In case of several missed visits, side effects or adverse events, a study nurse and a study psychiatrist will meet with the patient and a dose decrease will be arranged using the prearranged blinded dose adjustment schedule. Patients who cannot tolerate 50% of the maximal dose (i.e., 20 mg/day memantine) will be discontinued from study medication; however, based on our experience, this is highly unlikely. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00246415
Study type Interventional
Source National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
Start date November 2002
Completion date December 2005

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03165942 - Neuroendocrine Response to Oral Alcohol Administration Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05343039 - Technology Enhanced Adolescent Mental Health (TEAM) N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04070521 - EEG Monitoring in the Emergency Department
Completed NCT03169244 - Buproprion for Binge Drinking Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05246202 - Personalized Feedback Intervention for Latinx Drinkers With Anxiety N/A
Completed NCT05036499 - PFI for Pain-Related Anxiety Among Hazardous Drinkers With Chronic Pain N/A
Recruiting NCT04368416 - Anxiety/Depression, Sleep and Alcohol in Elderly Anxiety/Depression, Sleep Disturbances and Alcohol Use Disorder in Elderly With Cognitive Complaints
Not yet recruiting NCT04557631 - Evaluation of the Threshold for the Interpretation of the Results of a Method for the Blood Determination of Phosphatidyléthanol
Terminated NCT00890149 - Ondansetron for the Treatment of Heavy Drinking Among Emerging Adults Phase 2
Completed NCT02448134 - A Community-Based Strategy for Preventing Underage Drinking N/A
Completed NCT02681406 - Smartphone Based Continuing Care for Alcohol N/A
Completed NCT02179749 - Mifepristone Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorder Phase 2
Withdrawn NCT01796158 - Pilot Test of Computerized MET to Reduce Adolescent Alcohol Use N/A
Withdrawn NCT01847300 - cSBI-M for Young Military Personnel N/A
Withdrawn NCT01511679 - Brain-imaging and Adolescent Neuroscience Consortium N/A
Completed NCT01553136 - Varenicline Treatment of Alcohol Dependence in Smokers Phase 2
Terminated NCT01408641 - Topiramate for Alcohol Use in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder N/A
Withdrawn NCT01275391 - cSBIRT to Reduce Teen Tobacco, Alcohol and Drug Use Phase 1/Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT01539525 - Screening to Augment Referral to Treatment- Project START Phase 2
Completed NCT01207258 - Brief Intervention for Problem Drinking and Partner Violence Phase 2