Cocaine Dependence Clinical Trial
— Keppra-DBOfficial title:
Levetiracetam (Keppra) Treatment for Cocaine Dependence in Methadone-Maintained Patients
Verified date | January 2018 |
Source | Yale University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Concurrent dependence on cocaine occurs in up to 50% of the over one million opiate dependent
patients in spite of methadone maintenance treatment being highly effective for opiate
dependence and having excellent treatment retention. Cocaine dependence has remained largely
unresponsive to medications both in and outside of these methadone programs. We have initial
data from our open-label study with levetiracetam showing that this medication is well
tolerated and may reduce cocaine use in this cocaine-abusing methadone treated population.
The specific aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of levetiracetam 3 grams/day in
modifying cocaine-using behavior, reducing cocaine craving and attenuating cocaine's
reinforcing effect among methadone-maintained patients. The primary outcomes will be
reduction in cocaine use as assessed by self-report and thrice-weekly urinalyses. Secondary
outcomes will include weeks in treatment (retention) and change in measures of cocaine
craving, anxiety symptoms and opiate withdrawal symptoms.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 28 |
Est. completion date | October 2008 |
Est. primary completion date | June 2008 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 65 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Between the ages of 18-65 years. - Participants must demonstrate current opioid dependence as determined by study physician or APRN, self-reported history of opioid dependence for one year and a positive urine of opiates. Participants may be transferred from other methadone maintenance programs, including the WHVA methadone program. - Participants also must be current users of cocaine with self-reported use of cocaine > 1 time/week in at least one month preceding study entry, cocaine-positive urine screen and score over 3 as assessed with the Severity Dependence Scale. - Women of childbearing age are eligible to be included in the study if they have a negative pregnancy test at screening, agree to adequate contraception to prevent pregnancy, to have monthly pregnancy tests, and they understand the risk of fetal toxicity due to medication and cocaine. Exclusion Criteria: - Current diagnosis of other drug or alcohol dependence (other than opiates, cocaine or tobacco). - Patients with serious medical illness (e.g., major cardiovascular, renal, endocrine, hepatic, and serious neurological disorders including any history of seizures). - Patients with current serious psychiatric illness or history of psychosis, schizophrenia, bipolar type I disorder and subjects with suicidal or homicidal thoughts or taking psychotropic medications. - Women who are pregnant, nursing or refuse to use a reliable form of birth control or refuse monthly testing. - Screening liver function tests (SGOT or SGPT) greater than 3 times normal and renal function test (creatinine) greater than 1.5 mg/dl. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | VA CT Healthcare System | West Haven | Connecticut |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Yale University | National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change of Thrice Weekly Cocaine Free Urine Toxicology From Week 1 to 13 | The primary outcome variable was the change from baseline to week 13 of the thrice weekly cocaine-free urine scores. In this repeated ordinal variable, 0 represented all 3 urine samples submitted by the subject as positives, 1 represented some urine samples submitted by the subject were negative, and 2 represented all 3 urine samples submitted by the subjects were negative for cocaine. Balancing the distribution between these categories improved the models for the analysis of repeated ordinal data. Data is summarized as number of participant that were cocaine free urine (score 2) per week by group. | Weekly from baseline to week 12 | |
Secondary | Change of Thrice Weekly Opioid Free Urine Toxicology From Week 1 to 13 | The secondary outcome variable was the change from baseline to week 13 of the thrice weekly opioid-free urine scores. In this repeated ordinal variable, 0 represented all 3 urines samples submitted by the subject as positives, 1 represented some urine samples submitted by the subject were negative, and 2 represented all 3 urines samples submitted by the subjects were negative for opioids excluding methadone. Balancing the distribution between these categories improved the models for the analysis of repeated ordinal data. Data summarized by number of participants who were had opioid free urine samples (score 2) per week by group. | Weekly from baseline to week 12 | |
Secondary | Treatment Retention | Weekly from week 1 to 13 | Week 13 | |
Secondary | Cocaine Craving | Weekly cocaine craving was measure at intake and weekly after with the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) of the Cocaine Selective Severity Assessment. The VAS measures the intensity of cocaine craving with a scale from 0 (No desire at all) to 7 (Unable to resist), and frequency of cocaine craving in the previous 24 hours with a scale from 0 ( never) to 7 ( all the time). The scale is totaled for a maximum number of 14, the minimum is 0. (Kampman et al., 1998; Mulvaney et al., 1999). | Weekly from baseline to week 12 |
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