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Clinical Trial Summary

This is a randomized, cross-over, single-blind, placebo-controlled, single-center, multiple-panel evaluation of the potential for oral lorcaserin to modify cocaine self-administration in a laboratory setting. To prevent unauthorized drug use, study medications will be administered as participants are confined during overnight stays at the Medical Center. Non-treatment-seeking, regular cocaine users will receive oral treatment with single doses of placebo, lorcaserin 10 mg (Panel 1), or lorcaserin 20 mg (Panel 2). Afterwards, the subjective and reinforcing effects of intravenous cocaine will be measured in a laboratory setting.


Clinical Trial Description

Background

Serotonin (5-HT) is one of three brain monoamines that are widely distributed in the brain and play important roles in affect and goal-directed behaviors. Limbic structures that underlie behavior motivated by palatable food and drugs of abuse receive dense projections from brainstem serotonergic nuclei. In rats, light and sound cues associated with access to cocaine strongly stimulate drug-seeking behavior. Agonists for the type 2C serotonergic receptor (5-HT₂cR) attenuate this responding.8 Drug taking (cocaine self-administration) is also attenuated at 5-HT₂cR agonist doses similar to those that decrease food-reinforced responding and cause reductions in locomotor activity.

Lorcaserin is a novel and selective agonist of the 5-HT₂cR recently approved by the FDA for weight loss therapy. It acts selectively at this receptor subtype with minimal activation of 5-HT₂ᴀR or 5-HT₂ᴃR receptors. Based on initial clinical studies leading to its approval, lorcaserin is well tolerated and probably does not cause cardiac valve disease or other serious side effects. Even so, given the potential for serious adverse events, the FDA has limited its use to patients who are either obese or overweight with a medical complication such as hypertension. Whether or not lorcaserin will become generally accepted as a long-term treatment for obesity will depend on the results of ongoing post-marketing studies of cardiovascular outcome data.

Rationale In preclinical studies, agonists for the 5-HT₂cR potently attenuate cocaine-seeking behavior. Lorcaserin is a recently approved selective 5-HT₂cR agonist with an acceptable safety profile in humans. No published studies have reported its effects on cocaine-induced craving or drug-reinforced responding in humans.

Specific Aims:

1. Evaluate whether lorcaserin treatment attenuates the positive subjective effects of cocaine and drug-reinforced behavior.

2. Determine whether active treatment modifies cocaine- or script- induced craving.

Methods This is a randomized, cross-over, double-blind, placebo-controlled, single-center, multiple-panel evaluation of the potential for oral lorcaserin to modify cocaine self-administration in a laboratory setting. Up to 32 non-treatment-seeking, regular cocaine users will receive treatment with single doses of oral placebo, lorcaserin 10 mg (Panel 1), or lorcaserin 20 mg (Panel 2). Script-guided imagery of autobiographical memories will be developed based on experiences related to cocaine use, anger, and a neutral event. Following treatment with lorcaserin, script-induced emotional states will be assayed. Sampling doses of cocaine (0.0, 0.23, and 0.46 mg/kg) will be administered, and participants will choose between self-administering additional intravenous doses or receiving monetary alternatives. Detailed measures of the negative and positive subjective effects of intravenous infusions will also be made. As noncontingent infusions of cocaine are administered, the pharmacokinetics of cocaine and lorcaserin will be determined. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Pharmacokinetics/Dynamics Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02680288
Study type Interventional
Source Midwest Biomedical Research Foundation
Contact Midwest Biomedical Research Foundation KCVA
Phone (816) 499-1614
Email Kenneth.Grasing@va.gov
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 1/Phase 2
Start date November 2015
Completion date November 2019

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