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Clinical Trial Summary

Objective of the Project.

-Methamphetamine (MA) use is growing to epidemic proportions and existing treatments for MA dependence demonstrate sub-optimal efficacy. Research implicates heavy use of MA as at least a contributing agent to a variety of neuropsychiatric impairments including psychosis, mood disturbance, anxiety, cognitive deficits, and motor dysfunction. Initial study by this investigator suggests that agents like risperidone may also be beneficial to MA dependent individuals by decreasing MA use and improving cognitive function in early abstinence. Long-acting injectable risperidone may prove more efficacious given its receptor binding characteristics and potential to increase medication adherence. The study objective is to determine the safety and efficacy of treating MA dependence and the associated cognitive and psychiatric symptomatology with long-acting injectable risperidone.


Clinical Trial Description

Objective of the Project.

-Methamphetamine (MA) use is growing to epidemic proportions and existing treatments for MA dependence demonstrate sub-optimal efficacy. Research implicates heavy use of MA as at least a contributing agent to a variety of neuropsychiatric impairments including psychosis, mood disturbance, anxiety, cognitive deficits, and motor dysfunction. Initial study by this investigator suggests that agents like risperidone may also be beneficial to MA dependent individuals by decreasing MA use and improving cognitive function in early abstinence. Long-acting injectable risperidone may prove more efficacious given its receptor binding characteristics and potential to increase medication adherence. The study objective is to determine the safety and efficacy of treating MA dependence and the associated cognitive and psychiatric symptomatology with long-acting injectable risperidone.

Research Plan.

-This is an open-label trial of long-acting injectable risperidone administered 25mg every 2-weeks for the treatment of methamphetamine (MA) dependence. Participation will last approximately 14 weeks. A total of 20 subjects (veterans and non-veterans) aged 18 to 65 years old who meet DSM-IV criteria for current MA dependence, have a stable address or alternative contact, and expect to be in the Puget Sound area for the length of the study will be enrolled at the Seattle and American Lake Divisions of the VA PSHCS. Exclusionary criteria include: 1) known sensitivity or allergy to risperidone; 2) current treatment with an antipsychotic agent, a mood stabilizer, or CYP 2D6 inhibitor; (3) transaminase levels >5X ULN; (4) albumin levels <3.5g/dl; (5) random serum glucose levels >200mg/dl; (6) diabetes mellitus or history of myocardial infarction; (7) baseline Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale score >72; (8) presence of tardive dyskinesia; (9) Barnes Akathisia Rating Scale global item score >2; (10) Simpson-Angus Scale total score > 0.3; (11) involvement with the legal system that could compromise study participation; (12) pregnancy or nursing; (13) receiving current mental health treatment.

Methodology

-Potential subjects will complete a screening, including medical history and physical, laboratory, EKG, assessment of MA and other drug use, psychiatric screening and cognitive testing, to determine eligibility. Eligible subjects will repeat the cognitive testing instruments prior to starting medication. After completing the screening period, subjects who continue to be eligible will receive 7 days of oral risperidone to assess tolerability followed by administration of long-acting injectable risperidone, 25mg. For 3 weeks following the first IM injection, participants will take oral risperidone each night to achieve a therapeutic plasma level of risperidone. During the oral co-administration phase, participants will have medication pill counts during their weekly visit to evaluate adherence and corroborate self-report data. Participants will receive additional 25mg risperidone injections every 14 days (at weeks 2, 4, and 6 after the first injection).

Following the first injection, subjects will return to the study center for weekly visits for 8 weeks. At each study visit, patients will be evaluated for possible adverse events, use of concomitant medications, and use of methamphetamine. Safety labs will be repeated at week 4 and 8. Plasma levels of risperidone and 9-OH-risperidone will be obtained at 3, 6, and 8 weeks. If intolerable adverse events occur, risperidone dosage will be reduced, or, if indicated, risperidone will be discontinued. Psychiatric symptoms and cognitive functioning will be evaluated at Baseline, and 4 and 8 weeks. A follow-up visit will take place at 12 weeks. Subjects will receive behavioral treatment consisting of individual, once weekly, standardized, manual guided, relapse prevention therapy.

Findings, results, or conclusions reached to date.

-None to date. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00284206
Study type Interventional
Source Seattle Institute for Biomedical and Clinical Research
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
Start date January 2006
Completion date August 2007

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