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Effects of baclofen and mirtazapine on a laboratory model of marijuana withdrawal and relapse. | LitMetric

Effects of baclofen and mirtazapine on a laboratory model of marijuana withdrawal and relapse.

Psychopharmacology (Berl)

Department of Psychiatry, Division on Substance Abuse, New York State Psychiatric Institute, 1051 Riverside Drive, Unit 120, New York, NY 10032, USA.

Published: August 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • A small number of individuals seeking treatment for marijuana use successfully achieve long-term abstinence, highlighting the need for additional treatment options.
  • Two studies (one with baclofen and one with mirtazapine) were conducted on daily marijuana smokers to assess the impact of these medications on cravings, withdrawal symptoms, and relapse during controlled smoking sessions.
  • Results indicated that neither baclofen nor mirtazapine effectively helped reduce cravings or relapse rates, with baclofen actually impairing cognitive function, while mirtazapine only improved sleep and increased food intake.

Article Abstract

Rationale: Only a small percentage of individuals seeking treatment for their marijuana use achieves sustained abstinence, suggesting more treatment options are needed.

Objectives: We investigated the effects of baclofen (study 1) and mirtazapine (study 2) in a human laboratory model of marijuana intoxication, withdrawal, and relapse.

Methods: In study 1, daily marijuana smokers (n = 10), averaging 9.4 (+/-3.9) marijuana cigarettes/day, were maintained on placebo and each baclofen dose (60, 90 mg/day) for 16 days. In study 2, daily marijuana smokers (n = 11), averaging 11.9 (+/-5.3) marijuana cigarettes/day, were maintained on placebo and mirtazapine (30 mg/day) for 14 days each. Medication administration began outpatient prior to each 8-day inpatient phase. On the first inpatient day of each medication condition, participants smoked active marijuana (study 1: 3.3% THC; study 2: 6.2% THC). For the next 3 days, they could self-administer placebo marijuana (abstinence phase), followed by 4 days in which they could self-administer active marijuana (relapse phase); participants paid for self-administered marijuana using study earnings.

Results: In study 1, during active marijuana smoking, baclofen dose-dependently decreased craving for tobacco and marijuana, but had little effect on mood during abstinence and did not decrease relapse. Baclofen also worsened cognitive performance regardless of marijuana condition. In study 2, mirtazapine improved sleep during abstinence, and robustly increased food intake, but had no effect on withdrawal symptoms and did not decrease marijuana relapse.

Conclusions: Overall, this human laboratory study did not find evidence to suggest that either baclofen or mirtazapine showed promise for the potential treatment of marijuana dependence.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3323354PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00213-010-1888-6DOI Listing

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