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Initial and Maintenance Naltrexone Treatment for Alcohol Dependence Using Primary Care vs Specialty Care: A Nested Sequence of 3 Randomized Trials

Authors
 Stephanie S. O'Malley  ;  Bruce J. Rounsaville  ;  Patrick G. O'Connor  ;  Jane Robinson  ;  Ran Wu  ;  Kee Namkoong  ;  Conor Farren 
Citation
 ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE , Vol.163(14) : 1695-1704, 2003 
Journal Title
ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
ISSN
 0003-9926 
Issue Date
2003
MeSH
Adolescent ; Adult ; Aged ; Alanine Transaminase/blood ; Alanine Transaminase/drug effects ; Alcoholism/drug therapy* ; Alcoholism/therapy ; Aspartate Aminotransferases/blood ; Aspartate Aminotransferases/drug effects ; Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ; Combined Modality Therapy ; Connecticut ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Medicine* ; Middle Aged ; Naltrexone/therapeutic use* ; Narcotic Antagonists/therapeutic use* ; Patient Compliance ; Patient Participation ; Primary Health Care* ; Specialization* ; Time ; Treatment Outcome ; gamma-Glutamyltransferase/blood ; gamma-Glutamyltransferase/drug effects
Keywords
12885685
Abstract
Background Naltrexone may improve success in primary care treatment of alcohol dependence (AD). This study tests naltrexone and primary care management (PCM) vs naltrexone and cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) and tests naltrexone maintenance among patients who respond to an initial course of naltrexone combined with PCM vs CBT.

Methods A nested sequence of 3 randomized trials was conducted. In study 1, 197 subjects with AD participated in a 10-week comparison of PCM and naltrexone (50 mg/d) vs CBT and naltrexone (50 mg/d). In study 2, 53 PCM responders from study 1 continued in a 24-week placebo-controlled study of maintenance naltrexone. In study 3, 60 CBT responders from study 1 continued in a 24-week placebo-controlled study of maintenance naltrexone and CBT.

Results Study 1: No difference in the response to treatment; 84.1% (74/88) of the PCM patients and 86.5% (77/89) of the CBT patients avoided persistent heavy drinking. Percentage of days abstinent (PDA) declined over time for PCM vs CBT (P = .03). Study 2: Higher response maintenance for PCM and naltrexone (21/26, 80.8%) vs PCM and placebo (14/27, 51.9%; P = .03) and PDA declined more for the placebo group (P = .02). Study 3: The differences between naltrexone vs placebo on maintenance of response (25/30, 83.3% vs 21/30, 70.0%) or PDA did not reach statistical significance.

Conclusions Naltrexone yielded comparable results during the initial 10 weeks of treatment when combined with PCM or CBT. Maintenance of improvement was enhanced by continued naltrexone treatment in the PCM but not in the CBT arm.
Full Text
http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=215873
DOI
10.1001/archinte.163.14.1695
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Psychiatry (정신과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Namkoong, Kee(남궁기) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1400-8057
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/113989
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