학술논문

Bupropion and Naltrexone in Methamphetamine Use Disorder
Document Type
article
Source
New England Journal of Medicine. 384(2)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
Clinical Research
Brain Disorders
Neurosciences
Methamphetamine
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Substance Misuse
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
6.1 Pharmaceuticals
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Administration
Oral
Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Amphetamine-Related Disorders
Bupropion
Delayed-Action Preparations
Double-Blind Method
Drug Therapy
Combination
Female
Humans
Injections
Male
Medication Adherence
Middle Aged
Naltrexone
Narcotic Antagonists
Young Adult
Medical and Health Sciences
General & Internal Medicine
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundThe use of naltrexone plus bupropion to treat methamphetamine use disorder has not been well studied.MethodsWe conducted this multisite, double-blind, two-stage, placebo-controlled trial with the use of a sequential parallel comparison design to evaluate the efficacy and safety of extended-release injectable naltrexone (380 mg every 3 weeks) plus oral extended-release bupropion (450 mg per day) in adults with moderate or severe methamphetamine use disorder. In the first stage of the trial, participants were randomly assigned in a 0.26:0.74 ratio to receive naltrexone-bupropion or matching injectable and oral placebo for 6 weeks. Those in the placebo group who did not have a response in stage 1 underwent rerandomization in stage 2 and were assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive naltrexone-bupropion or placebo for an additional 6 weeks. Urine samples were obtained from participants twice weekly. The primary outcome was a response, defined as at least three methamphetamine-negative urine samples out of four samples obtained at the end of stage 1 or stage 2, and the weighted average of the responses in the two stages is reported. The treatment effect was defined as the between-group difference in the overall weighted responses.ResultsA total of 403 participants were enrolled in stage 1, and 225 in stage 2. In the first stage, 18 of 109 participants (16.5%) in the naltrexone-bupropion group and 10 of 294 (3.4%) in the placebo group had a response. In the second stage, 13 of 114 (11.4%) in the naltrexone-bupropion group and 2 of 111 (1.8%) in the placebo group had a response. The weighted average response across the two stages was 13.6% with naltrexone-bupropion and 2.5% with placebo, for an overall treatment effect of 11.1 percentage points (Wald z-test statistic, 4.53; P