Journal Basic Info

  • Impact Factor: 1.809**
  • H-Index: 6
  • ISSN: 2474-1655
  • DOI: 10.25107/2474-1655
**Impact Factor calculated based on Google Scholar Citations. Please contact us for any more details.

Major Scope

  •  Forensic and Legal Medicine
  •  Physiology
  •  Psychiatry and Mental Health
  •  Genetics
  •  Oncology Cases
  •  Cardiac Surgery
  •  Nuclear Medicine
  •  Anatomy

Abstract

Citation: Ann Clin Case Rep. 2017;2(1):1297.DOI: 10.25107/2474-1655.1297

Randomized Single Blind Study of the Efficacy of Pregabalin vs. Clonidine in the Treatment of Opioid Withdrawal Syndrome: Results of Intermediate Analysis

Krupitsky EM, Ilyuk RD, Mikhailov AD, Kazankov KA, Rybakova KV, Zaplatkin IA and Neznanov NG

St. Petersburg V.M. Bekhterev Research Psychoneurological Institute, Russia
St. Petersburg Pavlov State Medical University, Russia
Murmansk Regional Addiction Hospital, Russia

*Correspondance to: Krupitsky EM 

 PDF  Full Text Short Communication | Open Access

Abstract:

Introduction: Treatment of opioid withdrawal syndrome (OWS), commonly referred to as “detoxification”, is one of the most important problems in addiction psychiatry. Existing pharmacotherapy detoxification protocols are poorly tolerated and studies indicate that many of the patients do not complete treatment. Hyperalgesia, sleep disturbances and anxiety are the symptoms often cited as causes of failure to detoxify. Pregabalin (Lyrica ®) is an effective analgesic, anxiolytic and hypnotic medication. This study tested the hypothesis that Pregabalin is a safe and effective adjunct to opioid detoxification therapy.Methods: Study design: Single-blind randomized symptom-regulated protocol with an active control. Thirty-four patients admitted to an inpatient addiction treatment program were randomly assigned to two groups. The first group (N=19) received up to 600 mg a day of Pregabalin for six days along with symptomatic therapy that was divided into basic treatment that was given to all patients (Doxylamin 30 mg/day) and additional medications based on patients’ needs as determined by a psychiatrist using the Opioid Withdrawal Scale and included Ketorolac, Loperamide, Metoclopramide, Nefazolin and Phenazepam (a benzodiazepine developed in Russia for sleep). The second group (N=15) received up to 600 micrograms of Clonidine a day as the main treatment along with the same basic and symptomatic regimen. No other medications were prescribed to these patients. Opiate withdrawal severity, craving, sleep disturbance, anxiety and depression, as well as general clinical impressions and side effects were assessed daily by psychiatrists who were blind to patients’ group assignment using internationally validated quantitative psychometric instruments.
Results: The two patient groups did not differ significantly on baseline in clinical or demographic characteristics or severity of opioid withdrawal. In the Pregabalin group, 15 out of 19 patients completed treatment (79%) compared to 7 out of 15 patients (47%) in the Clonidine group (p = 0,05; Fisher exact test). Kaplan-Meier survival analysis also confirmed better patient retention in the Pregabalin group (p = 0,001; Log Rank (Mantel-Cox) criterion). There were no statistically significant differences between groups on any assessments of the severity of OWS (reduction of the severity of opiate withdrawal), perhaps because of the symptom-triggered study design and small sample size. However, in the Pregabalin group there were lower indicators of the severity of craving for opiates (p = 0,05), anxiety (p = 0,05) and depression (p < 0,05), while patient-rated selfassessment of their general health condition with a visual analog scale was significantly better in the Pregabalin group (p < 0,05). An average dose of symptom-triggered ketorolac (NSAID analgesic) in the Clonidine group was almost twice that of the Pregabalin group (60,5±8,2mg vs. 36,0±7,8mg, p < 0,05). There were no significant differences in the frequency of adverse events between the groups, however, the Pregabalin group reported less fatigue compared to the Clonidine group (16% vs. 47%, p < 0,05). We conclude that reduced craving, fatigue and analgesic requirements in the Pregabalin patients indicate that they tolerated the withdrawal better than the clonidine comparison group, and that led to a higher detoxification completion rate (retention).Conclusion: These preliminary results indicate that a Pregabalin-based opioid withdrawal protocol is likely safe and effective and results in better outcomes than the usual Clonidine-based protocol. The mechanism underlying this effect is likely related to a reduction in glutamate release from hyper-excited glutamatergic neurons which might reduce dysregulations of endogenous opioid neuropeptides.

Keywords:

Pregabalin; Clonidne; Opioid withdrawal syndrome; Pharmacotherapy

Cite the Article:

Krupitsky EM, Ilyuk RD, Mikhailov AD, Kazankov KA, Rybakova KV, Zaplatkin IA, et al. Randomized Single Blind Study of the Efficacy of Pregabalin vs. Clonidine in the Treatment of Opioid Withdrawal Syndrome: Results of Intermediate Analysis. Ann Clin Case Rep. 2017; 2: 1297.

Search Our Journal

Journal Indexed In

Articles in PubMed

Tocotrienols: Exciting Biological and Pharmacological Properties of Tocotrienols and Naturally Occurring Compounds, Part II
 PubMed  PMC  PDF  Full Text
Tocotrienols: Exciting Biological and Pharmacological Properties of Tocotrienols and other Naturally Occurring Compounds, Part I
 PubMed  PMC  PDF  Full Text
View More...

Articles with Grants

Pediatric Appropriate Prolonged-Release Melatonin Minitablet for Insomnia in Children and Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder
 Abstract  PDF  Full Text
Additional Test of Anti-Pt IgA in the Samples with Detectable Anti-PT IgG can Improve Serodiagnosis of Recent Pertussis
 Abstract  PDF  Full Text
View More...