Human Behavioral Pharmacology Laboratory (HBPL) Study of Varenicline's Impact on Cocaine and Alcohol Craving



Status:Completed
Conditions:Psychiatric, Pulmonary
Therapuetic Areas:Psychiatry / Psychology, Pulmonary / Respiratory Diseases
Healthy:No
Age Range:21 - 65
Updated:10/26/2017
Start Date:July 2010
End Date:December 2013

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This is a Phase II within-subjects double-blind placebo-controlled human laboratory study.
The purpose of the study is to determine the efficacy of varenicline (Chantix) for reducing
cue-induced cocaine and alcohol craving.


Inclusion Criteria:

1. Subject is male or female and is between 21 and 65 years of age.

2. The subject has used cocaine, alcohol, or cocaine and alcohol at least once per month
for at least the past year, and has used cocaine, alcohol, or cocaine and alcohol
within the past 30 days.

3. Live within a commutable distance of the Treatment Research Center (TRC) at the
Penn/VA Center for Studies of Addiction, University of Pennsylvania. We define this to
be a distance within the service area of Septa, within an hour drive, or a distance
that both the patient and Principal Investigator (PI) find acceptable.

4. Understands and signs the informed consent.

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Meets DSM-IV criteria for current dependence on any substance other than nicotine,
cocaine, alcohol or marijuana.

2. Subjects who are currently taking anti-depressant medications (e.g., SSRIs such as
citalopram)

3. Patients who are diagnosed during screening with clinical depression using the HAM-D
rating scale and present with a score >10.

4. Subjects who are diagnosed with anxiety as diagnosed using the HAM-A anxiety scale
with a score >17

5. Subjects who meet current- or lifetime DSM-IV criteria for a psychotic disorder (e.g.,
schizophrenia)

6. Requires treatment with any psychotropic medication (e.g., antidepressant,
antipsychotic, benzodiazepine, or mood stabilizing medication).

7. Subjects who test positive on the urine drug screen for any illicit drugs other than
cocaine and marijuana during screening will be allowed a single retest. Those
individuals who test positive for amphetamine during screening, given that they
provide a copy of a prescription, will only be included if they can safely discontinue
amphetamine use for the duration of the study. Subjects will need to provide a urine
free of all illicit drugs other than cocaine and marijuana at study onset to be
randomized. Subjects who test positive for any drugs other than marijuana prior to a
study session will be allowed a single retest and a chance to reschedule their
session. If the subject tests positive for any drug other than marijuana at the
retest, their participation in the study will be terminated.

8. Use of any investigational medication within the past 30 days.

9. Concomitant use of any one of the following drugs or classes of drugs:

Anti-depressant drugs such as citalopram, fluoxetine; antipsychotic drugs such as
haloperidol; benzodiazepines or other anxiolytic medications; Antihypertensive drugs
such as Reserpine, Verapamil; Blood thinners Medications used to treat respiratory
diseases such as theophylline; Trimethoprim; Cimetidine; Antiepileptic drugs (AEDs)
such as phenytoin or valproic acid.

10. Patients with a known hypersensitivity to varenicline.

11. Patients with severe unstable or serious medical illness such as a seizure disorder,
unstable cerebrovascular disease, bronchospastic disease, hyperthyroidism, or diabetes
mellitus.

12. Patients with known AIDS or other serious illnesses that may require hospitalization
during the study.

13. Female subjects who are pregnant, plan to become pregnant, are currently lactating, or
are of child-bearing potential and are not using acceptable methods of birth control;
acceptable methods of birth control would include:

1. Barrier method (diaphragm or condom)

2. Intrauterine progesterone contraceptive system

3. Levonorgesterel implant

4. Medroxyprogesterone acetate contraceptive injection, or

5. Oral contraceptives.

14. Patients with impaired renal function, as indicated by corrected creatinine clearance
below 60 ml/min as determined by the modified Cockcroft equation (CDC, 1986).

15. An unacceptable liver panel (liver function tests; LFTs) that may be indicative of
hepatic dysfunction.

16. Clinical laboratory tests (e.g., CBC, blood chemistries, urinalysis) outside normal
limits, as determined by PI.

17. History of significant heart disease or dysfunction (e.g., an arrhythmia which
required medication, Wolff Parkinson -White Syndrome, angina pectoris, documented
history of myocardial infarction, heart failure).

18. Electrocardiography (EKG) indicative of 1st degree heart block, sinus tachycardia,
left-axis deviation, non-specific ST or T-wave changes.

19. History of chest pain associated with cocaine use that prompted a visit to a
physician.

20. Any medical or psychological condition that could jeopardize the subject's safe
participation in the trial as determined by the PI.
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