PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Antidepressant medication may be key to help people stop use of cocaine while in treatment for opioid use disorder

2023-03-15
(Press-News.org) For some people receiving methadone for treatment of opioid use disorder (OUD), the co-use of opioids and stimulants such as cocaine is an issue. Now, a new study led by Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers found that bupropion, an antidepressant medication also used for smoking cessation, may help people stop using cocaine while in treatment for OUD.

The results of the study were published March 15 in JAMA Network Open.

For this double-blind randomized study, the researchers used an adaptive treatment design, meaning that it allowed modifications to the trial and its statistical procedures. Between March 2015 and September 2019, 80 adult participants who were receiving methadone for OUD were recruited. Participants self-reported using cocaine at least once in the 30 days prior to entering the study. Their average age was 48 and they were predominately male (66%). Forty participants were randomized to receive bupropion (up to 300 mg twice daily, orally) while the other 40 received a placebo. The participants were seen three times each week for 30 weeks. Urine samples and data on self-reported cocaine use were collected during every visit. Subjects received a monetary incentive for providing cocaine-negative urine samples during the study’s first 26 weeks. Monetary incentives began at 50 cents per negative urine sample and increased exponentially throughout the course of the study. Nothing was earned for positive samples.

“Cocaine use is something our patients receiving methadone report wanting help with, and until now, very few treatments have been successful at helping them stop using cocaine,” says Kelly Dunn, Ph.D., M.B.A., professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. “Providing a monetary incentive is one of the most effective treatment strategies for cocaine use disorder.”

Importantly, the type of incentive participants received varied based on their treatment response during the first six weeks of the study. Subjects who stopped using cocaine during the first six weeks received incentives to prevent relapse, while those who did not stop using cocaine received enhanced incentives to promote abstinence. Following this period, participants were assigned to receive either the medication or placebo for the remainder of the study. To determine whether the combined medication and incentive treatment was effective, the study compared people receiving either medication or placebo overall and then again within the two incentive groups.

The study did not find an effect of bupropion versus placebo overall. However, among participants who earned monetary incentives to help them stop using cocaine, those who received bupropion were more likely to not be using cocaine at the end of the study (67%) compared with those who received abstinent incentives with the placebo (30%). In contrast, people who received incentives designed to prevent relapse did not have any additional benefit from receiving bupropion versus placebo.

“Pairing bupropion to prevent cocaine use after the monetary incentives are discontinued may be a promising treatment strategy,” says Dunn. “Our study showed that bupropion can work for a subgroup of people with OUD, and that whether or not they respond initially to treatment is a meaningful determinant as to the intensity of treatment they might need going forward.”

The researchers say more studies are needed to assess the long-term outcomes for these patients and to see at what rate they might relapse back to cocaine use.

“We want to know the optimal length of time people need to be exposed to the medication to make the abstinence effects last longer,” says Dunn.

Dunn is available for interviews.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Zook joins The Gerontological Society of America’s Board of Directors

2023-03-15
The Gerontological Society of America (GSA) — the nation’s largest interdisciplinary organization devoted to the field of aging — has named David Zook of Faegre Drinker LLP as an at-large member of its Board of Directors. GSA’s Board of Directors provides governance oversight, establishes Society policy, sets the organization’s strategic plan, and oversees implementation thereof. It comprises 12 members representing the broad diversity of the Society’s membership. Zook’s three-year term became effective January 1. “GSA is very effective in applying knowledge to policymaking as the role of older individuals in our society continues to evolve,” ...

Breakthrough drug combination remains safe and effective in patients with cystic fibrosis after four years

Breakthrough drug combination remains safe and effective in patients with cystic fibrosis after four years
2023-03-15
Patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) face difficulty breathing and a decline in lung function and are at risk of early death. CF is an inherited condition that results in thick mucus build-up, persistent infection and inflammation in the lungs. Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) researcher Patrick Flume, M.D., was lead author of a recent Journal of Cystic Fibrosis article reporting the findings of a trial of a two-drug combination for treating CF. The study demonstrated long-term safety and clinical benefit of the combination therapy. Flume is director of the ...

Remains of a modern glacier found near mars’ equator implies water ice possibly present at low latitudes on Mars even today

Remains of a modern glacier found near mars’ equator implies water ice possibly present at low latitudes on Mars even today
2023-03-15
March 15, 2023, Mountain View, California – In a groundbreaking announcement at the 54th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference held in The Woodlands, Texas, scientists revealed the discovery of a relict glacier near Mars' equator. Located in Eastern Noctis Labyrinthus at coordinates 7° 33' S, 93° 14' W, this finding is significant as it implies the presence of surface water ice on Mars in recent times, even near the equator. This discovery raises the possibility that ice may still exist at shallow depths in the ...

Associations between teacher and student mathematics, science, and literacy anxiety in fourth grade

2023-03-15
Educational Impact and Implications Statement We investigated associations among teachers’ and students’ anxiety in mathematics, science, and literacy. We found that teachers’ anxiety in mathematics and science was associated with the mathematics and science anxiety of their low-SES students. Results highlight STEM content areas as contexts in which transmission of negative emotions between teachers and students may take place, as well as highlight the particular impacts these processes might have on students from underserved socioeconomic backgrounds. The ...

Kerin Adelson, M.D., named MD Anderson Chief Quality and Value Officer

2023-03-15
HOUSTON ― The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center today announced Kerin Adelson, M.D., as the institution’s chief quality and value officer. An accomplished clinician and researcher with extensive leadership experience in delivering high-quality and value-based cancer care, Adelson will begin her role March 20. She also will hold a faculty appointment in Breast Medical Oncology. As chief quality and value officer, Adelson will partner with Chief Administrative Quality Officer José Rivera to lead MD Anderson’s medical practice quality improvement efforts and ...

For the first time, controlling the degree of twist in nanostructured particles

2023-03-15
Images Micron-sized "bow ties," self-assembled from nanoparticles, form a variety of different curling shapes that can be precisely controlled, a research team led by the University of Michigan has shown.    The development opens the way for easily producing materials that interact with twisted light, providing new tools for machine vision and producing medicines.    While biology is full of twisted structures like DNA, known as chiral structures, the degree of twist is locked in—trying to change it breaks the structure. Now, researchers can engineer the degree of twist.    Such materials ...

Study unravels a cause of resistance to novel drug in patients with acute leukemia

2023-03-15
BOSTON – A new targeted drug has not only sparked remissions in patients with a common form of leukemia but also induced the cancer cells to reveal one of their schemes for resisting the drug, investigators at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and other research centers report in a new pair of studies in the journal Nature. One of the papers presents results of a clinical trial in which approximately 40% of patients with acute leukemia subtypes had a complete response – a disappearance of all signs of cancer – to treatment with the drug revumenib. The other paper uncovers a molecular countermove by which leukemia cells come to sidestep the drug and reassert their growth. The ...

Making sense of scents: Deciphering our sense of smell

2023-03-15
Breaking a longstanding impasse in our understanding of olfaction, scientists at UC San Francisco (UCSF) have created the first molecular-level, 3D picture of how an odor molecule activates a human odorant receptor, a crucial step in deciphering the sense of smell. The findings, appearing online March 15, 2023, in Nature, are poised to reignite interest in the science of smell with implications for fragrances, food science, and beyond. Odorant receptors - proteins that bind odor molecules on the surface of olfactory cells - make up half of the largest, most diverse family of receptors in our bodies; A deeper understanding of them paves the way for ...

Scientists discover key information about the function of mitochondria in cancer cells

2023-03-15
Scientists have long known that mitochondria, the "powerhouses" of cells, play a crucial role in the metabolism and energy production of cancer cells. However, until now, little was known about the relationship between the structural organization of mitochondrial networks and their functional bioenergetic activity at the level of whole tumors. In a new study, published in Nature, researchers from the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center used positron emission tomography (PET) in combination ...

Artificial Sweetener could dampen immune response to disease in mice

2023-03-15
Francis Crick Institute press release Under strict embargo: 16:00hrs GMT Wednesday, March 15, 2023 Peer reviewed Experimental study Animals / Cells   Artificial Sweetener could dampen immune response to disease in mice Scientists at the Francis Crick Institute have found that high consumption of a common artificial sweetener, sucralose, lowers activation of T-cells, an important component of the immune system, in mice. If found to have similar effects in humans, one day it could be used therapeutically to help dampen T-cell responses. For example, in patients with autoimmune diseases who ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Shingles vaccine linked to slower biological aging in older adults

A self-assembling shortcut to better organic solar cells

A two-week leap in breeding: Antarctic penguins’ striking climate adaptation

Climate risks to insurance and reinsurance of global supply chains

58% of patients affected by 2022 mpox outbreak report lasting physical symptoms

Golden Gate method enables rapid, fully-synthetic engineering of therapeutically relevant bacteriophages

Polar weather on Jupiter and Saturn hints at the planets’ interior details

Socio-environmental movements: key global guardians of biodiversity amid rising violence

Global warming and CO2 emissions 56 million years ago resulted in massive forest fires and soil erosion

Hidden order in quantum chaos: the pseudogap

Exploring why adapting to the environment is more difficult as people age

Society for Laboratory Automation and Screening welcomes new scientific director: Madeline M. Farley, Ph.D.

Austrian cow shows first case of flexible, multi-purpose tool use in cattle

Human nasal passages defend against the common cold and help determine how sick we get

Research alert: Spreading drug costs over the year may ease financial burden for Medicare cancer patients

Hospital partnership improves follow up scans, decreases long term risk after aortic repair

Layered hydrogen silicane for safe, lightweight, and energy-efficient hydrogen carrier

Observing positronium beam as a quantum matter wave for the first time

IEEE study investigates the effects of pointing error on quantum key distribution systems

Analyzing submerged fault structures to predict future earthquakes in Türkiye

Quantum ‘alchemy’ made feasible with excitons

‘Revoice’ device gives stroke patients their voice back

USF-led study: AI helps reveal global surge in floating algae

New method predicts asthma attacks up to five years in advance

Researchers publish first ever structural engineering manual for bamboo

National poll: Less than half of parents say swearing is never OK for kids

Decades of suffering: Long-term mental health outcomes of Kurdish chemical gas attacks

Interactional dynamics of self-assessment and advice in peer reflection on microteaching

When aging affects the young: Revealing the weight of caregiving on teenagers

Can Canada’s health systems handle increased demand during FIFA World Cup?

[Press-News.org] Antidepressant medication may be key to help people stop use of cocaine while in treatment for opioid use disorder