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

CU Anschutz School of Medicine researchers identify new method for treating alcohol use disorder

Joseph Schacht, PhD, and Drew Winters, PhD, of the Department of Psychiatry, found that the drug tolcapone increases behavioral control by increasing activation of the prefrontal cortex

2025-09-30
(Press-News.org) Currently, the treatments for alcohol use disorder (AUD) work in one of two ways, explains Joseph Schacht, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Colorado Anschutz School of Medicine — they either make the effects of alcohol less pleasurable, or they reduce cravings for alcohol.

“Those are important things for alcohol and substance use disorders — reducing how good the drug makes you feel or how much you want to use it,” Schacht says.

But is there another mechanism a drug could target to help people with alcohol use disorder? Schacht and his colleague Drew Winters, PhD, research associate in the CU Anschutz Department of Psychiatry, hypothesized that there could be — and their research published recently in the journal Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging shows that their theory may be correct. 

Targeting the prefrontal cortex “The current medications for AUD target the neurotransmitter dopamine in the reward-related parts of the brain,” Schacht says. “But we were interested in understanding how dopamine might act in a different part of the brain — the prefrontal cortex — and how its action there might affect a different behavior, which is behavioral control.”

Because AUD and addiction are diseases of the “gas” — wanting to feel good by using the substance — as well as the “brakes,” or the inability to control one’s behavior when a craving arises, a medication that increases the amount of control one has over their behavior could be another way to treat them, the researchers hypothesized.

Enter tolcapone To test the theory, they turned to a drug called tolcapone, an FDA-approved medication, originally designed to treat Parkinson’s disease, that increases dopamine in the prefrontal cortex by suppressing the action of an enzyme that degrades dopamine. In the CU randomized study, participants with AUD who took the medication instead of a placebo performed better on a computer-based test called a “stop signal task,” in which they must stop themselves from pressing the space bar when a certain signal comes up on the screen.

“You have a greater number of trials where you just press the space bar,” Winters says. “You're already primed to hit the space bar, then when a different signal comes up, you have to stop yourself and not press anything. We were measuring if they can stop, and we also want to see, when they make an error, are they making corrections afterward?”

Reduction in use MRI images taken during the stop signal task showed that the drug increased activation in the prefrontal cortex when people were trying to control their behavior, which is consistent with tolcapone increasing dopamine in the prefrontal cortex. The researchers also asked participants about their alcohol use during the seven days they were taking the drug.

“They came in, we gave them the medication, they came back a week later, and we said, ‘How much did you drink during the last week?’” Schacht says. “Greater prefrontal cortex activation was associated with less drinking during that week, suggesting that the mechanism of increased control was having an effect on their behavior in the real world.”

“It was very gratifying to see that this medication is working in the ways that we expected it to, and that there were actually changes in the brain that associate with behavior,” Winters adds. “That connection is really important.”

Next steps Schacht, who also has conducted research on the effects of GLP-1 agonist drugs like Ozempic on AUD, is now conducting a study on the effects of tolcapone on people with AUD who also have attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

“Those patients are the ones who might especially benefit from being able to control their behavior more, because they have not only AUD, which is impairing the ‘brakes,’ but also this disorder related to difficulties with controlling impulsivity,” he says.

Because tolcapone is no longer used to treat Parkinson’s, the researchers say, it’s unlikely that it would be repurposed to treat AUD. But their research sets the stage for a pharmaceutical company to develop a drug that works similarly to treat AUD and substance use disorders.

“I've worked in AUD medication development for a long time, and I’ve tested many medications with different mechanisms of action,” Schacht says. “It was very fulfilling to see that one that works in a different way could also be effective. It suggests that we might be able to broaden the space for what medications might be useful in this condition.”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Stowers Institute recruits renowned developmental and evolutionary biologist from HHMI’s Janelia Research Campus

2025-09-30
Kansas City, MO — September 30, 2025 — Some of nature’s most important secrets are hidden in plain sight. David Stern, Ph.D., has spent his career unlocking such mysteries, from fruit fly genetics to the proteins insects use to hijack plants. The Stowers Institute for Medical Research is proud to announce Stern’s appointment as Investigator. Stern, a Senior Group Leader at Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Janelia campus since 2011, will move his lab and HHMI appointment to Kansas City in February 2026. Stern and his lab pioneered research behind the battle between plants ...

Can digital health tools help younger cancer survivors better predict future health risks?

2025-09-30
A groundbreaking new study from the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology aims to test whether digital tools and chatbot technology can help young adult cancer survivors get the genetic counseling they need to better understand future health risks to themselves and family members. Led by Alliance Study Chair Angela Bradbury, MD, Professor of Medicine in the Division of Hematology Oncology at the University of Pennsylvania Abramson Cancer Center, the AYA ACCESS (Alliance A232301CD) study will enroll participants to study ways to address longstanding gaps in genetic services for adolescents and young adults (AYA) aged 18 to 39, who often receive care in community settings ...

Scientists uncover room-temperature route to improved light-harvesting and emission devices

2025-09-30
HOUSTON – (Sept. 30, 2025) – Atoms in crystalline solids sometimes vibrate in unison, giving rise to emergent phenomena known as phonons. Because these collective vibrations set the pace for how heat and energy move through materials, they play a central role in devices that capture or emit light, like solar cells and LEDs. A team of researchers from Rice University and collaborators have found a way to make two different phonons in thin films of lead halide perovskite interact with light so strongly that they merge into entirely ...

Intergovernmental platform on biodiversity issues an urgent call to stem decline of nature

2025-09-30
Human-caused biodiversity loss has accelerated over the past fifty years. An opinion article published September 30th in the open-access journal PLOS Biology by a team of renowned international authors, including Anne Larigauderie, former Executive Secretary of Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), concludes that stopping biodiversity loss is contingent on transformative social and cultural changes across multiple scales. The IPBES Transformative Change Assessment is a 2024 report prepared by an interdisciplinary group of nearly 100 scientists and holders of Indigenous and local knowledge. It aims to inform the implementation ...

New AI tool scans social media for hidden health risks

2025-09-30
A new artificial intelligence tool can scan social media data to discover adverse events associated with consumer health products, according to a study published September 30th in the open-access journal PLOS Digital Health by John Ayers of the University of California, San Diego, U.S., and colleagues. The constant post-market surveillance of the safety of consumer products is crucial for public health and safety. However, current adverse-event reporting systems for approved prescription medications and medical devices depend on voluntary submissions from doctors and manufactures to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The rapid growth ...

Johns Hopkins researchers show novel immune system boost helps fight cancer cells

2025-09-30
In experiments with mouse models of breast, pancreatic, and muscle cancers, researchers at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital report new evidence that a novel means of boosting the natural immune system prevents cancer recurrence and improves survival.     The study, published Sept. 2 in Nature Immunology, was federally funded by the National Cancer Institute/NIH. Malignant tumors are often described as immune-suppressive or “immune cold,” meaning the patient’s immune system does not recognize or attack ...

AI model for imaging-based extranodal extension detection and outcome prediction in HPV−positive oropharyngeal cancer

2025-09-30
About The Study: This single-center cohort study found that an artificial intelligence (AI)-driven pipeline can successfully automate lymph node segmentation and imaging-based extranodal extension (iENE) classification from pretreatment computed tomography scans in human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated oropharyngeal carcinoma. Predicted iENE was independently associated with worse oncologic outcomes. External validation is required to assess generalizability and the potential for implementation in institutions ...

Frequent wildfires, heat intensify air quality issues in American megacities such as New York City

2025-09-30
Air quality in America’s largest cities has steadily improved thanks to tighter regulations on key sources of particulate pollution. However, increased heat, wildfire smoke and other emerging global drivers of urban aerosol pollution are now combining to create a new set of challenges for public health officials tasked with protecting millions of people on the East Coast. Research from Colorado State University published in npj Climate and Atmospheric Science begins to unpack and characterize these developing relationships against the backdrop of New York City. The research quantifies how existing particulate pollution from sources such as vehicle exhaust or consumer products are ...

Doctors and nurses are better than AI at triaging patients

2025-09-30
Vienna, Austria: Doctors and nurses are better at triaging patients in emergency departments than artificial intelligence (AI), according to research presented at the European Emergency Medicine Congress today (Tuesday) [1]. However, Dr Renata Jukneviciene, a postdoctoral researcher at Vilnius University, Lithuania, who presented the study, said that AI could be useful when used in conjunction with clinical staff, but should not be used as a stand-alone triage tool. “We conducted this study to address the growing issue of overcrowding in the emergency department and the escalating workload of nurses,” ...

Scientists solve mystery of loop current switching in kagome metals

2025-09-30
Quantum metals are metals where quantum effects—behaviors that normally only matter at atomic scales—become powerful enough to control the metal's macroscopic electrical properties.  Researchers in Japan have explained how electricity behaves in a special group of quantum metals called kagome metals. The study is the first to show how weak magnetic fields reverse tiny loop electrical currents inside these metals. This switching changes the material's macroscopic electrical properties and reverses which direction has easier electrical flow, a property ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The Lancet Infectious Diseases: New study suggests risk of long COVID in children may be twice as high after a second infection

Risk of long COVID in kids doubles after second infection

Patient-reported outcome analysis of NRG Oncology trial in limited-stage small cell lung cancer suggests quality of life benefit with twice - (vs once -) daily radiation

NRG Oncology trial analysis shows improvement in survival outcomes for glioblastoma patients receiving proton therapy, trial moves to phase III

In a landmark move, ECMWF is poised to announce a new phase in its data sharing strategy

Seal’s sensitive whiskers hold key to foiling fish escapes

Neurological outcomes after patients suffer cardiac arrest at home are similar between low- and high-income areas in Vienna

Precision without incision: the new era of functional radiosurgery

University of Miami scientists launch accessible global climate modeling framework

Parallel atom-photon entanglement paves way for future quantum networking

Single-step battery cathode recycling

Farm conservation is an economical path to save Colorado River water

Feeling in control helps beat daily stress, researchers find

The Municipal Finance Journal joins the Chicago Journals program

Antarctic icefish rewired their skulls to win an evolutionary arms race

Moffitt study shows promise for new treatment in patients with leptomeningeal disease

CU Anschutz School of Medicine researchers identify new method for treating alcohol use disorder

Stowers Institute recruits renowned developmental and evolutionary biologist from HHMI’s Janelia Research Campus

Can digital health tools help younger cancer survivors better predict future health risks?

Scientists uncover room-temperature route to improved light-harvesting and emission devices

Intergovernmental platform on biodiversity issues an urgent call to stem decline of nature

New AI tool scans social media for hidden health risks

Johns Hopkins researchers show novel immune system boost helps fight cancer cells

AI model for imaging-based extranodal extension detection and outcome prediction in HPV−positive oropharyngeal cancer

Frequent wildfires, heat intensify air quality issues in American megacities such as New York City

Doctors and nurses are better than AI at triaging patients

Scientists solve mystery of loop current switching in kagome metals

Reaction-induced restructuring of CoOx species to control selectivity in propane dehydrogenation

Beneath the ice: spring sunlight triggers photoinhibition and recovery in lake Akan Marimo

12,000-year-old monumental camel rock art acted as ancient 'road signs' to desert water sources

[Press-News.org] CU Anschutz School of Medicine researchers identify new method for treating alcohol use disorder
Joseph Schacht, PhD, and Drew Winters, PhD, of the Department of Psychiatry, found that the drug tolcapone increases behavioral control by increasing activation of the prefrontal cortex