Extended-release naltrexone modulates brain response to drug cues in abstinent heroin-dependent patients.
Publication/Presentation Date
3-1-2014
Abstract
Drug cues play an important role in relapse to drug use. Naltrexone is an opioid antagonist that is used to prevent relapse in opioid dependence. Central opioidergic pathways may be implicated in the heightened drug cue-reactivity, but the effects of the opioid receptors' blockade on the brain responses to drug cues in opioid dependence are unknown. To pursue this question, we studied 17 abstinent i.v. heroin users with brain functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during exposure to visual heroin-related cues and matched neutral images before and 10-14 days after an injection of extended-release naltrexone (XRNTX). Whole brain analysis of variance of fMRI data showed main effect of XRNTX in the medial frontal gyrus, precentral gyrus, cuneus, precuneus, caudate and the amygdala. fMRI response was decreased in the amygdala, cuneus, caudate and the precentral gyrus and increased in the medial frontal gyrus and the precuneus. Higher plasma levels of naltrexone's major metabolite, 6-beta-naltrexol, were associated with larger reduction in the fMRI response to drug cues after XRNTX in the precentral, caudate and amygdala clusters. The present data suggest that XRNTX pharmacotherapy of opioid-dependent patients may, respectively, decrease and potentiate prefrontal and limbic cortical responses to drug cues and that this effect might be related to the XRNTX metabolism. Our findings call for further evaluation of the brain fMRI response to drug-related cues and of the 6-beta-naltrexol levels as potential biomarkers of XRNTX therapeutic effects in patients with opioid dependence.
Volume
19
Issue
2
First Page
262
Last Page
271
ISSN
1369-1600
Published In/Presented At
Langleben, D. D., Ruparel, K., Elman, I., Loughead, J. W., Busch, E. L., Cornish, J., Lynch, K. G., Nuwayser, E. S., Childress, A. R., & O'Brien, C. P. (2014). Extended-release naltrexone modulates brain response to drug cues in abstinent heroin-dependent patients. Addiction biology, 19(2), 262–271. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1369-1600.2012.00462.x
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
22747521
Department(s)
Department of Surgery, Fellows and Residents
Document Type
Article