Rapastinel, the new experimental drug, could be useful to help manage opioid withdrawal during the initial days after someone has entered treatment and is trying to abstain from opioid use.
Rapastinel, a new experimental drug initially developed as an antidepressant, later found to reverse the sudden, severe signs of opioid withdrawal in rats in just three days. This drug offers a better solution for opioid withdrawal compared to the //available common medicines which cause side effects and relapses before treatment completion.// The findings suggest rapastinel could be useful to help manage withdrawal during the critical first days after someone has entered treatment and is trying to abstain from opioid use, according to researchers.
‘Rapastinel could be a new safe and effective treatment option for opioid dependence in reducing withdrawal signs without producing any adverse effects.’
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"We have found that rapastinel has potential as a new treatment for opioid dependence, as it is effective in reducing withdrawal signs and has not been shown to produce any negative side effects," said Julia Ferrante, an undergraduate at Villanova University who conducted the research with Cynthia M. Kuhn, PhD, professor of pharmacology and cancer biology at Duke University. "By reducing withdrawal symptoms, the patient feels less discomfort during treatment, and we hypothesize this would lead to a decreased risk of relapse." Read More..
Ferrante will present the research at the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics annual meeting during the 2019 Experimental Biology meeting in Orlando, Fla.
"Our research suggests that new alternatives to standard treatments for opioid dependence have potential to be safer and more effective," Ferrante added. "Rapastinel research for opioid dependency is currently only being done in rodents, but if the drug continues to have successful trials, it may enter clinical trials for use in humans."
Buprenorphine and methadone, the most common drugs used to help people quit opioid abuse, are problematic because they are themselves opioids and can be addictive, have unpleasant and sometimes dangerous side effects and often must be used for months to avoid relapse. Ketamine, which has been proposed as an alternative, non-opioid treatment for opioid withdrawal, also has the potential for abuse and can cause hallucinations and other negative side effects.
Rapastinel, developed as an antidepressant, binds to the same receptor as ketamine but at a different site, where it has a milder effect. While a clinical trial recently concluded rapastinel is not effective against depression, trials have shown it is well tolerated and has no serious side effects.
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To move toward clinical trials in humans, researchers will continue to investigate rapastinel's effects on a molecular level and study whether the drug can reduce the likelihood of relapse. If approved for treating opioid dependence, rapastinel would likely be administered intravenously, possibly in an outpatient setting, Ferrante said. It is unknown how long patients would need to use rapastinel to ensure complete recovery from opioid dependence.
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Source-Eurekalert