Low-dose ondansetron: A candidate prospective precision medicine to treat alcohol use disorder endophenotypes
Bankole A Johnson
1
,
Hannu Alho
2, 3
,
Giovanni Addolorato
4
,
Otto Michael Lesch
5
,
Jonathan Chick
6
,
Lei Liu
7
,
Vinzant Schuyler
1
3
Addictum Helsinki, Finland
|
6
Castle Craig Hospital, Scotland
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2024-09-01
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 1.166
CiteScore: 7.9
Impact factor: 6.1
ISSN: 09536205, 18790828
PubMed ID:
38876929
Abstract
BackgroundAlcohol use disorder (AUD) is among the leading causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide, and over 95 million people live with alcohol dependence globally. The estimated heritability of AUD is 50–60 %, and multiple genes are thought to contribute to various endophenotypes of the disease. Previous clinical trials support a precision medicine approach using ondansetron (AD04, a 5-HT3 antagonist) by segregating AUD populations by the bio-genetic endophenotype of specific serotonergic genotypes and the bio-psychosocial endophenotype of the severity of drinking or both. By targeting the modulation of biogenetic signaling within the biopsychosocial context of AUD, low-dose AD04 holds promise in reducing alcohol consumption among affected individuals while minimizing adverse effects.MethodsThis was a phase III, 6-month, 25-site, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial using AD04 to treat DSM-V–categorized AUD individuals who were pre-stratified into the endophenotypes of heavy or very heavy drinking individuals and possessed a pre-defined profile of genetic variants related to the serotonin transporter and serotonin-3AB receptor. Participants (N = 303) presented moderate to severe AUD, >80 % were men, mostly in their fifties, and >95 % were of European descent. Low-dose AD04 (approx. 033 mg twice daily) or a matching placebo was administered twice daily for 6 months. Brief Behavioral Compliance Enhancement Treatment (BBCET [53Johnson B., Diclimente C., Ait-Daoud N., Stokes S. Brief behavioral compliance enhancement treatment (BBCET) manual. Handbook of clinical alcoholism treatment Baltimore Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. 2003a; In: Johnson, B.A., Ruiz, P., and Galanter, M. (Editors):282–301.Google Scholar]) was administered every two weeks to enhance medication compliance and clinic attendance.ResultsThere was a significant reduction in the monthly percentage of heavy drinking days, PHDD (-46·7 % (2·7 %), 95 %CI: -52·1 % to -41·2 % vs. -38·1 % (2·9 %), 95 %CI: -43·8 % to -32·5 %, respectively; LS mean difference=-8·5 %; p = 0.03) among AD04-treated vs. placebo-receiving heavy drinking individuals at month 6. Heavy drinking individuals were also less likely to be diagnosed with AUD [Month 1: -32·0 % (2·8 %), 95 %CI: -37·5 % to -26·5 % vs. -23·2 % (2·9 %), 95 %CI: -28·9 to -17·5 %; LS mean difference= -8·8 %; p = 0·026)], and improved on the WHO quality of life BREF scale with a significant effect for at least a 1-level downward shift (OR = 3.4; 95 % CI: 1·03–11·45, p = 0·044). Importantly, heavy drinking individuals, as distinct from very heavy drinking individuals, were the bio-psychosocial endophenotype more predictive of therapeutic response to AD04. AD04 had an exceptional safety and tolerability profile, like the placebo's.ConclusionsIn this Phase 3 clinical trial, AD04 was shown to be a promising treatment for currently drinking heavy drinking individuals with AUD who also possess a specific genotypic profile in the serotonin transporter and serotonin-3AB receptor complex. Using AD04 to reduce the harm of AUD in heavy drinking individuals who are currently drinking, without the necessity of abstinence or detoxification from alcohol use, is an important advance in the field of precision medicine. AD04's adverse events profile, which was like placebo, should enhance accessibility and acceptance of modern medical treatment for AUD by lowering the incorrect but commonly perceived stigma of personal failure.
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Total citations:
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Citations from 2024:
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Johnson B. et al. Low-dose ondansetron: A candidate prospective precision medicine to treat alcohol use disorder endophenotypes // European Journal of Internal Medicine. 2024. Vol. 127. pp. 50-62.
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Johnson B. A., Alho H., Addolorato G., Lesch O. M., Chick J., Liu L., Schuyler V. Low-dose ondansetron: A candidate prospective precision medicine to treat alcohol use disorder endophenotypes // European Journal of Internal Medicine. 2024. Vol. 127. pp. 50-62.
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1016/j.ejim.2024.06.001
UR - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0953620524002401
TI - Low-dose ondansetron: A candidate prospective precision medicine to treat alcohol use disorder endophenotypes
T2 - European Journal of Internal Medicine
AU - Johnson, Bankole A
AU - Alho, Hannu
AU - Addolorato, Giovanni
AU - Lesch, Otto Michael
AU - Chick, Jonathan
AU - Liu, Lei
AU - Schuyler, Vinzant
PY - 2024
DA - 2024/09/01
PB - Elsevier
SP - 50-62
VL - 127
PMID - 38876929
SN - 0953-6205
SN - 1879-0828
ER -
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@article{2024_Johnson,
author = {Bankole A Johnson and Hannu Alho and Giovanni Addolorato and Otto Michael Lesch and Jonathan Chick and Lei Liu and Vinzant Schuyler},
title = {Low-dose ondansetron: A candidate prospective precision medicine to treat alcohol use disorder endophenotypes},
journal = {European Journal of Internal Medicine},
year = {2024},
volume = {127},
publisher = {Elsevier},
month = {sep},
url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0953620524002401},
pages = {50--62},
doi = {10.1016/j.ejim.2024.06.001}
}