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Published Online: 17 March 2015

Clonidine Maintenance Prolongs Opioid Abstinence and Decouples Stress From Craving in Daily Life: A Randomized Controlled Trial With Ecological Momentary Assessment

Abstract

Objective:

The authors tested whether clonidine blocks stress-induced seeking of heroin and cocaine. The study was also intended to confirm translational findings from a rat model of drug relapse by using ecological momentary assessment of patients’ stress to test hypotheses about clonidine’s behavioral mechanism of action.

Method:

The authors conducted a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled clinical trial with 208 opioid-dependent patients at an outpatient buprenorphine clinic. The 118 participants (57%) who maintained abstinence during weeks 5–6 were continued on buprenorphine and randomly assigned to receive clonidine (N=61) or placebo (N=57) for 14 weeks. Urine was tested thrice weekly. Lapse was defined as any opioid-positive or missed urine test, and relapse as two or more consecutive lapses. Time to lapse and relapse were examined with Cox regressions; longest period of abstinence was examined with a t test, and ecological momentary assessment data were examined with generalized linear mixed models.

Results:

In an intent-to-treat analysis, clonidine produced the longest duration (in consecutive days) of abstinence from opioids during the intervention phase (34.8 days [SD=3.7] compared with 25.5 days [SD=2.7]; Cohen’s d=0.38). There was no group difference in time to relapse, but the clonidine group took longer to lapse (hazard ratio=0.67, 95% CI=0.45–1.00). Ecological momentary assessment showed that daily-life stress was partly decoupled from opioid craving in the clonidine group, supporting the authors’ hypothesized mechanism for clonidine’s benefits.

Conclusions:

Clonidine, a readily available medication, is useful in opioid dependence not just for reduction of withdrawal signs, but also as an adjunctive maintenance treatment that increases duration of abstinence. Even in the absence of physical withdrawal, it decouples stress from craving in everyday life.

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Supplementary Material

File (appi.ajp.2014.14081014.ds001.pdf)
File (aug2015_opioid.mp3)

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 760 - 767
PubMed: 25783757

History

Received: 13 August 2014
Revision received: 17 September 2014
Revision received: 17 November 2014
Accepted: 5 December 2014
Published online: 17 March 2015
Published in print: August 01, 2015

Authors

Affiliations

William J. Kowalczyk, Ph.D.
From the Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Research Branch, NIDA, Baltimore; the Clinical Trials Operations and Biostatistics Branch, NIMH, Rockville, Md.; the Center for Clinical Trials Network, NIDA, Bethesda, Md.; and Advanced Heart Failure Program, Spectrum Health System, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Karran A. Phillips, M.D.
From the Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Research Branch, NIDA, Baltimore; the Clinical Trials Operations and Biostatistics Branch, NIMH, Rockville, Md.; the Center for Clinical Trials Network, NIDA, Bethesda, Md.; and Advanced Heart Failure Program, Spectrum Health System, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Michelle L. Jobes, Ph.D.
From the Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Research Branch, NIDA, Baltimore; the Clinical Trials Operations and Biostatistics Branch, NIMH, Rockville, Md.; the Center for Clinical Trials Network, NIDA, Bethesda, Md.; and Advanced Heart Failure Program, Spectrum Health System, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Ashley P. Kennedy, Ph.D.
From the Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Research Branch, NIDA, Baltimore; the Clinical Trials Operations and Biostatistics Branch, NIMH, Rockville, Md.; the Center for Clinical Trials Network, NIDA, Bethesda, Md.; and Advanced Heart Failure Program, Spectrum Health System, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Udi E. Ghitza, Ph.D.
From the Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Research Branch, NIDA, Baltimore; the Clinical Trials Operations and Biostatistics Branch, NIMH, Rockville, Md.; the Center for Clinical Trials Network, NIDA, Bethesda, Md.; and Advanced Heart Failure Program, Spectrum Health System, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Daniel A. Agage, M.D.
From the Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Research Branch, NIDA, Baltimore; the Clinical Trials Operations and Biostatistics Branch, NIMH, Rockville, Md.; the Center for Clinical Trials Network, NIDA, Bethesda, Md.; and Advanced Heart Failure Program, Spectrum Health System, Grand Rapids, Mich.
John P. Schmittner, M.D.
From the Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Research Branch, NIDA, Baltimore; the Clinical Trials Operations and Biostatistics Branch, NIMH, Rockville, Md.; the Center for Clinical Trials Network, NIDA, Bethesda, Md.; and Advanced Heart Failure Program, Spectrum Health System, Grand Rapids, Mich.
David H. Epstein, Ph.D.
From the Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Research Branch, NIDA, Baltimore; the Clinical Trials Operations and Biostatistics Branch, NIMH, Rockville, Md.; the Center for Clinical Trials Network, NIDA, Bethesda, Md.; and Advanced Heart Failure Program, Spectrum Health System, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Kenzie L. Preston, Ph.D.
From the Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Research Branch, NIDA, Baltimore; the Clinical Trials Operations and Biostatistics Branch, NIMH, Rockville, Md.; the Center for Clinical Trials Network, NIDA, Bethesda, Md.; and Advanced Heart Failure Program, Spectrum Health System, Grand Rapids, Mich.

Notes

Address correspondence to Dr. Preston ([email protected]).

Funding Information

National Institute on Drug Abuse10.13039/100000026:
The authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.

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