大麻二酚对青少年酒精使用障碍的神经和心理生理影响:一项随机对照临床试验。

Anna E Kirkland, Brittney D Browning, Lindsay R Meredith, Elizabeth Robertson, Cori Herring, Rachel L Tomko, Kevin M Gray, Lindsay M Squeglia
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引用次数: 0

摘要

需要对青少年酒精使用障碍(AUD)进行新的治疗评估。大麻二酚(CBD)是大麻植物的一种成分,由于其潜在的治疗特性和临床前研究表明它可以减少酒精的使用,可能是一种很有前途的候选药物治疗方法。由于人体数据有限,建议严格筛选CBD的急性神经、心理生理和酒精相关影响,以评估其作为青少年AUD潜在治疗方法的可行性。采用受试者内、随机、双盲、安慰剂对照设计,我们测试了CBD (600mg)对未寻求治疗的青年AUD患者的急性多模态效应(N = 36;年龄17-22;69%的女性)。结果包括:(1)质子磁共振波谱法测定前扣带皮层谷氨酸+谷氨酰胺(Glx)和GABA水平;(2)用功能性MRI测量全脑和先验感兴趣区神经酒精线索反应性;(3)通过自我报告的急性酒精渴望、心率变异性和皮肤电导来测量酒精嗅觉线索的心理生理反应;(4)饮酒。未观察到与cbd相关的不良事件。与安慰剂相比,急性给予CBD对任何感兴趣的结果都没有影响。这是首个针对青少年AUD患者使用CBD的充分有力的药物筛选研究。在这个样本中,我们没有发现CBD对神经代谢、神经行为、心理生理或酒精使用结果的显著影响。未来的研究可能会受益于长期给药,以更好地了解物质相关的效应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The neural and psychophysiological effects of cannabidiol in youth with alcohol use disorder: A randomized controlled clinical trial.

Novel treatment evaluation for youth with alcohol use disorder (AUD) is needed. Cannabidiol (CBD), a constituent of the Cannabis sativa plant, may be a promising candidate pharmacotherapy due to its potential therapeutic properties and preclinical research suggesting it decreases alcohol use. Due to limited data in humans, rigorous screening of the acute neural, psychophysiological, and alcohol-related effects of CBD is indicated to assess its viability as a potential treatment for youth AUD. Using a within-subjects, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled design, we tested acute multi-modal effects of CBD (600 mg) in non-treatment seeking youth with AUD (N = 36; ages 17-22; 69% female). Outcomes included (1) glutamate+glutamine (Glx) and GABA levels in the anterior cingulate cortex measured with proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy; (2) whole-brain and a priori region-of-interest neural alcohol cue-reactivity measured with functional MRI; (3) psychophysiological response to alcohol olfactory cues measured by self-reported acute alcohol craving, heart rate variability, and skin conductance; and (4) alcohol use. No CBD-associated adverse events were observed. There were no effects of acute CBD administration, compared to placebo, on any outcomes of interest. This is the first adequately powered medication screening study for the use of CBD in youth with AUD. We did not detect significant effects of CBD on neurometabolic, neurobehavioral, psychophysiological, or alcohol use outcomes in this sample. Future studies may benefit from chronic administration to better understand substance-related effects.Clinicaltrials.gov NCT05317546 https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05317546.

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