Title: Topiramate for the Treatment of Alcohol Dependence:
1 Topiramate for the Treatment of Alcohol
Dependence The Multi-Site Trial
Bankole A. Johnson, DSc, MD, PhD, MPhil,
FRCPsych Alumni Professor of Psychiatry and
Neurobehavioral Sciences Professor of
Neuroscience Professor of Medicine Chairman,
Department of Psychiatry and Neurobehavioral
Sciences University of Virginia Charlottesville,
VA
Main source Johnson BA, et al. JAMA
2007298(14)1641-1651.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
2- Acute alcohol ? firing rate of inhibition of
VTA-GABA neurons, thereby reducing their activity
and promoting ? DA neuronal activity of
cortico-mesolimbic neurons. Topiramate ? GABA
inhibition at VTA and NAcc and ? GLU excitation
at the same sites concomitantly these effects
might attenuate alcohol-induced ? DA in
cortico-mesolimbic neurons. - Line weights (i.e., heavy, medium, and thin)
denote relative strengths of neuronal activity.
Source Johnson BA. Alcohol Clin Exp Res
200428(8)1137-1144.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
3- Chronic alcohol is associated with
hyper-excitable VTA-GABA neurons due to ?
GABA-ergic tone from NAcc to VTA and ? GLU
sensitization, and relative VTA-DA hypo-function.
Abrupt alcohol cessation would result in
rebound ? DA neuronal activity, which could
promote relapse. Topiramate ? GLU sensitization
by ? AMPA GLU and ? L-type Ca2 channel currents
and potentiating VTA-GABA neurons, thereby
normalizing VTA-GABA neuronal activity. NAcc
DA release is suppressed due to blockade of
excitatory GLU afferents and facilitation of
inhibitory GABA neuronal inputs to NAcc. - Line weights (i.e., heavy, medium, and thin)
denote relative strengths of neuronal activity.
Source Johnson BA. Alcohol Clin Exp Res
200428(8)1137-1144.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
4Objective and Study Design
- Primary objective was to evaluate the safety and
efficacy of topiramate as compared with placebo
in the treatment of subjects with alcohol
dependence. - 14-week, outpatient, randomized, double-blind,
placebo-controlled clinical trial was conducted
at 17 sites in the United States. - Study consisted of 4 phases a washout period
from day ?35 (visit 1A) to day ?7 (visit 1B), a
1-week screening period, a 6-week titration
period, and an 8-week maintenance period. - Written informed consent was obtained from all
subjects before they underwent any study
procedures, and ethical approval for the study
was provided by the institutional review boards
of all 17 of the participating sites.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
5Inclusion Criteria
- Men and women between 18 and 65 years of age
- Current diagnosis of alcohol dependence as
defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
of Mental Disorders, 4th edition (DSM-IV) - Drinking an average of ?28 standard drinks/ week
(women) or ?35 standard drinks/week (men) during
the 28 days prior to screening and during the
7-day period between the screening visit and
randomization - Score of 8 on the Alcohol Use Disorders
Identification Test - Body mass index of gt18 kg/m2
- Negative urine toxicological screen for
narcotics, amphetamines, antidepressants,
propoxyphenes, and barbiturates - Expressing a desire to stop or reduce the
consumption of alcohol
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
6Exclusion Criteria
- Current Axis I psychiatric diagnosis on DSM-IV
other than alcohol, nicotine, or caffeine
dependence - History in the last 6 months of substance abuse
or dependence other than dependence on alcohol,
nicotine, or caffeine - Important alcohol withdrawal symptoms (score of
gt10 on the revised Clinical Institute Withdrawal
Assessment for Alcohol scale) - More than four unsuccessful formal inpatient
treatment attempts to curb alcohol dependence - Clinically significant depression as defined by a
total Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale
score of gt24 - Suicidal ideation or suicide attempt in the past
30 days - Currently receiving treatment for alcohol
dependence other than Alcoholics Anonymous
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
7Exclusion Criteria (continued)
- Clinically significant physical abnormalities on
physical examination, electrocardiogram
recording, hematological assessment, biochemistry
including bilirubin concentration, and urinalysis - History of or current renal impairment, renal
stones, seizures, or unstable hypertension - Progressive neurodegenerative disorders or
clinically significant neurological disorders
including seizures - Currently pregnant or lactating
- Currently taking medications with a potential
effect on alcohol consumption or a carbonic
anhydrase inhibitor - Compelled to receive treatment for alcohol
dependence to avoid imprisonment, parole,
probation, or loss of employment - From the same household as another subject
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
8Treatment Regimen
- Patients were randomized to receive topiramate
(n183) or placebo (n188). - Study medication was dispensed in double-blind
fashion for the efficacy determination period,
which began at week 0 and finished at the end of
week 14. - The dose of the medication was titrated from
weeks 0 to 6 to 300 mg/day or the maximum
tolerated dose, and the achieved dose was
maintained from weeks 6 to 14. Subjects must
have achieved a minimum dose of 50 mg/day. - All randomized subjects received brief behavioral
compliance enhancement treatment (BBCET) as their
psychosocial treatment. BBCET, a standardized,
brief (i.e., delivered in about 15 minutes),
psychosocial adherence enhancement procedure,
emphasized that medication was crucial to
changing the drinking behavior of
alcohol-dependent individuals.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
9Baseline Demographic and Psychopathological
Characteristics of Subjects
(Table continued on next slide)
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
10Baseline Demographic and Psychopathological
Characteristics of Subjects (continued)
Abbreviations SD, standard deviation CIWA-Ar,
revised Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment
for Alcohol scale. Self-reported alcohol
drinking reflects the average values during the
28-day period prior to the screening visit. All
other values refer to baseline (i.e., week 0).
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
11Trial Flow Diagram
707 Individuals screened Â
336 Excluded 265 Did not meet inclusionor
met exclusioncriteria 31 Participant
choice 40 Lost to follow-up
371 Randomized
183 Randomized to receive topiramate
188 Randomized to receive placebo
4 Enrollment failures 2 Participant choice
2 Lost to follow-up 67 Did not complete trial
34 Limiting adverse event 16 Participant
choice 13 Lost to follow-up 3 Lack of
efficacy 1 Other
3 Enrollment failures 2 Limiting adverse
event 1 Lost to follow-up 41 Did not
complete trial 6 Limiting adverse event
19 Participant choice 7 Lost to follow-up
4 Lack of efficacy 5 Other
144 Completed trial
112 Completed trial
183 Included in primary analysis 183 Included in
safety analysis
188 Included in primary analysis 188 Included in
safety analysis
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
12Primary Efficacy Variable and Safety Assessment
- The primary efficacy variable was the percentage
of heavy drinking days, defined as the number of
days on which men and women consumed 5 and 4
standard drinks/day, respectively, divided by the
number of study days.
- The safety assessment included monitoring of
retention and adverse events profile. - Adverse events were coded according to the World
Health Organization Adverse Reactions Terminology
dictionary modified for topiramate (version 1992,
3rd quarter).
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
13Statistical Analysis
- Data were analyzed with SAS version 9.1 (SAS
Institute Inc., Cary, NC). - A sample size of 184 subjects per group (N368
total) was estimated. - The aim was to achieve 90 power to detect a mean
group difference of 11.5 in percentage of heavy
drinking days at a two-sided 0.05 significance
level. - For the primary analysis, we tested the null
hypothesis on the efficacy measures in all
randomized participants by imputing data for all
dropouts as relapse to the baseline measure
(i.e., data from the 7-day period prior to taking
the first dose of medication at week 0). - This was done to provide the most conservative
estimate for the difference in treatment effect
between topiramate and placebo.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
14Statistical Analysis (continued)
- For the pre-specified analysis, we tested the
null hypothesis on the efficacy measures in all
randomized participants who took at least one
study medication dose and had at least one
double-blind visit, without imputing missing data
for dropouts. - For both approaches, a repeated-measures model
was used to analyze the primary efficacy measure,
percentage of heavy drinking days. Covariates
included treatment group, center, week, sex,
baseline percentage of heavy drinking days,
chronological age, age at onset of problem
drinking, and treatment-by-week interaction. - A fixed sequence procedure was used to control
for type 1 error when determining the earliest
time point at which the between-groups difference
in percentage of heavy drinking days became
statistically significant and was sustained for
subsequent time points.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
15Statistical Analysis (continued)
- The procedures basis was to test the
between-groups difference in percentage of heavy
drinking days at week 14 at the 0.05 significance
level (two-tailed). - If the difference at week 14 was significant,
this procedure would be repeated for the
preceding weeks until a time point was reached at
which there was no difference. - A finding of no significant difference at week 14
would have stopped the comparison for the
preceding weeks. - The Kaplan-Meier method was used to calculate the
cumulative probability function of reaching 28 or
more days of continuous abstinence and 28 or more
days of continuous non-heavy drinking for the
topiramate and placebo groups.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
16Percentage of Heavy Drinking Days from Study Week
1
The primary analytic approach of imputing missing
data with the baseline value is illustrated.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
17Percentage of Heavy Drinking Days from Study Week
1
The pre-specified approach of not imputing
missing data is illustrated data were analyzed
using a repeated-measures mixed model.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
18BBCET
- BBCET was successful at ensuring medication
compliance - The pill-taking rates were
- Topiramate 91.46 14.96
- Placebo 90.09 13.12
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
19Time to First Day of 28 or More Days of
Continuous Abstinence
The primary analytic approach of imputing missing
data with the baseline value is illustrated the
observed numbers of participants in the
topiramate group meeting this criterion were 27
of 183 compared with 6 of 188 in the placebo
group.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
20Time to First Day of 28 or More Days of
Continuous Abstinence
The pre-specified approach of not imputing
missing data is illustrated the observed numbers
of participants in the topiramate group meeting
this criterion were 27 of 179 compared with 6 of
185 in the placebo group.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
21Time to First Day of 28 or More Days of
Continuous Non-Heavy Drinking
The primary analytic approach of imputing missing
data with the baseline value is illustrated the
observed numbers of participants in the
topiramate group meeting this criterion were 54
of 183 compared with 28 of 188 in the placebo
group.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
22Time to First Day of 28 or More Days of
Continuous Non-Heavy Drinking
The pre-specified approach of not imputing
missing data is illustrated the observed numbers
of participants in the topiramate group meeting
this criterion were 54 of 179 compared with 28 of
185 in the placebo group.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
23Selected Adverse Events During Treatment
Occurring in 10 of Subjects in the Topiramate
Group
Plt0.05, chi-square test. If a subject
experienced more than one adverse event within a
category, the subject is counted once under that
category. Subjects with more than one occurrence
of an adverse event are summarized under the most
related category.
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson
24 Conclusions
- Topiramate is more efficacious than placebo in
treating alcoholism as it - Reduces heavy drinking
- Promotes abstinence
- Side-effect profile of topiramate is consistent
with findings in epilepsy and migraine prevention - The first evidence of efficacy was seen at 100
mg/day, which was well tolerated, with few
reported adverse events more data are needed to
characterize the minimum effective dose - Future studies elucidating the optimum dose that
balances efficacy, tolerability, and compliance
would be important
Courtesy of Professor Bankole Johnson