4.5 Article

Looking beyond the opioid receptor: A desperate need for new treatments for opioid use disorder

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 432, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jns.2021.120094

Keywords

Opioid use disorder; Substance use disorder; Neuromodulation; Psychedelics; Novel treatments

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This paper reviews novel treatments being investigated for opioid use disorder (OUD), including neuromodulatory interventions, psychedelic drugs, and other novel approaches. These proposed treatments offer hope for a more durable and effective OUD treatment beyond the traditional opioid agonist therapy. However, more clinical data are needed to support their efficacy and safety.
The mainstay of treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD) is opioid agonist therapy (OAT), which modulates opioid receptors to reduce substance craving and use. OAT maintains dependence on opioids but helps reduce overdose and negative sequelae of substance abuse. Despite increasing availability of OAT, its effectiveness is limited by difficulty in initiating and maintaining patients on treatment. With the worsening opioid epidemic in the United States and rising overdose deaths, a more durable and effective treatment for OUD is necessary. This paper reviews novel treatments being investigated for OUD, including neuromodulatory interventions, psychedelic drugs, and other novel approaches. Neuromodulatory interventions can stimulate the addiction neural circuitry involving the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and deeper mesolimbic structures to curb craving and reduce use, and multiple clinical trials for interventional treatment for OUD are currently conducted. Similarly, psychedelic agents are being investigated for efficacy in OUD specifically. There is a resurgence of interest in psychedelic agents' therapeutic potential, with evidence of improving mood symptoms and decreased substance use even after just one dose. Exact mechanism of their anti-addictive effect is not fully elucidated, but psychedelic agents do not maintain opioid dependence and some may even be helpful in abating symptoms of withdrawal. Other potential approaches for OUD include targeting different parts of the dopamine-dependent addiction pathway, identifying susceptible genes and modulating gene products, as well as utilizing vaccines as immunotherapy to blunt the addictive effects of substances. Much more clinical data are needed to support efficacy and safety of these therapies in OUD, but these proposed novel treatments look beyond the opioid receptor to offer hope for a more durably effective OUD treatment.

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