4.2 Article

The Effects of Long-Term Varenicline Administration on Ethanol and Sucrose Seeking and Self-Administration in Male P Rats

Journal

ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 42, Issue 2, Pages 453-460

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/acer.13562

Keywords

Appetitive; Consummatory; Craving

Funding

  1. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism [P60AA007611, R01AA021208]
  2. NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON ALCOHOL ABUSE AND ALCOHOLISM [R01AA021208, P60AA007611] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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BackgroundVarenicline, a partial agonist at 42 and full agonist at 7 nicotinic cholinergic receptors, is FDA-approved for treatment of smoking cessation and has been found to reduce alcohol craving in clinical populations. In rodents, varenicline decreases free-choice ethanol (EtOH) intake with somewhat mixed findings in operant paradigms that utilize a combined appetitive/consummatory response. MethodsThe present experiment utilized an operant paradigm that procedurally separates appetitive from consummatory responding and a reward-blocking approach (i.e., rats were able to consume EtOH during treatment) to better understand the efficacy of varenicline as a treatment for EtOH self-administration and subsequent EtOH seeking. Separate groups of EtOH- and sucrose-reinforced alcohol-preferring, male P rats experienced alternating cycles of vehicle (2-week cycles) and varenicline (0.3, 1.0, and 2.0mg/kg self-administered in a gelatin preparation) treatment (3-week cycles) prior to daily sessions where a single lever press resulted in 20minutes of reinforcer access. At the end of each cycle, a single extinction session assessed the seeking response in the absence of drug pretreatment. ResultsVarenicline dose dependently decreased EtOH intake. Sucrose intake was largely unaffected, with no overall treatment effects and only sporadic days where the medium and high dose differed from vehicle. Neither sucrose nor EtOH seeking was significantly decreased by varenicline, and there were no treatment effects on either lick or lever-press latency. Overall effect sizes were much greater for both drinking and seeking in the EtOH group as compared to the sucrose group. ConclusionsVarenicline effectively attenuates EtOH self-administration during treatment, but the experience with EtOH consumption while varenicline is on board is not sufficient to alter subsequent EtOH seeking. The overall pattern of findings indicates that varenicline blocks the rewarding properties of EtOH while not substituting for EtOH, that the nonspecific effects on an alternate reinforcer are negligible, and that blood levels of varenicline need to be maintained in order for treatment to remain effective.

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