 News Release - Family history of alcoholism affects response to drug used to  treat heavy drinking
News Release - Family history of alcoholism affects response to drug used to  treat heavy drinkingNew study in Biological Psychiatry
Philadelphia, PA, September 19, 2007 – Naltrexone is one of four oral  medications approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the  treatment of alcoholism. A recent large multicenter research study of alcohol  dependence supported by the National Institute of Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse  (NIAAA), the COMBINE Study, suggested that naltrexone produced a modest but  significant benefit but another FDA-approved medication, acamprosate, was  ineffective.
Perhaps consistent with its modest effects in COMBINE, naltrexone  is not widely prescribed in the treatment of alcoholism. Yet, clinicians report  that naltrexone may have significant benefits for individual patients.
To make  naltrexone a more useful medication, it would be important to begin to identify  groups of patients who might be more or less likely to show a significant  clinical benefit from naltrexone prescription and to understand the causes of  differential naltrexone efficacy. A new study that will appear in the September  15th issue of Biological Psychiatry suggests that alcohol dependent individuals  with a family history of alcohol dependence may be more likely than alcohol  dependent individuals without a family history of alcohol dependence to reduce  their drinking in the laboratory when prescribed naltrexone.
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